The Globe and Mail and Morneau Shepell created the Employee Recommended Workplace Award to honour companies that put the health and total well-being of their employees first. Register for the 2020 Employee Recommended Workplace Award at: employeerecommended.com.

Read about the 2019 winners of the award and watch a video from the winners here. You can also purchase the benchmark report that outlines findings from 2018 at this link.

If your first thought as you prepare for another day of work is not positive, is it because you don’t enjoy working with or don’t trust your direct manager? Perhaps it’s not uncommon for you to feel unwell just thinking about going to work, as the thought of dealing with your direct manager once again upsets your stomach.

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A direct manager can have a positive or negative influence on an employee’s resiliency and mental health. Interacting with a direct manager who’s controlling and negative can lead to stress, but dealing with one who is positive, encouraging and supportive can be good for employees’ mental health.

This micro skill exercise focuses on how our relationship with our direct manager – one of the most important we have in the workplace – can be influenced by our actions.

Awareness

Since most of us spend half of our total waking hours at work, we should be mindful of how experiences with a direct manager may be impacting our mental health, whether positively or negatively. These experiences accumulate and can impact our thinking, feeling and behaviour.

If you’re concerned about your relationship with your direct manager, you may use the direct manager experience quick screen listed below to objectively self-evaluate it. Using a scale of one (not true) to five (very true), rate each statement on your experience over the past few months. The closer your total score is to 30, the more likely you have a positive, healthy and safe relationship with your direct manager.

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  1. I trust my direct manager.
  2. I feel safe interacting with my direct manager.
  3. I know my direct manager appreciates my work.
  4. I believe my direct manager respects my abilities.
  5. My direct manager is an excellent coach and teacher.
  6. I find my direct manager’s feedback helpful.

Now write out three points that best describe how you feel about your direct manager.

Accountability

The way to maintain or improve a relationship with a direct manager is to be mindful not only of their behaviour, but also of your own.

It takes two willing people to develop a healthy and positive relationship. If there are things you know are a problem or distraction, take ownership of what you can control and stop any behaviours that you believe are creating strain.

Action

You don’t have to accept that your relationship with your direct manager is not where you want it to be; you can act to improve it. Stop avoiding the problem and look for an opportunity to talk about your concerns.

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Bill Howatt is the chief of research for work force productivity at the Conference Board of Canada and a co-creator of the Employee Recommended Workplace Award.

You can find other stories like these at tgam.ca/workplaceaward.

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