Companies that cultivate optimism come out on top in lots of ways. Research from Gallup shows optimistic people more engaged, successful, healthy, and happy that their pessimistic counterparts. Plus, it aids in creativity and perseverance and impacts morale.
The trait isn’t necessarily ingrained in people either.
Although most lean one way or the other, it can be cultivated, meaning organizations
have the ability to cash in on all the benefits and enjoy a happier, more engaged,
and more productive workforce, by taking a few simple steps.
To put it succinctly, optimism emerges when hope and
confidence fuse. In other words, virtually any step you take that helps people
see that goals can be achieved or which steps will lead to success, will help
you cultivate optimism.
Opportunity was a recurring theme in McKinsey and Lean In’s 2019 Women in the Workplace report. The report revealed that the biggest challenge for women trying to develop their careers isn’t reaching the glass ceiling. It’s a “broken rung” that prevents women from even getting into management. Generally speaking, just 73 women are promoted into management roles for every 100 men who are. The disparity is even greater for women of color, with 68 Latinas and 58 Black women getting promotions for every 100 men.
To address this, organizations should establish guidelines
for pools that require having a specific number of candidates from various
backgrounds before selecting one for promotion. Establishing criteria for
equitable representation within upper positions goes a long way too.
Overt discrimination is thankfully less of an issue these
days, but unconscious bias still reigns. Companies that don’t place focus on
addressing unconscious bias through things like training and standardized
evaluation criteria simply don’t have the diversity and inclusion their
counterparts do. Employees pick up on this and it’s a major killer of morale.
To cultivate optimism, organizations should not only create policies that eradicate unconscious bias, but publicize what they’re doing and why they’re doing it to build confidence in the system.
Since we’ve been discussing returnships and returning to work quite a bit here on Pink Petro, we put out a poll on the Pink Petro members app asking whether people felt they’d be welcomed back to work if they needed to take some time away. Three distinct stories emerged about how maternity leave was handled for different women. One was given a year off without issue, another was pressured to return six weeks after a c-section, and another was expected to be on an international flight the first day back to work after an eight-week leave. “I feel like it’s always who the manager is,” says Pink Petro founder and CEO Katie Mehnert.
She’s absolutely right. The direct manager is the face of
the company for an employee, and if that person isn’t giving people a reason to
believe good things are ahead, enthusiasm and optimism plummets.
“Pessimistic managers may not only plan for the worst, but
invite it,” says Jennifer Robison of Gallup. She calls upon the research of positive
psychology expert Margaret Greenberg who explains that without optimism in
managers, “there is no hope, no reason to stretch, and no belief that an
organization can rally to achieve its vision."
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Feature image credit: Image by Gerhard Gellinger from Pixabay.