Resilience : definition, traits, and key skills
Resilience refers to the ability of an individual to adapt when facing challenges and obstacles. The easier the individual is to adapt, the more he will be characterized as resilient.
Resilience refers to the ability of an individual to adapt when facing challenges and obstacles. The easier the individual is to adapt, the more he will be characterized as resilient.
The Casita model is a house that allows to represent resilience in visual form through its multiple facets.
Turnover describes the departures and arrivals of workers in a company. Above 15%, it harms the organization.
Discover the eNPS (Employee Net Promoter Score), the indicator to measure your employees’ satisfaction and their propensity to recommend your company.
The role of each worker has a decisive impact on the organization. Considering it contributes to the company’s growth and the well-being of workers.
Technostress comes from the excessive and permanent use of ICT. Discover its impact on workplace performance.
Neuroticism is a personality trait that leads the worker to see things in a more stressful and threatening way.
Job security is the situation where one enjoys a stable job without the imminent fear of losing it or undergoing a job change.
For resilient people, failures are opportunities to learn and improve.
Why and how to offer more autonomy to workers with flexible hours ? What are the advantages and disadvantages?
Digital detoxification : understanding its meaning and getting advice to disconnect and regain balance in our digital world.
Commuting generates stress, especially because of its unpredictability. Road hazards are major factors.
The concept of psychosocial risks (PSR) encompasses various factors likely to affect employees’ mental and physical health at work. In Belgium, the Law of 4 August 1996 on Well-being at Work highlights the importance of employee participation in their own well-being, thereby establishing a legal framework for the prevention and management of these risks. The SPF Emploi, Travail et Concertation sociale notes that this regulation is a mandatory requirement included in the Belgian Code on Well-being at Work.
Hyperconnectivity, characterized by constant availability to communication technologies, poses major challenges.
Managing the abundance of ICT information is a challenge. Supporting their use in companies improves employee well-being.