Workplace stress has reached crisis levels. Seventy-seven percent of workers reported experiencing work-related stress in the prior month, with 57% indicating negative impacts from that stress, according to the American Psychological Association's 2023 Work in America Survey.
Behind these statistics are HR professionals struggling to retain talent, managers burning out while trying to support their teams, and employees whose work stress follows them home, affecting sleep, relationships, and physical health.
The scale of workplace stress extends far beyond what most organizations realize. Common sources include:
But workplace stress isn't simply an inevitable byproduct of modern work. It's largely a symptom of how organizations are managed and how well they support their people.
The distinction matters because it means stress is addressable. When companies understand what's driving stress and how it manifests in their workforce, they can take meaningful action to reduce it.
Not all workplace stress is created equal, and not all of it is harmful.
Good stress, sometimes called "eustress," can be motivating. Deadlines that push teams to focus, goals that inspire creative solutions, and challenges that build new skills all fall into this category. The question isn't whether stress exists in the workplace. It's whether that stress helps people grow or leaves them overwhelmed.
The difference comes down to how the body responds. Stress becomes problematic when the nervous system's reaction shifts from helpful to harmful.
Think of an employee who receives critical feedback from their supervisor. An adaptive response might involve scheduling time to discuss the concerns and develop an improvement plan. A maladaptive response might look like avoiding the supervisor entirely, working late into the night fueled by anxiety, or becoming defensive and argumentative.
These reactions aren't character flaws. They're the body's attempt to protect itself. When stress becomes overwhelming, the nervous system kicks into what's known as fight, flight, or freeze mode. In the workplace, these responses show up in distinct ways:
The problem with these stress responses is that they're designed for short-term survival, not sustained performance. When your body perceives a threat (even if that threat is an overflowing inbox or an unrealistic deadline) it releases chemicals meant to help you react quickly. Your heart rate increases, certain parts of your brain activate, and others temporarily shut down.
This response works well for genuine emergencies. It works terribly for the chronic, low-grade stress that characterizes many modern workplaces.
Understanding this physiology helps explain why stressed employees often struggle to think creatively, communicate effectively, or make sound decisions. Their bodies are operating in survival mode, prioritizing immediate reaction over thoughtful response.
The good news is that workplace stress is manageable when organizations take a comprehensive approach.
Research consistently shows that effective management practices and robust employee support systems make a measurable difference. This isn't just about employee wellbeing. Every dollar an organization spends on employee support resources sees a return in improved productivity and output. That return comes from reduced absenteeism, lower turnover, better decision-making, and improved performance.
Comprehensive employee support programs address stress at multiple levels. They provide immediate resources for employees experiencing crisis or acute stress, while also building longer-term resilience and coping skills.
These programs also support managers, who often carry the dual burden of managing their own stress while supporting their teams. When managers have access to consultation services and training, they're better equipped to recognize warning signs of burnout, have difficult conversations with empathy, and create psychologically safe environments where employees feel comfortable asking for help.
Perhaps most importantly, effective support programs reduce the stigma around mental health and stress management. When employees see their organization investing in comprehensive support, when leaders talk openly about utilizing these resources, and when colleagues feel safe discussing struggles, it shifts the entire workplace culture. Stress becomes something to address rather than something to hide.
Creating a truly supportive workplace requires more than offering a wellness app or hosting an occasional stress management workshop. HR leaders need a strategic approach that addresses the root causes of workplace stress while providing accessible resources for employees who need help.
Start by conducting honest assessments of your organization's stress points. Look at workload distribution, deadline practices, and communication patterns. Ask the tough questions: Are there bottlenecks that consistently create pressure? Do certain teams or roles experience disproportionate stress? Are expectations clear, or are employees left guessing what success looks like?
Once you've identified the sources of unnecessary stress, work systematically to address them. This might mean redistributing work, adjusting timelines, improving communication systems, or addressing toxic team dynamics.
Hold workshops and training sessions that help both employees and managers recognize their personal stress triggers and responses. When people understand how their bodies react to stress, they can intervene earlier and more effectively. These sessions should go beyond generic stress management tips to provide practical tools for the specific challenges your workforce faces.
Training should also help employees distinguish between adaptive and maladaptive coping strategies, giving them concrete alternatives when they notice themselves slipping into unproductive stress responses.
Create psychological safety by training leaders to respond to stress with empathy rather than judgment. Employees need to know they can raise concerns about workload, admit when they're struggling, or ask for accommodations without fear of retaliation or career consequences. This kind of safety doesn't happen automatically. It requires intentional culture-building and consistent modeling from leadership.
Provide access to professional support through a comprehensive Employee Assistance Program. The best programs go beyond traditional EAP models by combining face-to-face counseling, life coaching, and management consultation with crisis response services and organizational effectiveness consulting. This integrated approach ensures employees can access the right level of support for their specific needs, whether that's short-term counseling for acute stress or ongoing coaching to build resilience skills.
The challenge many organizations face is that their existing wellness initiatives aren't delivering results.
Research from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health shows that traditional interventions like stress management workshops and lifestyle programs, when used alone, have a limited impact on workplace stress because they do not address root causes in job design and organizational culture.
This doesn't mean these tools are worthless. It means they're insufficient when used in isolation.
Effective wellness initiatives share several characteristics:
HR leaders should regularly evaluate whether their wellness programs are actually reaching employees who need them most. Key questions to ask include:
These evaluation efforts should be ongoing, not annual. Regular pulse surveys, focus groups, and usage data can help HR teams adjust their approach based on what's actually working.
Even the best employee support program can't help if no one uses it.
The business case for comprehensive employee support programs is compelling.
Organizations see measurable improvements in retention, engagement, and productivity. Employees who feel supported are more likely to stay with their employer, recommend the organization to others, and go above and beyond in their roles.
But the return extends beyond metrics. Healthier, less stressed employees make better decisions. They collaborate more effectively. They bring creativity and energy to their work rather than just going through the motions. They show up as better colleagues, better managers, and better leaders.
For HR professionals, robust support programs also make the job easier.
When employees have access to professional resources for personal challenges, HR teams spend less time managing crises and more time on strategic initiatives. When managers are trained to handle stress-related concerns appropriately, fewer issues escalate to HR. When the organization demonstrates genuine commitment to employee wellbeing, it becomes easier to attract and retain top talent.
The stakes are too high to treat workplace stress as someone else's problem or something employees need to manage entirely on their own. Organizations that invest in comprehensive, thoughtful support systems create environments where people can genuinely thrive, and that benefits everyone.
When you partner with Ulliance, our Life Advisor Consultants are always just a phone call away to teach ways to enhance your work/life balance and increase your happiness. The Ulliance Life Advisor Employee Assistance Program can help employees and employers come closer to a state of total well-being.
Investing in the right EAP or Wellness Program to support your employees will help them and help you. Visit https://ulliance.com/ or call 866-648-8326.
The Ulliance Employee Assistance Program can address the
following issues:
• Stress about work or job performance
• Crisis in the workplace
• Conflict resolution at work or in one’s personal life
• Marital or relationship problems
• Child or elder care concerns
• Financial worries
• Mental health problems
• Alcohol/substance abuse
• Grief
• Interpersonal conflicts
• AND MORE!
References:
The Truth Behind Stress—And What It Means For The Workplace; Forbes Business Council; Melanie Boyack
https://www.forbes.com/councils/forbesbusinesscouncil/2024/05/07/the-truth-behind-stress-and-what-it-means-for-the-workplace/
2023 Work in America Survey: Workplaces as Engines of Psychological Health and Well-Being; American Psychological Association
https://www.apa.org/pubs/reports/work-in-america/2023-workplace-health-well-being
State of the Global Workplace: 2024 Report; Gallup
https://www.gallup.com/workplace/645758/state-of-the-global-workplace-2024-press-release.aspx
Workplace Stress; The American Institute of Stress
https://www.stress.org/workplace-stress/