4 Ways to Combat Zoom Fatigue While Working Remotely

4 Ways to Combat Zoom Fatigue While Working Remotely

4 ways to combat zoom fatigue while working remotely.  Zoom has been an invaluable tool for keeping workforces connected throughout the pandemic, but overuse could lead to burnout. 

Remote work helps you gain back commute time and you can easily connect team members across the country through the Internet. However, after months of working remotely, more and more employees are finding themselves with a new problem: Zoom fatigue.

What is Zoom Fatigue?

Zoom fatigue, as identified and studied by researchers in places like the Stanford Virtual Human Interaction Lab, is a type of burnout associated with virtual calls.  Zoom fatigue can be caused by a number of factors, but the biggest seems to be that the cognitive load of virtual meetings is actually higher than what employees experience in-person. Workers strain to stay engaged behind a screen and interpret conversations with significantly less non-verbal cues than we do in person.

How can you avoid zoom fatigue?

Researchers have found there are four ways to combat zoom fatigue while working remotely. Try to adopt the following:

1. After meetings, take time out to rest your eyes.

Stanford researchers suggest that the increased levels of eye contact that occur during virtual meetings can feel unnatural and exhausting. So, following meetings, it’s a good idea to take a break from the screen. A walk outside, a stretch or a snack can go a long way toward giving your eyes and brain a break — just try not to trade one screen for another and avoid picking up your phone or turning on the television to unwind. You might also try a break strategy such as the 20-20-20 rule. This rule, developed by Jeffrey Anshel, states that every 20 minutes you should look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds.

2. Learn how to organize your Zoom screen to avoid feeling overwhelmed.

Seeing a person up-close and face-to-face is intense, and can leave our brains feeling stressed or on-edge. So, the default speaker-view of many zoom calls may not actually be ideal. Does the intensity of looking at one person in speaker-view throw you off? Or does seeing a speaker up close help you better read their facial expressions? If your camera is on, do you fixate on yourself? Or does it help you focus to know that your coworkers can see you? Organizing the way you see yourself and others in Zoom calls may help you feel less overwhelmed and gradually reduce Zoom fatigue.  Look for tutorials to optimize your experience, just make sure you know what you want.

3. Aim to define the difference between your workspace and your home.

This can be hard to achieve when we’re literally working from home, but sometimes Zoom fatigue is simply a product of feeling like the work day never ends. Look for ways to make a clearer divide in your day. Try working from a dedicated space that helps you feel “in the office.” Consider putting on work clothes even if you don’t leave the house, just to put your best foot forward for the day.

You might also want to work set hours. This one is important, especially with regards to Zoom fatigue. Make sure your meetings have hard end times as well as start times. This keeps everyone efficient and allows you to plan your breaks with more time in advance. Take these breaks seriously and try not to schedule back-to-back meetings if you can.

4. Before you agree to Zoom, confirm that a meeting is in fact needed.

Zoom has been an amazing tool in maintaining some semblance of normalcy and connection in our workspaces. However, if you know that you or your coworkers are suffering Zoom Fatigue from constant video calls, ask yourself before your next call: Is a face-to-face meeting really the best course of action? Would detailed written instructions or an articulate email suffice? If so, maybe take a break from the Zoom altogether and opt for an approach that will allow yourself and your team members to work at your own pace.

If you want to learn more about how Best Money Moves can bring financial wellness to your company, download our whitepapers.

Financial Wellness as an Employee Engagement Strategy

Financial Wellness as an Employee Engagement Strategy

Financial wellness as an employee engagement strategy. If you want to improve employees’ productivity, start with the heart of the problem.

If you’re looking for a way to improve your employees’ productivity, start with tackling their financial stress — not only will you bolster engagement, you’ll also boost your bottom line. 

Financial Stress Is Affecting Employee Engagement

That’s because employee financial stress is costing American businesses $500 billion per year, according to a recent survey of over 10,000 Americans. Employee financial stress finds its way into the workplace, as workers spend an average of three hours a week thinking about their personal finances on the job. 

According to the same study, that lost productivity represents between 11 and 14 percent of payroll expenses per employee, per year. Additionally, employees stressed by their personal finances report more than 56 percent more absences than their co-workers. For businesses that don’t provide financial wellness programs, this stress adds up and decreases their income. 

This stress is felt across a variety of different areas. For instance, over two-thirds of financially stressed employees say they consistently carry credit card balances each month, according to research by PwC. Additionally, 68 percent of those employees have saved less than $50,000 for retirement. 

Financial Wellness Programs Can Help With Employee Engagement

While the range of financial problems your employees are facing can vary — from a lack of retirement savings to mounting student loan debt — the first step to help them address the situation is to provide a comprehensive understanding of it. A majority of employees still want to make their own decisions when it comes to their financial lives — but they also want a resource that will help validate their decisions. The most desired employer benefit for one in four employees is a financial wellness program with access to unbiased counselors. 

Among employees who were provided a financial wellness program by their employer, 71 percent say they’ve used the benefit, and the programs are particularly popular among Millennials and Baby Boomers. Usage of the programs is up as well, with just 49 percent of employees using these same programs in 2015. 

Financial wellness programs give you a competitive advantage in the hiring market as well. Seventy-eight percent of employees who reported being stressed about their finances said they would be attracted to another company that cared more about their financial wellbeing. 

Financial wellness programs like Best Money Moves can help. Best Money Moves is mobile, gamified and easy-to-use. It provides practical, unbiased help so employees can make smarter financial decisions and manage the debt they have. 

More On Financial Wellness and Employee Engagement

5 Must-Have Benefits for Millennial Employees

How Does Financial Wellness Affect Health?

5 Fast Financial Stress Statistics

Hiring Trends to Watch in 2020

What Is Financial Literacy and Why Is It Important?

4 Big Employee Benefit Trends for Family Planning

How Can Financial Wellness Be Improved?

Top 10 Employee Benefits for 2020


If you want to learn more about how Best Money Moves can bring financial wellness to your company visit us at Success Connect in Las Vegas this September 15th-19th. Join Best Money Moves founder and CEO Ilyce Glink’s session “Transform the Employee Experience by Reducing Financial Stress and Improving Financial Well-Being” on Wednesday, September 18th at 1:00 p.m.

Then, you can find us in booth #2550 at HR Tech this October 1st-4th and listen to Ilyce Glink’s speech “Employee Financial Stressors by Generation and How to Help at Every Stage” on Thursday, October 3rd from 1:10-2:00 p.m. in the Expo Room.

2 Top Tips for Increasing Employee Productivity

2 Top Tips for Increasing Employee Productivity

2 top tips for increasing employee productivity. Recent research from Cigna highlights rising employee stress and two areas employers can target to minimize worker stress and increase productivity.

Stress was identified as a key employee health problem in the 2019 Cigna 360 Well-Being Survey. Over 80 percent of workers say they’re stressed and almost 15 percent say they’re unable to cope. The top stressors are personal finances, workloads and health concerns.

Stressed out employees don’t think employers are helping much. Close to 40 percent of workers say no stress management support is provided and only 30 percent receiving stress management support from their employer felt it was adequate.

It’s a serious issue. Studies have shown that employees lose sleep, are distracted at work, have higher rates of absenteeism and are more likely to have health problems when under stress.

Improve Work Culture for Better Employee Productivity

“There is a real need to resolve the ‘always on’ culture before it escalates further as it is negatively affecting the global workplace,” says Jason Sadler, President, Cigna International Markets.

More than 60 percent of employees work in an ‘always on’ culture where they feel the need to constantly access work emails, attend work calls or check mobile phones for work purposes. Workers report a decline in their physical health as a result of not having enough sleep and exercise.

Most employees feel that employers are not addressing wellness concerns sufficiently and often have a ‘one-size-fits-all’ mindset when it comes to stress management and workplace wellness programs.

Make Employee Wellness Programs Work

There are two specific employee populations that don’t feel like their workplace wellness program addresses their needs.

Half of the ‘sandwich generation’ (defined as those between 35-49) feel senior management doesn’t seriously support workplace wellness programs. Having to care for both aging parents and growing families is taking its toll on this generational cohort. More than half of those in the sandwich generation indicated there isn’t a workplace wellness program in place to address their needs, including but not limited to flexibility at work, enhanced company settings and special leave arrangements.

Over half of working women feel that workplace wellness programs need to better address the specific needs of each gender. They see an unmet demand for customized wellness programs that support flexible working hours, establish breakrooms where employees can relax, give the flexibility to work from home/elsewhere outside of the office, provide special paid leave and bolster job/employment security.

The best workplace wellness programs have various components so employees can choose the wellness benefits most relevant to their specific needs. Employers who prioritize stress management through effective wellness programs are likely to reclaim some of the employee productivity lost to stress by way of distraction and absenteeism.

More on Employee Productivity:

Do Flexible Work Schedules Work?

Know the Warning Signs of Employee Burnout

Help Your Employees Get More Sleep!

What Tops Financial Stress for Employees?

How to Raise Productivity and Employee Wellbeing in One Shot

Zombie Employees: Who Are They and What Do You Need to Know?

How to Support Mental Health at Work

March Madness is Killing Employee Productivity. Here’s How to Fix It

March Madness is Killing Employee Productivity. Here’s How to Fix It

In this week’s Best Money Moves roundup, we take a look at news stories and new research studies that may impact employee benefits and HR issues. We hope you find this news roundup helpful, and we’d love your feedback.

Is March Madness 2017 taking over your workplace and killing employee productivity?

The NCAA basketball tournament offers a great opportunity for workplace socializing as employees compare brackets and talk about the latest games, but it can wreak havoc on your otherwise productive office environment.

This puts HR executives in a tough spot: They want to see employees enjoying themselves, but they don’t want to let March Madness distract from the work that still needs to be done.

Fortunately, you can keep March Madness from derailing employee productivity. Learn how HR can control the “madness” in the office while still allowing workers to enjoy the tournament.

Financial wellness continues to be a top employee benefit trend for 2017. Aon Hewitt’s annual Hot Topics in Retirement and Financial Well-Being report found that nearly all (92 percent of) employers are likely to focus on financial wellness beyond retirement benefits this year.  Learn more about the findings.

Uber’s scandals show what happens to a company without a strong HR department. While startups eschew HR executives as stuffy sticklers for the rules who dampen their colorful, creative office cultures, they’re necessary for maintaining a positive, respectful office culture.

Tax time is stressful for employees, especially for those with little experience filing tax returns. Best Money Moves founder and CEO Ilyce Glink has been talking to Millennial employees around the country about their biggest money questions. Are your employees asking these questions about their taxes?

Americans aren’t living as long as they used to. The U.S. is now ranked 42nd in the world for life expectancy, with the average American expected to live about 80 years. Learn how this impacts your employees’ retirement savings and the company’s healthcare costs.

More than 40 percent of Americans aren’t as prepared for retirement as they think they are. A study by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College found that many workers think they’re saving enough but aren’t, while others worry more than they need to. Why is this retirement disconnect happening?

Which class would have helped you most in high school? A survey by the National Financial Educators Council found that 54 percent of Americans wish they’d had a money management or personal finance class. See the rest of the results.

Boosting workers’ financial wellness doesn’t always mean a full benefits overhaul. A few small initiatives can go a long way toward reducing your employees’ financial stress. Try these five tips.

Is your company’s HR information secure? While cyberattacks dominate the headlines, simple human error and unsecured devices can also let sensitive personal information fall into the hands of people who shouldn’t see it. How do employees feel about security measures at work?

OOPS! This company’s International Women’s Day press release didn’t go as planned. The company announced that it was giving its female employees the day off on March 8, but this nice-sounding gesture was actually a violation of federal labor laws. Here’s what the company did when a journalist asked questions.

Have something to add? Email info@bestmoneymoves.com.

It’s hard to stay on top of everything in the news. That’s why each week our Best Money Moves newsroom will bring you the most important news in financial wellness, employee benefits and financial stress. We hope you like the information and, if you do, please spread the word. For midweek developments, follow us on Twitter and on Facebook.