How to have an energised team all year round.
1 September 2025
Need another break already?
With most of us heading back to school and work this week, you may be determined to hang on for as long as possible to that all-too fleeting feeling of being re-energised. By late September that summer break can feel like eons ago when we’ve been running at full tilt again for a few weeks, juggling all the urgent work that has to be done by yesterday and already feeling depleted. It’s a well-researched fact that work intensity has been steadily increasing over the past 2 decades.
So here are ten practical ways - that don’t require big budgets or renegotiating company policies - to help you and your team to keep your energy levels up month in, month out, so you’re not crawling on the floor with exhaustion between now and your next annual leave:
- Lighten the load. Stop doing work that isn’t adding value and worse still, sucks up too much time. Use my free Time ROI tool to identify in a low-risk way what you can safely delegate, do less often or ditch completely. You can do this exercise in 15 minutes on your own, or in 30 minutes with your team.
- Give time back. When your team has been putting in extra effort to hit a deadline or complete a big piece of work, let them work shorter hours over the following day(s). Maybe it’s an afternoon off, maybe it’s coming in late for a day or two; even a small gesture will be highly appreciated. If you’re a team member, ask your manager if you can do this.
- Hold a team ‘standback’ session. When you’re all working flat out, it’s hard to see the wood for the trees; you don’t have the headspace or perspective to reassess how you’re working together. In a 2 hour workshop you can identify what’s working well/less well and elicit ideas for improving collaboration and efficiency; it can be a really valuable opportunity to regroup, surface frustrations and proactively build on the positives. Here’s a sample agenda and consider using an external facilitator to get maximum benefit from your session (get in touch if you want to explore this).
- Buddy up. The higher the ‘substitutability’ of team members, the more flexible your resourcing can be, meaning you can easily re-distribute work if some individuals in your team are feeling overloaded. With buddying up, a second colleague informally shadows the lead colleague on a particular strand of work so they can quickly step in and support when needed.
- Organise social time. Not just after-hours but during the working day too. Spending time together not on tasks strengthens social bonds, a shared sense of community and the feeling of belonging, which in turn increases levels of motivation and engagement. Team coffees fika-style, a daily/weekly team game or competition, celebrating birthdays and other life milestones and finishing meetings 10 minutes early for some purely social chat are all effective, low-cost ways to do this.
- Pay attention to work handovers. When the handover of work to/from other teams doesn’t happen smoothly, this can result in an energy-sapping duplication of effort, inter-team friction, delays or all of these. Suggest a collaborative review with the other team manager or your counterpart and map out the ideal steps, timings and ‘what if’ scenarios. You’ll appreciate better any constraints you’re each facing and build transparency and mutual trust.
- Engage a time management coach. I know, I would say this being a time management expert and a coach, but as a manager or leader, your relationship with time has a fundamental impact on your team, the way they work and your collective performance. Managing your time more effectively has a positive outward ripple effect and senior leaders have told me that their time coaching was the most valuable investment they’d made in 2 years.
- Look afresh at who you’re rewarding and for what. Is it the people working long hours who are rewarded with stretch/higher profile opportunities, pay increases and promotions for putting in ‘discretionary effort’ and ‘going above and beyond’? If so, for healthier work norms focus instead on rewarding those who achieve their performance goals within normal working hours and without overworking.
- Just say yes. When it comes to flexibility, the small things matter alot. Say yes as much as possible to ad-hoc requests that help people manage their work and home lives in a sustainable way. Provided they’re still delivering what’s expected of them, it’s a win-win. If you can’t say yes, what could you propose/explore together as an alternative?
- Lead the change. Whether you’re a manager or leader or not, we all have our own sphere of influence. By visibly role-modelling positive time habits – your own energy levels, carving out thinking time, managing your work boundaries, investing in social bonds etc – you’re showing others that you don’t have to blindly follow unhealthy work norms and that there is a better way.
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How often do you get the luxury of extended, undisturbed time? Is there a quiet space or magical place you retreat to? I’m writing this in a silent house, up early before the rest of the family. All I can hear is the scratching of my ink pen on the paper and the cooing and chirruping of garden birds outside my window. No voices, machines, traffic, notifications or interruptions. I can hear myself think, there’s no-one calling for my attention and the jobs can wait. But at any minute, this brief lull will crumble. It's hard to get extended, undisturbed time. Many of us are spending less time in our home offices now more organisations have encouraged – or mandated – more in-office working. The majority of people still work a structured hybrid patterns, but likely 1-2 days per week at most at home. Not that home-working is typically quieter – diaries are still largely stuff with calls, messaging channels ping continously and the home distractions of pets demanding attention, chatty home-working partners, texts from teenagers at school or – my pet peeve – couriers knocking on the door, dropping the parcel outside and driving straight off while I’m halfway down the stairs thinking I’m needed. Our focus time is bounded by each interruption or intrusion into our attention. Some people I know say they need background noise to help them concentrate. At least 2 CEO’s I’ve spoken to prefer doing calls and emails in cafés and their office’s buzzy atrium where the constant hum of voices and hissing and thumping of coffee macines provide a cloack of anonymity around even sensitive conversations. Whatever your preference environment-wise, it turns out that noisy ones are actually damaging to our health; anything above the maximum recommended noise level of 53 decibels is described as a ‘ silent killer ’. A quiet library falls under this, your average office above it. Quiet time isn’t just about the decibel level, it’s also about freedom from distraction and interruptions. As I was telling over 200 sixth-form students at an Enterprise and Innovation conference a week ago, our brains prefer to focus on one task at a time and maintain an extended attention set – to get into ‘flow’, in other words. In terms of cognitive functioning, that’s when we are at peak performance. Every time our attention is tugged away from the task at hand, research has shown that it takes us over 2 seconds to reorient back to the task at hand. Known as the toggling tax, this happens on average up to 1,200 times per day, costing us 4 hours a week or 5 full weeks per year of lost attention, wasted time and reduced productivity. Ouch. So there’s a strong case for designing work environments that allow people to concentrate in quiet spaces and office design today is increasingly factoring this in. Co-working hubs and corporate offices now offer quiet zones where calls and conversations are not permitted; individual work spaces that look like padded, high-wall cubicles block out the rustling or key board tapping of workers either side; and individual sound-proofed call booths that keep noise leakage to a minimum. I’ve learnt the hard way to be more selfish with my quiet time when I’m writing, silencing notifications on my phone, putting noise cancelling headphones on and shutting the door to our companionable, aka needy, cat (and my companionable but not needy husband). I’ve been reminded this week of the power of quiet time and a restorative environment: I was fortunate to spend 2 nights at the UK’s only privately-owned national nature reserve in a luxury eco-cabin (hot shower and log burner included) overlooking 3,300 acres of marshland, big skies and an incredible array of wildlife. Having discovered it last year, I’d booked myself in again as a reward for getting to the ¾ milestone in writing People Glue and an incentive to crack on with the last 12,500 words as the manuscript deadline looms. In the magical peace and quiet, I wrote close to 3,000 words there – my average weekly output in just over a day – in long, undisturbed stretches punctuated only by my daily run, short walks to clear my head and the arrival of delicious dinners brought to my door. The biggest distraction was the wildlife outside the cabin’s huge glass windows: a mesmerisingly beautiful, shadowy-eyed short-eared owl did its utmost to persuade me to look up from my writing with its swooping, gliding and head-swivelling display. Hares bounded around playfully as buzzards, marsh- and hen-harriers patrolled hungrily overhead. A tiny wren skipped across my patio, tapping its beak on the glass doors, tail cocked up jauntily. No school runs, no pets to feed, no work calls, no washing macines to load, not unattended chores in sight nagging me reproachfully - I am very grateful to my wonderful husband for holding the fort at home so I could steal away. Perhaps you would prefer the cosmopolitan buzz of a city or a sunlounger beside a gleaming hotel pool - I wouldn’t say no to either at a different time. But soaking up this solitude, my time felt unbounded and that felt the biggest luxury of all. It has reminded me of the importance of consciously planned quiet time, ideally somewhere magical, for our wellbeing, our creativity and the quality of our thinking. I’m just wondering how soon I can book a return visit….

How to encourage this in a way that works for your business. There is a real and urgent need to address the creeping norm of employees working all hours, being contactable and available all the time. But Labour’s recent abandoning of a legal ‘right to disconnect’ in favour of a voluntary code of practice is probably the right move, in my humble opinion. Here are 5 reasons why, 5 ways to make switching off a win/win for you and your organisation, and 5 positive actions to put into practice now. Why legislation is too blunt a tool: Heavy-handed legislation will probably antagonise businesses, not secure their support. There's more to do first to spotlight organisations that are managing the boundaries well between working & non-working time well and proving the business benefits. It’s too early to say confidently how well similar legislation has worked abroad. Australia only adopted this last month; the longer-standing fine-based approach in France and Portugal isn't proven as an effective deterrent. Human-centred organisations are probably already paying attention to this, being creative about work boundaries and using their approach to enhance their employer brand. They'll be the ones who proactively adopt the code of practice and make it genuinely part of ‘the way we work here’ - and they'll win at attracting and retaining talented people longer-term as a result. ‘But clients will go elsewhere’. This is the defence I often hear in rejection of proposals like the right to disconnect. No, client won't IF you engage them in the change and show them that it means they get to access your sharpest minds working at their best,. When organisations see their early-adopter competitors living the code and still winning & keeping desirable clients - and nabbing theirs - they’ll swiftly follow suit. Let’s be clear: some people will continue to say yes to high pay/exciting work in return for ‘you’ll work whenever when we need you ‘. But it’ll be a transactional relationship lasting for as long as it benefits the individual (or employer) and no longer. Easy come, easy go. If that’s your philosophy as an employer: own it and be transparent. Don’t sign the code and pay it lip service. If yours IS an organisation that wants to do better at encouraging employees to switch off, try: 1. Using Labour’s shift to open up conversations at work about pressures to communicate or be available after hours. 2. Adding ‘we support the right to disconnect’ in your recruitment material and having examples to share with candidates during interviews. 3. Supporting selected managers and their teams to trial different experiments around switching off. 4. Asking people ‘how can we help you do to your best work within your normal working hours?’. ‘What gets in the way of this?’. 5. Setting up an industry-wide collaboration to trial different ways of achieving the same outcome. Asynchronous and flexible working are here to stay and bring many benefits to individuals and their employers. But they can make it a challenge to co-ordinate and communicate within teams and across time zones. Here's what you can do personally to uphold the right to switch off and respect other people's non-working time: Add an email footer like: 'I'm sending this now because it suits me but I'm not expecting a response outside of normal working hours'. Work offline if you're working late evenings or weekends, so you're not visible on Teams/whatever channels you use, and schedule your emails to send the next day to avoid the ripple effect of people responding immediately. If people on your team have repeatedly worked late or sacrificed home lives to help reach a deadline, then give them some time back straight afterwards. It's simple and effective. If you're a manager, find out people's preferences around being contacted - or not - during out of hours or when on leave. Everyone's different, so make it your job to know. See annual leave as an opportunity for a colleague to step up and have some stretch experience by covering for you, with support beforehand. Then switch off properly and don't muddy the water by dipping in and out unasked. Listen to my podcast conversation with Ben Higgins, Global CHRO of Wholesale Banking at Societe Generale, about how he does this. These examples are about applying #timeintelligence. If you want to know more about my #timeintelligence sessions for leaders, teams and individuals, get in touch . And if you're making good progress in your organisation on switching off - or at least trialling a few changes - then I'd love to hear more. During normal working hours, of course.

When sticking stops. A barn owl perched observantly on a post in front of me, a heron gliding by like a feathered Concorde with its wings tucked in. Just two of the birds I’ve spotted today whilst working at UK’s only family-owned and managed National Nature Reserve, at Elmley in Kent. I’m not working in the sense of checking on wildlife and mending fences, I’m working in the sense of enjoying an indulgent writing retreat in glorious isolation, tucked away in a definitely-not-roughing-it wooden cabin complete with outdoor tub overlooking meadows and marshes (more pics here ). This retreat is both a long-anticipated birthday gift from my family and the official starting point for writing my second business book. It’s been brewing in my head for months and is now begging loudly to be given some proper love and attention. So here I am, off-grid in every sense with nowhere else to go and nothing else to do for 24 hours than plan and write. Write what? I hear you ask…