Pressure growing on line manager wellbeing

43% of line managers in UK businesses with more than 250 employees are managing teams in excess of 10 people; with 5% of those managing 50+ people, according to new research from Legal & General Group Protection.

Overall, 25% of line managers said their team size had grown since before the pandemic.

The Legal & General Wellbeing at Work Barometer found that, at the other end of the scale, 34% of line managers had teams of up to five people and 22% of team sizes fell with the range of six to 10 people.

When line managers were asked what would most improve their wellbeing, in first place came ‘more flexible working options’ (41%), followed by ‘recognition of work well done – informal and/or formal’ (37%) then ‘more flexible employee benefits, suited to my needs’ (35%).

Line manager respondents also said the top way in which they could be helped to improve the wellbeing support they provided to their teams was ‘recognition from the top that managers are employees and have wellbeing needs too’ (41%) followed by ‘clear direction from the top on company purpose and values and how wellbeing fits in’ (38%).

Meanwhile, team members said the top three ways in which an employer could help with their wellbeing in the workplace were: ‘offer me flexible working arrangements’ (35%); ‘talk more openly as an organisation about mental health and the need for wellbeing for all’ (32%); and ‘lead from the top when it comes to positive wellbeing practices’ (31%).

Legal & General says that insurers and intermediaries are well placed to support line manager wellbeing. The provider’s group income protection programme includes, for example:

Vanessa Sallows, claims & governance director of Legal & General Group Protection, said: “It’s broadly agreed that line managers are the glue that keeps an organisation running. Common-sense dictates that the larger and more fragmented teams become, the harder it is for the line manager to monitor and meet everyone’s needs, keep motivating the team, and importantly avoid neglecting their own wellbeing. If this fine balance becomes destabilised, there is a knock-on effect on everyone involved, including across recruitment, retention and productivity.

“Group risk intermediaries and insurers are well placed to support line manager wellbeing, in turn helping them give their best to their teams. Achieving this requires looking at group income protection differently, getting into all the aspects of support provided and, in particular, where there is multidisciplinary expertise that can help them work through what can be complex issues in terms of workforce wellbeing.

“This starts with management support in the shape of help to carry out stress risk assessments and it extends to direct access to vocational clinical specialists where managers might have specific concerns about an employee. Also, wellbeing training and toolkits, in addition to personalised care pathways will help. As industry body GRiD recently said, it would be wise for employers to review their wellbeing provision against GIP embedded services.”

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