Employee Counselling
Employee Counselling
Employee Counselling
What is Counselling?
"HR initiatives only look at the organizational perspective, but the well being of the
workforce depends just as much on the individual's well being. And stress, from home or
from the routine of work affects not just the individual, but the workplace in turn," says
Dr Samir Parikh, consultant psychiatrist at Max Healthcare
1. Understanding self
2. Making impersonal decisions
3. Setting achievable goals which enhance growth
4. Planning in the present to bring about desired future
5. Effective solutions to personal and interpersonal problems.
6. Coping with difficult situations
7. Controlling self defeating emotions
8. Acquiring effective transaction skills.
9. Acquiring 'positive self-regard' and a sense of optimism about one's own ability to
satisfy one's basic needs.
When to counsel?
An employee should be counseled when he or she has personal problems that affect job
performance. Some signs of a troubled employee include
• Sudden change of behavior
• Preoccupation
• Irritability
• Increased accidents
• Increased fatigue
• Excessive drinking
• Reduced production
• Waste
• Difficulty in absorbing training
According to a recent study done in India – the study was done in a manufacturing
company in Mumbai
• Majority of the employees of the company (61% of the sample) were unaware of the
concept of Employee Counselling. Those employees who had a partially correct idea (25
% of the sample) about employee counseling knew that it was related to helping an
employee in distress, advising, creating self-awareness and personality development. The
remaining 14 % had an incorrect understanding about the concept.
• After the researcher had explained what employee counselling was all about, 69 % of
the sample agreed that there was a (perceived) need for employee counseling in the
company. The reasons were many, most common ones being to assist employees solve
their personal and/or work related problems and to improve the employee relationships
and overall culture of the workplace. Among the 31 % who were of the viewpoint that
employee counseling as an institutionalized process was not needed in the company, 57
% of this group felt that the company had a family culture and the informal relationships
between the employees could be leveraged upon.
• Only 22 % of the sample disagreed on the importance of employee counseling as a part
of HR –systems while 78 % of the employees felt that counseling is an important HR
function.
• 83 % of the employees were unaware of the companies practicing Employee
Counselling in India (this could also be because the sample was a mix of managerial
employees, staff level and workers)
The research results indicate that majority of the sample under study responded positively
to the hypothesis i.e. a need for Employee Counselling was felt and that it would benefit
the organization. However, the awareness about the concept of counselling and employee
counselling, particularly so was found to be exceptionally low.