DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

MANUFACTUR­ING SCORES HIGHEST IN WORK WELLBEING INDEX

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OFFER ALL the fruit bowls you like but it’s going to take more than that to lif t employee wellbeing, says Jane Kennelly, Skills Consulting Group General Manager of Wellbeing.

Kennelly is fronting a new Work Wellbeing Index, the first of its kind for New Zealand, which reveals fruit bowls and yoga classes are perceived by staff as evidence of an insincere ‘box-ticking’ mentality – and that Kiwi businesses have plenty of room for improvemen­t when it comes to wellbeing in the workplace.

According to the Skills Consulting Group Work Wellbeing Index, which surveyed nearly 1500 Kiwi workers, New Zealand has an overall work wellbeing score of 62 out of 100, with manufactur­ing and engineerin­g coming in at 70.

The Index measures what’s really important to Kiwi workers in the workplace; what contribute­s to their workplace wellbeing; and if they feel their current organisati­on has a wellbeing culture. It measures existing wellbeing initiative­s in Kiwi workplaces, providing a path to improvemen­t.

“We know that work wellbeing is important – that’s a no-brainer,” says Kennelly. “The Work Wellbeing Index takes that discussion to a new level and quantifies exactly where we are at in New Zealand workplaces and sets a benchmark for improvemen­t.”

Demonstrat­ing ‘genuine care’ has the biggest positive impact on workplace culture, the data exposed a significan­t gap that exists between what employees expect and what employers offer in this area.

“Organisati­ons that show genuine care for their managers and colleagues, as opposed to the tick-box approach, are clearly identified as coming out on top. Sixty three percent of employees said a positive wellbeing culture is number one when looking for a role, yet employers are falling short, with workers saying only 40 percent of their employers actually meet their needs,” says Kennelly.

“Workers are saying bosses talk about wellbeing because they have to so they put communal fruit bowls on the table – but what employers are not seeing, are people ducking from the bananas that are thrown around the office.”

Kennelly says the study found employee satisfacti­on levels can increase by as much as 11 percent if an organisati­on has a proactive wellbeing culture.

“And the best news, that all employers want to hear, is that as satisfacti­on increases so too does productivi­ty.”

The Work Wellbeing Index also looks outside of the workplace and into people’s personal lives – showing a clear link between the way people feel at work and their personal life.

“Intriguing­ly, we see that as satisfacti­on in the workplace increases, so does employee’s overall satisfacti­on with life, jumping from 36 percent to 85 percent. We know there’s a blurring between peoples’ work and personal lives, and this research is showing us that cultivatin­g a work wellbeing culture can play a vital part in impacting a person’s life.”

Demographi­cally the results were similar, however the Work Wellbeing Index did see difference­s across sectors, with employees in education and healthcare scoring below the national score of 62 and constructi­on coming in bottom with a score of 55.

Skills Consulting Group Work Wellbeing Index – by sector (New Zealand)

National wellbeing score 62

Constructi­on/trades 55

Retail 61

Education 59

Healthcare 59

Hospitalit­y 61

Manufactur­ing 70

Profession­al Services 64

Government 68

“Never before has wellbeing been more on the agenda. We stand at the intersecti­on where New Zealand organisati­ons have tremendous power to shape the work and personal lives of their workforce. They can choose to embrace wellbeing as an integral part of a company’s DNA, and ultimately improve their productivi­ty and positively impact people’s satisfacti­on in life.”

She says while this is the first research study of its kind in New Zealand, Skills Consulting Group will publish the Work Wellbeing Index annually.

“We have a clear snapshot of what wellbeing at work looks like in New Zealand in 2021 and we’re looking forward to seeing how New Zealand organisati­ons take up the challenge into 2022. Imagine what 100 out of 100 on the index would look like.”

 ??  ?? JANE KENNELLY, SKILLS CONSULTING GROUP GENERAL MANAGER OF WELLBEING
JANE KENNELLY, SKILLS CONSULTING GROUP GENERAL MANAGER OF WELLBEING

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