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What every business owner needs to know about employee burnout

Burnout shows up in different ways in your business:

  • Your most reliable person starts making careless mistakes
  • Someone who used to handle difficult customers well now loses their temper
  • A worker who always stayed late is suddenly out the door at closing time

When this happens, it costs you money.

What burnout really is

Burnout is when someone becomes mentally and physically drained from ongoing work stress. It builds quietly without obvious signs until their work starts to suffer.

It doesn’t fix itself with a few days off. Left alone, it leads to long-term sick leave, lost productivity or losing a good person altogether.

A man looking demoralised in front of a laptop

Why it costs you money

Work takes longer: Jobs that used to be done quickly now drag on. Quality drops. Deadlines get missed. You end up picking up the pieces.

Good people leave: Finding and training someone new costs between half and double their yearly wages. Plus, you lose all that knowledge they’ve built up.

Customers notice: Exhausted staff can’t give the service that keeps people coming back. I’ve watched businesses lose loyal customers because burnt-out employees just couldn’t cope anymore.

What you can do

Have a proper chat: Ask about their workload and what’s making their job hard. Really listen – don’t jump in with solutions straight away.

Look at what they’re doing: Are they working longer hours than everyone else? Have they gradually taken on too much?

Take some pressure off: Push back non-urgent deadlines, or take some tasks back yourself, while you work out what’s going on.

Set some limits: If they’re answering the phone at 10pm or working on Sundays, that needs to stop.

Don’t wait until it’s too late

Dealing with burnout early takes a few conversations. Leaving it can cost you a brilliant employee and thousands in recruitment costs.

You can’t watch everyone all the time, but you know your people. If you’ve got someone helping you to manage, make sure they know what to look out for too.

Spotting burnout isn’t just HR’s job – it’s leadership. Get proper training for yourself and your managers on recognising the signs early. That’s how you keep the people who make your business work.

If you’re ready to upskill your managers, we can help.  

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