CEOs are Dealing With Two Mental Health Crises: Their Employees’ and Their Own

How to lead when the world is in perpetual chaos—and you’re struggling too

Larry Kanter
Marker

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Photo: Three Images/DigitalVision/Getty Images

It was mid-March, still weeks before surging unemployment claims and the mounting death toll, yet the collective stress at Otter Products was already starting to bubble over. Confusion reigned among the Colorado-based smartphone-case maker’s 1,100 employees: What happens if someone gets sick? Or needs to care for a sick family member? Is it still safe to come to work? Is the company going to be okay? Will everyone be able to keep their jobs? How long will this last? “The anxiety,” recalls Otter CEO Jim Parke, “was palpable.”

Parke is accustomed to putting out tactical and strategic fires, not emotional ones. Now, he realized, he not only needed to focus on the survival of his business — Otter’s sales were about to take a serious hit — but a psychologically fragile workforce. “They needed more empathy, more communication, things they may not have been getting from other sources,” he says.

For workers, stress is bombarding them from all directions with no sign of relenting. Employees are on edge about holding onto their jobs (and their partners’ holding onto theirs). Those lucky enough to do so often find themselves with smaller teams, big…

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Larry Kanter
Marker
Writer for

Larry Kanter, a former deputy editor of Men’s Journal and executive editor of Inc., is a freelance journalist in Hillsdale, NY.