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Managing Stress. Overview. Definition of Stress Elements of Stress Reactions to Stress Defense Mechanisms Coping Strategies Time Management Exercise. Definition. An environment filled with reinforcing or opposing forces that either stimulate or inhibit performance. Effects of Stress.
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Overview • Definition of Stress • Elements of Stress • Reactions to Stress • Defense Mechanisms • Coping Strategies • Time Management • Exercise
Definition An environment filled with reinforcing or opposing forces that either stimulate or inhibit performance
Effects of Stress • Takes $500 billion from economy yearly • Adversely affects health of half the adult population • Costs $550 million in workdays lost each year • Leads to 40% of U.S. worker turnover • Is a factor in 60-80% job accidents
Elements of Stress • A balance or imbalance of: • Driving Forces (stressors) • Restraining Forces (resiliency)
Elements of Stress Current Level of Functioning Restraining Force A Driving Force A Driving Force B Restraining Force B Restraining Force C Driving Force C Driving Force D Restraining Force D Modified from Lewin’s Force Field
Elements of Stress • Driving Forces (Stressors) • Time: too much in too little time • Encounters: interpersonal issues • Situation (environmental): long hours/changes • Anticipatory: expected tense climate
Elements of Stress • Restraining Forces (Resiliency) • Physiological: cardiovascular conditioning & dietary control • Psychological: control, commitment, challenge develops “hardiness” • Social: friendships, mentor relationships, cohesive work teams
Reactions to Stress • General Reactions • Alarm • Resistance • Exhaustion
Reactions to Stress • Managerial Reactions • Narrow View (tunnel vision) • Intolerant & Demanding • Fixate on Single Approach • Adopt a Crisis Mentality • Oversimplify Issues • Consult Others Less Often • Rely on Old Habits • Less Creative Problem Solving Stress not only affects employees and followers but get in the way of effective management and leadership
Stress Model Experiencing Stress • Stressors • Anticipatory • Encounter • Time • Situational • Reactions • Physiological • Psychological • Resiliency • Physical • Psychological • Social
Defense Mechanisms • Aggression - attack the stressor • Regression - childish • Repression - denial • Withdrawal - attention gap/escape • Fixation – pointless persistence
Coping Strategies • Enactive – creating non-stress environment • Proactive – increasing resiliency • Reactive – short-term Managing Stress Enactive Strategies Proactive Strategies Reactive Strategies Purpose Eliminate Stressors Develop resiliency strategies Learn temporary coping mechanisms Effects Approach Permanent Long Term Short Term Time Enactive Proactive Reactive Long Time Moderate Time Immediate
Time Management • Long-term – Effective • Important vs. Urgent • Focus on results • Short-term – Efficient • Calendars, to do lists, planning tools • Just say “no” • Eliminate major time stressors (effective) use the time you have to focus on important and urgent things (efficiency)
Time Management • Efficient Techniques • Hold routine day-end meetings • Hold short stand-up meetings • Set meeting time deadlines • Cancel light-agenda meetings • Set agenda • Stick to it • Keep track of time • Start meetings on time
Time Management • Efficient Techniques • Prepare minutes, follow up on decisions • Insist followers suggest solutions • Meet visitors in office doorway • Visit subordinates’ office for brief meetings • Don’t over-schedule your day • Have someone else take calls, scan email • Have place to work uninterrupted • Do something definitive w/ every piece of paper
Time Management • Efficient Techniques • Keep work area clean • Delegate work • Identify amount of effort • Give others credit for success
Summary • Definition of Stress • Elements of Stress • Reactions to Stress • Defense Mechanisms • Coping Strategies • Time Management • Exercise