Regenerating Your Leaders and Teams With Sustainable Energy

BY Matthew Koehler | September 25, 2024

While compensation and benefits are important, they’re not the only factors that influence job satisfaction. Seventy percent of preventable leavers say that if their general work culture had been better, they would have stuck around. In other words, if the energy was better, they’d stay. And engaged employees could save U.S. companies trillions of dollars.

Andrew Deutscher, the founder of Regenerate, knows about energy–especially how a work environment that drains you of energy can lead to disengaged employees. 

After a career in sales, marketing, and media leading to burnout, he learned the value of understanding energy and managing it to create sustainable performance for himself. He started Regenerate to spread this message to other companies, their leaders, and employees to help “develop energy-inspired sustainable practices to transform their workplaces.”

Deutscher told me during an interview for From Day One that his goal at Regenerate is to “teach people how to better manage their energy inside of a lot of demands and accelerated burnout in this era of work.” 

Poor Leadership, Not Bad Workers

Deutscher points to high turnover among leaders because many companies don’t provide proper support, and the high turnover often occurs because leaders are overstretched and their capacity is drained.

“Part of the reason that engagement is the core issue for so many people around burnout and turnover, is because leaders are so busy and under the weight of a lot of responsibility. If you’re running a full time job [while] also having to lead, which is a full time job, there’s really going to be a strain,” he said.

There’s an opportunity for growth and improvement when teams step up and speak out. Oftentimes, bad leaders stick around because the people around them don’t have the courage to speak up or don’t understand the damage being done to teams and company culture, Deutscher says. When awareness is raised, these challenges can be addressed before “it infests, and those leaders get to stay and [create this] really bad environment.”

Employees may not approach their managers to express their feelings of disengagement, which provides leaders with a valuable opportunity to proactively foster open communication and create a supportive environment. It's part of a leader’s role to recognize and address these needs.

Deutscher shared a graphic from a 2022 study done by McKinsey showing the primary drivers of disengagement, where uncaring and uninspiring leaders were among the top. The focus on leadership shows up just behind a lack of career development and inadequate compensation. 

“There are six or seven different things here, but they’re all about energy,” he said. “Energy is the X factor for creating sustainable high performance. Energy is the internal strength and vitality required for sustained physical, emotional and mental activity,” Deutscher wrote for Forbes.

Leaders also play an important role in articulating purpose to their workers. Leaders who create a culture around purposeful work cultivate employees who are more engaged because they understand what they’re working for and have a common goal to achieve. “When leaders are moving too fast, they fail to articulate how the work matters and how it's meaningful–both to them individually and to the company.”

When leaders effectively manage their teams and employees have a clear understanding of the goals, everyone’s efforts align, creating continuity. This synergy fosters a stronger company culture, where everyone’s collective energy is directed toward shared objectives.

Commitment to Collaboration

When Deutscher gets hired to coach and help leaders restructure their energy for a better work culture, the outcome is a more engaged and cohesive team that values commonality and goal orientation over individual agendas and scarcity. Some of his assignments focus on helping the leader bolster collaboration and teamwork.

Leaders who prioritize building strong connections with their teams are better positioned to drive meaningful change, says Deutscher. When companies embrace this approach, they create the conditions for long-term success through healthy leadership.

From Day One spoke with Deutscher about energizing the workforce (company photo)

Sometimes these businesses have a solid strategy or product, but they can't overcome the human energy aspect needed for success. Deutscher helps leaders create alignment within their teams, so not only do they have a great product, but also a great culture. “[A]t the top end, if we’re customizing content, if you want commitment from people, you need to be aligned. If you want alignment, you have to be really clear on where you’re going.”

Deutscher has golden rules for achieving this. “Look people in the eye. Be respectful. Ask questions. Give them a chance to be heard. Be receptive to what they’re saying. Have a good value exchange of candor and receptivity. Speak your mind, but do it respectfully.”

Cracking the Code to Energy Engagement

Figuring out the energy coefficient on engagement and retention is about getting the fundamentals right and doing the deeper work. “Getting back to the basics is hard for people, teams, and leaders [because] it’s boring.” It takes a long-term commitment to working more sustainably and to building a workplace that prioritizes well-being alongside results.

Preparation is key for leaders and companies when thinking about the longer horizon for sustainability. “All we want to do is play the game. We don’t want to prepare to win the game in the workplace. That’s essentially what regenerate means. You have to renew, recover, strategize, plan, spend more time thinking and planning than doing. [That’s how] you prepare to win.”

Editor’s note: From Day One thanks our partner Regenerate, for supporting this sponsor spotlight. To learn more, tune into Andrew’s workshop at our October virtual conference.

Matthew Koehler is a freelance journalist and licensed real estate agent based in Washington, DC. His work has appeared in Greater Greater Washington, The Washington Post, The Southwester, and Walking Cinema, among others.


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She says it doesn’t have to be this way, and employers have an obligation to do better–by their recruiters and their applicants.“Full-cycle recruiting is a holistic approach,” Stevens said during a From Day One webinar on how full-cycle recruiting can help employers hire top talent. “Instead of passing candidates from one recruiter to the next to move them through the process, there is a single recruiter managing the process from the initial job requisition all the way to how new hires are integrated into the company.”Many companies have already adopted a full-cycle process, but some are still stuck on old models, like a sourcing-led path where one recruiter brings in the talent then candidates are passed among the team; very early on, the hiring experience is interrupted. For job candidates, full-cycle recruiting should be unnoticeable. “Having one person manage all of it does create a more seamless transition for the candidate and one point of contact. 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The reality of our market is that we have so many people in it–how can we really make sure that our ATS is working for them too?”Editor’s note: From Day One thanks our partner, Lever by Employ, for sponsoring this webinar.Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza is a freelance journalist and From Day One contributing editor who writes about work, the job market, and women’s experiences in the workplace. Her work has appeared in the Economist, the BBC, The Washington Post, Quartz, Fast Company, and Digiday’s Worklife.

Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza | October 04, 2024

Beyond Birth: How Employers Can Invest in the Postpartum Period

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In turn, employees also need to be trained on how to communicate their needs.Lastly, transition plans should be put in place to allow employees on leave to be able to ensure their continued professional development and assignments. “We're often afraid to step away because we feel like it might set us back. Adjusting the culture to support the employee and having that manager training to create that inclusive environment related to situations like this are critically important,” Hobbs said. “It really improves the workforce culture around [pregnancy] and postpartum.”Editor's note: From Day One thanks our partner, Ovia Health, for sponsoring this webinar. Katie Chambers is a freelance writer and award-winning communications executive with a lifelong commitment to supporting artists and advocating for inclusion. Her work has been seen in HuffPost and several printed essay collections, among others, and she has appeared on Cheddar News, iWomanTV, On New Jersey, and CBS New York.

Katie Chambers | October 01, 2024

How HR Can Become a Strategic Partner in Annual Business Planning

Poor planning returns poor results. In a company where the workforce is unprepared to meet shifting business needs, organizational performance can drop by as much as 26 percentage points, Gartner found in 2024. Human resources is responsible for delivering a workforce fit to meet the firm’s goals–no matter how fickle–so when business leaders plan poorly, or plan alone, HR teams struggle.John Bernatovicz is the founder of human capital management platform Willory and the author of HR Like a Boss: Your Guide to Amazingly Awesome HR. He believes the buck doesn’t stop with HR or talent acquisition; the business plan is a shared responsibility. “If you don’t feel like your company is effective in annual planning, look no further than your CEO, your board, or other key executives responsible for driving that critical business function,” he said during a From Day One webinar on how to become a strategic HR partner in your global annual business planning. 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Further, artificial intelligence is already coloring the skills employees are developing–and setting new standards for productivity.Becoming a Strategic Partner in Annual PlanningEarning a place in annual planning requires human resources people to think like business people, panelists agreed. HR may not think in numbers or spreadsheets, but executives certainly do, Bernatovicz says. Unless talent acquisition learns to link workers to revenue and teach executives to do the same, they won’t prove their relevance. “I see oftentimes that companies look at the bottom of the P&L first, not realizing that profit is an outcome of a number of unique things that are going to happen and run effectively in a strategic manner.”The panelists spoke about "Becoming an HR Strategic Partner in Your Global Business Annual Planning" during the From Day One webinar (photo by From Day One)“They need that data to understand where you’re coming from,” said Lane McFarland, senior director of talent management at data intelligence company Flashpoint. “Maybe the finance team just needs to hear the cost savings initiatives or the vacancy savings during the hiring period. Maybe the CEO just needs to know how many [positions] you’ve fulfilled by department.”Strategic thinkers ask good questions and answer them. Know the short-term and long-term business goals–and whether you have the workforce to achieve them, McFarland said. Inventory the skills of your team and find the gaps. If you don’t have what you need, can you develop those skills, or should you hire from the outside? Consider potential labor market shifts and how they might bump up against those plans. Could overall market swings change the business needs in the coming year? What are the consequences of hiring now versus later? What are the risks of over-hiring? What happens when you overload a manager and it pushes them out the door? If you hire in less expensive markets to save money, can you properly support those employees? What about regulatory requirements? Business leaders rely on their HR partners to inform them on the labor market and advise on how it will help or hinder achieving business goals.It’s not enough to be only a dollars-and-cents business contributor: Trust and influence are ultimately won through relationships. Start with the business leaders you already know, said Moll. That might be the sales director or head of content marketing. “Just get on their calendar for 15 minutes or 20 minutes every other week or every month to talk about what they care about,” she said. “Start learning about their business: What are the metrics that they are looking at? What are the pain points they’re experiencing?”Bernatovicz recommended starting with the finance team in particular. “Develop a relationship with [the finance practitioner] at whatever level you’re at, so if you’re the head of HR, then that’s the CFO. If you’re a manager, then find a manager. Get to know them as individuals, what makes them tick, why they’re working at the company, what they do outside of work.”As you embed yourself with your business counterparts, track the impact of decisions made about the workforce and provide regular updates, Moll advised. Know your time to hire and turnover, the cost of recruiting versus training versus internal moves, the success rate of onboarding, and how long it takes. Then involve business teams in your work, inviting them to work alongside you in investigating turnover rates, pipeline problems, or onboarding results.Be a helper and be a problem-solver, said McFarland. “Even if your team is split up between a people experience side and a talent side, talent acquisition specialists can be the ear for another team member, even if they just need someone to vent to or help them through difficulty or bounce an idea off of.”“They have to first see you as a partner that they can trust,” Moll said. “That takes time, and that means building relationships a little bit at a time, and that means maybe not participating in workforce planning this year, but you’re building to be part of it the next one.” The good news, McFarland noted, is that the relationship between HR and business is already becoming more strategic, and the direction of travel is positive.“Workforce planning is a tool, not a result. It’s not about having the perfect plan. That doesn’t exist,” Moll said. A plan is a guide. When you have a guide, you can adapt when things change. And things will always change.Editor's note: From Day One thanks our partner, HiBob, for sponsoring this webinar. Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza is a freelance journalist and From Day One contributing editor who writes about work, the job market, and women’s experiences in the workplace. Her work has appeared in the Economist, the BBC, The Washington Post, Quartz, Fast Company, and Digiday’s Worklife.

Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza | September 30, 2024