Psychological Safety in Today’s Global Workforce

Workplace Options (WPO) Debuts Data-Driven Study Across 9 Nations; Explores Workplace Issues, Need for Inclusive Leadership, and Renewed Commitment to Human-Centered Wellbeing

RALEIGH, N.C., April 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Amid mounting pressures and unprecedented challenges across the globe, psychologically safe workplaces have become a necessity for building organizational resilience and sustainable success. Leaders at every level recognize that they need to cultivate cultures of trust, openness, and inclusivity, where every voice is heard, valued, and respected.

The financial consequences are straightforward: Psychological safety is the lynchpin of employee engagement and the heart of bottom-line business results. The benefits range from talent retention and enhanced innovation to better customer service and stronger brand value.

Data Directly from Employees – Not Surveys or Opinions
As the largest independent provider of customized and localized wellbeing services, with more than 116,000 clients serving 79 million people, Workplace Options (WPO) has deep insight on global psychological safety, derived from data via the human-to-human counseling our clinical team conducted with in nine countries: Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Mexico, United Kingdom, and the United States.

The findings comprise the “WPO Psychological Safety Study: Global Context for Organizational Success,” a website and multimedia content hub that presents information on how psychological safety affects employees in different countries. The site includes multimedia resources, white papers, videos, articles, infographics, and other information on the global significance of psychological safety.

The “WPO Psychological Safety Study: Global Context for Organizational Success” can be accessed here: Psychological Safety.

“A culture built on psychological safety has immense value. Deep-rooted employee engagement leads to greater creativity, innovation, and an environment where people can be their authentic self in every aspect of their life,” said Alan King, President and CEO, Workplace Options. “The results from this study will help leaders and organizations make a transformative difference in people’s lives by building resilient cultures focused on wellbeing.”

Study Results – Comparing and Contrasting Workplace Concerns Across Countries
Individual country information has been derived from clinician engagement with customers, providing insight into workplace symptoms manifest in the employee’s emotions, cognitions, and attitudes toward work. These include: workplace stress, anxiety/panic, low mood, job performance, conflict/tension with manager, lack of recognition, and others.

Leaders can utilize the data to understand the challenges their employees face. For example, in Australia, “lack of recognition” is the top issue on employees’ minds. In contrast, employees in India identify “conflict/tension at work with manager” as their foremost issue. A company with operations in these two nations/regions can utilize the study results to gain deeper insight into strategies and tactics that will build psychological safety and organizational resilience.

Country Workplace Concern (By Prevalence)
Australia Lack of recognition, Work-life balance, Job performance
Canada Concerns with daily work activities, Job performance, Conflict of values/ethical climate in the company, Conflict/tension at work with manager
China Concerns with daily work activities, Lack of recognition, Lack of professional development
France Lack of professional development, Job performance, Concerns with daily work activities
Germany Work-life balance, Job performance, Conflict/tension at work with manager, Concerns with daily work activities
India Conflict/tension at work with manager, Job performance, Work-life balance, Lack of professional development, Concerns with daily work activities
Mexico Job performance, Concerns with daily work activities, Lack of recognition, Conflict/tension at work with manager
United Kingdom Lack of recognition, Work-life balance, Concerns with daily work activities
United States Work-life balance, Job performance, Conflict/tension at work with manager


The Value of Psychological Safety

Given the constantly shifting global business environment, leaders must create workplaces centered on psychological safety, which is a cornerstone of inclusive leadership. Teams that feel psychologically safe are more innovative, productive, and resilient in the face of adversity.

“As part of an overall corporate wellbeing strategy on a global scale, it is important to create a framework that allows the cultures and practices to be considered and recognized at the local level,” said Mary Ellen Gornick, WPO Consulting Group Founding Partner. “The study gives leaders the information they need to create inclusive cultures in the locations where they have operations. But they should also keep in mind that variances might exist in how strategies are implemented at the country level.”

Benefits of psychological safety include:
– Deeper employee engagement: Greater creativity, innovation, and development of new products, services, and solutions.
– Improved Team Performance: Open communication, collaboration, and constructive feedback within teams.
– Increased Employee Engagement and Retention: Engaged, motivated, and committed to their roles and the organization leads to higher levels of job satisfaction, lower turnover rates, and greater retention of top talent.
– Enhanced Problem-Solving and Decision-Making: Open dialogue and the exploration of diverse viewpoints leads to more effective problem-solving and decision-making processes.
– Greater Employee Well-Being: Creates a supportive environment where individuals feel valued, respected, and cared for, resulting in lower levels of stress, anxiety, burnout, and promotes holistic health and wellness.
– Enhanced Organizational Resilience: Better equipped to navigate change, uncertainty, and adversity, employees feel empowered to adapt, innovate, and collaborate, creating agility and resilience in the face of external pressures.
– Improved Customer Satisfaction: Employees who feel supported and empowered are more likely to engage with customers in a positive and empathetic manner, leading to higher levels of customer satisfaction and loyalty.

About the Data
Workplace symptoms are the ways in which workplace stressors or uncomfortable working conditions manifest in the employee’s emotions, cognition, and attitudes toward work. Because employees contact WPO when they are under stress or need help, the company is in a unique position to observe the kinds of workplace issues and challenges that employees face.

The details with individual employees are confidential and are recorded in secure case notes to facilitate ongoing support. WPO also captures data in more quantifiable formats and report on these in aggregate (without compromising participant confidentiality) to help our customer organizations understand employee needs and recognize potential risks at the organization and location level.

We have limited our consideration to those countries where the sample size – the number of cases with work-related issues and symptoms – is sufficient to make variations in the data statistically significant.

ABOUT WORKPLACE OPTIONS
Founded in 1982, Workplace Options (WPO) is the largest independent provider of holistic wellbeing solutions. Through customized programs, and a comprehensive global network of credentialed providers and professionals, WPO supports individuals to become healthier, happier, and more productive both personally and professionally. Trusted by 56 percent of Fortune 500 companies, WPO delivers high-quality care digitally and in-person to more than 79 million people across 116,000 organizations in more than 200 countries and territories.

Contact:
Bob Batchelor, Director, Public Relations and Publications
Bob.Batchelor@workplaceoptions.com

Jennifer Dart, Corporate Communications Manager
Jennifer.Dart@workplaceoptions.com

A video accompanying this announcement is available at: https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/cc6d9ccb-51a0-4dcd-9354-3428d0ed00f0

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e2Companies Identifies Global Power Leader Cummins Inc. as Strategic Supplier for the R3Di® System

Supply Chain Expansion focused on Product Performance and Sustained Growth

BONITA SPRINGS, Fla., April 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — e2Companies, a leading provider of data-driven solutions for grid modernization, is pleased to name Cummins Inc. CMI as an official supplier for the R3Di® System. This agreement provides e2Companies access to Cummins Inc. industry-leading generator sets that deliver exceptional power with high electrical efficiency.

“We continue to expand our supplier network with one goal in mind: top-notch performance,” said James Richmond, CEO and President at e2Companies. “Our agreement with Cummins Inc. reflects this commitment since they have set the benchmark for reliability with power generation. This allows us to uphold these standards while keeping up with increasing demand across global markets.”

“We are excited with the opportunity to supply our generator sets to the R3Di® System, a power generation solution that will provide seamless resiliency and reliability to customers” said Lucio Kroll, Managing Director of Microgrids at Cummins.

Cummins Inc. generator sets will be paired with the R3Di® System’s Lithium Iron Phosphate (LiFePO4) battery energy storage and continuous performance monitoring (Grove365) to deliver stable and conditioned power independent of grid issues. Cummins Inc. joins an expanding supplier network for e2Companies that includes Nuvation Energy, EPC Power, MSI Tec, and ABB Ltd.

About e2Companies

e2Companies is the first vertically integrated Virtual Utility® for power generation, distribution, and energy economics in the marketplace. e2Companies’ patented technology, the R3Di® System, provides a synthetic utility BUS with inertia for continuous on-site power and seamless resiliency, independent of grid conditions. The R3Di® System is continuously monitored by the Grove365 to optimize resources, track ESG targets, and unlock new revenue opportunities for customers.

e2Companies officially entered into a merger agreement with Minim, Inc. MINM on March 12, 2024, to create a NASDAQ-listed, comprehensive products and services company focused developing proprietary solutions for Grid 3.0, Autonomous Grid Stability.

To learn more about e2Companies visit www.e2companies.com.

About Cummins Inc.

Cummins Inc., a global power leader, is a corporation of complementary business segments that design, manufacture, distribute and service a broad portfolio of power solutions. The company’s products include diesel, natural gas, electric and hybrid powertrains and powertrain-related components including filtration, aftertreatment, turbochargers, fuel systems, controls systems, air handling systems, automated transmissions, axles, drivelines, brakes, suspension systems, electric power generation systems, batteries, electrified power systems, electric powertrains, hydrogen production and fuel cell products.

See how Cummins is powering a world that’s always on by accessing news releases and more information at www.cummins.com.

Media Contact: marketing@e2companies.com

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Fairtrade Africa launches project to combat depletion of vegetative cover


The Ghana Agroforestry for Impact (GAIM) Project has been launched at Goaso in the Ahafo Region to contribute to the improvement in livelihoods and climate change resilience through agro ecological transition of cocoa farms.

The three-year project, being implemented by Fairtrade Africa, in partnership with Max Havelaar France and the French Development Agency, will help improve livelihoods and climate resilience of cocoa farms.

It would focus on three main areas; strengthening Fairtrade certified cocoa cooperatives to support farmers in the agro ecological transition, contributing to the ecological intensification of smallholder cocoa production systems, and improving and diversifying cocoa farmers’ income and livelihoods.

The project would be implemented in the Asunafo North Municipality and Asunafo South District of the Ahafo Region to profit 1,200 Farmers and households from 20 communities.

Three Fairtrade certified cooperatives to benefit are the Asunafo North Municipal Cooperative Cocoa Farmers Union
, Kukuom Cooperative Cocoa Farmers and Marketing Union, and Kuapa Kokoo Farmers Union.

A statement signed by Madam Fanny Nana Ampon, Communications Coordinator for the DONUTS Programme at Fairtrade Africa, said Ghana, the second largest cocoa producer in the world, faced challenges of deforestation, increasing environmental degradation, aging farmers, climate change and pest and diseases.

Climate change had an impact on cocoa production leading to reduced yield, tree mortality, pest and diseases, it said.

Since agriculture production in Ghana, including cocoa, was largely dependent on rain fed agriculture, the over reliance on cocoa as the main source of income for the farming households had become unsustainable as most farmers suffered during the lean seasons, the statement said.

The GAIM project would, therefore, help provide tools to farmers to fight against the adverse effects of climate change, reduce their dependence on the sole commodity of cocoa, and revitalise ageing cocoa farms through Dynamic A
groforestry Techniques (DAF) to ensure their sustainability.

The GAIM project would strongly promote women in leadership and the involvement of the youth in cocoa farming through the Women’s School of Leadership and youth modules under the GAIM.

Meanwhile, Mr Yaw Osei-Boahen, the Municipal Chief Executive, Asunafo North Assembly, in a speech read on his behalf at the launch of the project, said Ghana was blessed with natural resources and minerals but they had been over exploited.

The nation had to constantly work towards restoring the natural endowment to sustain her ecological vegetation.

The MCE called on all to embrace the GAIM project and apply multi-dimensional approaches to combat the fast depletion of the country’s vegetation cover.

That would also help to promote the cultivation of cocoa plantation with mix cropping to offer farmers alternative livelihood sources.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Graphic Communications strategising to recapitalise operations


The Management of the Graphic Communications Group Limited (GCGL) is strategising on how to recapitalise the operations of the Company.

At a staff meeting Thursday morning, the Management said the Company was not making enough money to meet its commitments, hence the need to engage a transactional advisor for options, including Initial Public Offering (IPO).

An IPO means that a company’s ownership is transitioning from private ownership to public ownership. For that reason, the IPO process is sometimes referred to as ‘going public’.

It is also said to be the first step you take on the stock exchange, floating your shares and calling for bidders.

The Management said the Government, the sole shareholder of the Company, wanted to make it ‘liquid’ and more relevant thus the options, a source told the Ghana News Agency (GNA).

It said the Company needed advice from the Attorney General to proceed with the strategic plans and a possible listing on the Ghana Stock Exchange.

The staff were told that the Company
would go through a strategic review plan, first, with the Digital Unit.

The deadline for the review spans months, the GNA was told.

Some workers of the Company complained of unpaid salaries, pension contributions in arrears, and unresolved end-of-service benefits for retired staff, with many leaving the meeting unhappy with developments.

The Company, known for producing the renowned Graphic, Mirror, Graphic Sports and Junior Graphic newspapers, is noted for its longstanding presence as one of the nation’s foremost media outlets.

Graphic Communications Group Ltd (GCGL) was established in the Gold Coast as a private business in 1950 by the Daily Mirror Group of Britain.

At that time, the Company was named the West African Graphic Company Limited.

Graphic launched its first newspaper, the Daily Graphic, on 2nd October 1950.

In 1964 the Mirror Group, the owners of the Company, sold it to the Ghana government for £6,600.

According to the founder of the company, Mr Cecil King, in his memoirs, they sold the
company to the government ‘not because of political difficulties but because the incompetence of the exchange and import control system was gradually bringing us to a halt.’

After acquiring the Company, the government changed the name from Ghana Graphic Company to Graphic Corporation, the following year, 1965.

But it was in 1971 that a legislative instrument, Graphic Corporation Instrument 1971, LI 709, was passed to incorporate the company as a statutory corporation in compliance with the Statutory Corporations Act, 1964 (Act 232).

Source: Ghana News Agency

Seventy fire outbreaks recorded during Easter holidays-GNFS


A total of 70 fire outbreaks were recorded across the country during the Easter festivities as against 61within the same period the previous year, the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS) has disclosed.

The incidents recorded from March 29 to April 1st resulted in the death of three persons and two injuries.

The fires, recorded from Good Friday to Easter Monday were domestic, electrical, vehicular, bush, commercial, industrial, institutional fires.

Assistant Chief Fire Officer Grade I (ACFO) Timothy Osafo-Affum, the Head of Public Relations of the GNFS, disclosed this to the Ghana News Agency in Accra.

He said there was a slight increase in bushfires due to the extended dry season as well as vehicular fires because of the transportation activities during the period.

He said fire management was a shared responsibility and urged the public to play their respective roles to drive down the incidents of fire and destruction.

‘Should we take all the precaution necessary, and the emergency still occurs, we shoul
d not hesitate to call the Fire Service,’ he added.

ACFO Osafo-Affum urged the public to always remember to switch off their electrical gadgets and unplug them when leaving the house or workplaces.

‘Do not forget to call the Fire Service numbers 192 and 112 during an emergency,’ he added.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Devise ways to create access to funding for Small Scale Miners


Dr Steve Manteaw, Workstream Technical Advisor, UK-Ghana Gold Programme, says there is a need to devise ways to create access to funding for Small Scale Miners in Ghana.

He said Ghana was Africa’s leading producer of gold and that looking at the national production, a substantial portion of about 35 to 40 per cent was contributed by the Small-Scale Mining Sector but their contribution to the mining sector revenue was less than 2 per cent.

Dr Manteaw said this during the Launch of the Ghana National Association of Small-Scale Miners’ (GNASSM) Documentary and Policy Brief on Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM) Reforms Research in Ghana.

The study was commissioned by the Third World Network – Africa (TWN-Africa), under the Power of Voices Partnerships (PvP) in Fair4All project in Ghana with funding from the Dutch Foreign Affairs Ministry.

PvP intended to explore the impact and challenges of post – the 2017 ASM Reform effort to assess the gaps and weaknesses within the current regulatory frameworks governi
ng the ASGM sector in Ghana and outline key reforms necessary to enhance regulatory quality.

The event was on the theme: ‘Improving ASM Policies, Regulations and Practices based on Lessons Learnt from Recent State Interventions in the SM Sector.’

Dr Manteaw said this raised serious concerns about smuggling because as a country ‘we had not invested in the Small-Scale Mining Sector, and that we had created opportunities for some foreigners to finance small scale mining operations.’

‘So, our Small-Scale Miners take out the gold and give it to the financiers, who usually will smuggle the gold and avoid the payment of taxes to the state,’ he added.

Dr Manteaw said with the export of gold, the assay laboratory at the Kotoka International Airport put up by the Precious Minerals Marketing Company (PMMC) was the only checkpoint, allowing for smuggling of gold through other borders.

He called for support for PMMC to also be present at various border posts to set up assay laboratories to check the value of gold bei
ng exported for the payment of required taxes.

Mr Godwin Amarh, General Secretary, GNASSM, said the study revealed that ASM had grown in scale, complexity, and informality in Ghana.

He said while a substantial part of operators in the sector was driven by poverty, the sector had also seen an unfettered intrusion of ‘big capital’ foreign investors who had conspired with the local elite to take advantage of regulatory lapses in the sector to engage in illegal acts.

Mr Amarh said the biggest source of informality and illegality in Ghana’s ASM sector was the weak enforcement of regulations, which resulted from a combination of factors, including inadequate capacity of regulatory institutions, and political interference, among others.

He said the study revealed that the ASM licensing process remained one of the most important regulatory challenges in Ghana’s ASM sector, adding that not only was the process complex but also expensive and generally out of reach for most of the operators in the sector.

The Gener
al Secretary called for the abandoning of the military approach to reforming the sector, stating that ‘it must be clear that the militaristic approach to dealing with illegal mining does not work and must be completely avoided as a strategy for regularising the ASM system.’

He said instead of the military approach there should be more investment in strengthening the regulatory capacity of the relevant state institutions and grant them sufficient operational autonomy.

Mr Amarh said the State must prioritise and invest heavily in creating designated mining zones for ASM operators, and that this would require committed capacity building for the Geological Survey Department.

‘To address the compounding effects of the ASM sector on the country’s major hydrological resources, the state must begin to contemplate abolishing alluvial mining as a matter of general mining policy,’ the General Secretary added.

Source: Ghana News Agency