12 reasons why work from home burnout and Zoom fatigue are a lot more complex than you think

Have you come to dread yet another online meetings? Find out the 12 reasons why work from home burnout and Zoom fatigue are a lot more complex than you think.

Have you or your employees been feeling work-from-home burnout (and Zoom fatigue these past months, despite the supposed convenience of working from home and using video conferences to meet? 

Unfortunately, the vast majority of efforts to address work-from-home (WFH) burnout try to treat the symptoms without addressing the root causes. The fundamental root cause of WFH burnout stems from organizations adapting their existing ways of interacting in “office culture” to remote work.

To defeat WFH burnout, organizations need to understand the reality of the problems leading to WFH burnout to survive and thrive in our new world. Otherwise, using office-style culture to conduct virtual work is simply forcing a square peg into a round hole, leading many staff to burn out.

The 12 problems that lead to work-from-home burnout 

Combining my expertise in emotional and social intelligence with research on the specific problems of working from home during COVID, I’ve untangled these two concepts into a series of 12 factors.

1)Deprivation of our basic human need for meaning and purpose

Perhaps the biggest problem is that the vast majority of us don’t realize we aren’t simply experiencing work-from-home burnout. We’re deprived of the fulfillment of basic human needs of meaning and purpose that we get from work.

Our sense of self and identity, our narratives of ourselves and the sense of meaning-making we have in our lives, are tied to our work. That’s all severely disrupted by shifting to remote work. 

2) Deprivation of our basic human need for connection

Our work community offers a key source of fulfillment of the need for connection for many of us. Work-from-home cuts us off from much of our ability to connect effectively to our colleagues as human beings, rather than little squares on a screen.

3) Deprivation of building trust

In office settings, it’s easy to build trust through informal interactions. This building of trust doesn’t happen naturally in virtual settings. There’s a reason teams that start off virtual, but later meet in person at a company, work together substantially better after doing so.

By contrast, teams that shift from in-person settings to virtual ones gradually lose that sense of shared humanity and trust.

4) Deprivation of mentoring and informal professional development

A critical part of on-the-job learning stems from informal mentoring from senior colleagues. It also comes from the observational professional development you get from seeing how your colleagues do their jobs. Losing this mentoring has proven especially challenging for younger employees.

5) It’s not simply “Zoom fatigue” 

It’s a real experience, but it’s not about Zoom itself, or any other videoconference software. The big challenge stems from our intuitive expectations about virtual meetings bringing us energy through connecting to people, but failing to get our basic need for connection met.

In-person meetings, even if they’re strictly professional, still get us to connect on a human-to-human level. By contrast, our emotions just don’t process videoconference meetings as truly connecting us on a human-to-human gut level.  

6) Forcing a square peg into a round hole

Many companies try to replace the office culture glue of social and emotional connection through Zoom happy hours and similar activities that transpose in-person bonding events into virtual formats. Unfortunately, such activities don’t work well.

Similarly to other videoconferences, we have intuitively elevated expectations. We end up disappointed and frustrated by failing to have our needs met.

7) Lack of skills in virtual work technology tools

This problem leads to lowered productivity and frustrating experiences for those who need to collaborate. 

8) Lack of skills in effective virtual communication

It’s notoriously hard to communicate effectively even in-person. Effective communication becomes much more difficult when in-office teams become virtual teams. 

9) Lack of skills in effective virtual collaboration

There’s no natural way to have the needed casual interactions that are vital to effective collaboration and teamwork. Body language and voice tone are important to noticing brewing people problems, and virtual communication provides us fewer opportunities to notice such issues.

10) Lack of accountability

In-office environments allow for natural ways to hold employees accountable. Leaders can easily walk around the office, visually observing what’s going on and checking in with their direct reports on their projects.

The same applies to peer-to-peer accountability: it’s much easier to ignore an email with that question than someone stopping you in the hallway or standing in the doorway to your office. You’ll need to replace that accountability with a different structure for remote work.

11) Poor work-from-home environments

Some employees might have access to quiet spaces and stable internet connection, while others may not. Given the restrictions brought about by the pandemic, overhauling work spaces will take significant time and resources not available to many.  

12) Poor work-life boundaries

Ineffective separation of work and life stems from both employer and employee actions. In the long term, doing so causes lowered productivity, increased errors, and eventual burnout. 

Its time to make remote working the ‘new normal’

Work-from-home burnout and Zoom fatigue are much more complex than they appear. You need to implement a wholesale strategic shift to reframe your company culture and policies from the “emergency mode” of working from home to remote work being the new normal.  

Dr. Gleb Tsipursky is on a mission to protect leaders from dangerous judgment errors known as cognitive biases by developing the most effective decision-making strategies. 

A best-selling author, his new book is Never Go With Your Gut: How Pioneering Leaders Make the Best Decisions and Avoid Business Disasters.

Dr. Gleb Tsipursky is on a mission to protect leaders from dangerous judgment errors known as cognitive biases by developing the most effective decision-making strategies. 

A best-selling author, his new book is Never Go With Your Gut: How Pioneering Leaders Make the Best Decisions and Avoid Business Disasters.

His expertise comes from over 20 years of consulting,coaching, and speaking and training as the CEO of Disaster Avoidance Experts. It also comes from over 15 years in academia as a cognitive neuroscientist and behavioral economist with dozens of peer-reviewed articles published in academic journals.

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