Happy employees are more productive employees. Yet to truly foster productivity, leaders must go beyond perks and mandates—they must listen to and coach their teams as living systems.
Here’s why relational leadership is a productivity game-changer—and how systems thinking and ORSC (Organisation and Relationship Systems Coaching) help leaders harness it.
1. The Statistics Are Clear: Happiness Drives Productivity
- A one-point rise in happiness led to approximately a 12–13% increase in productivity. Oxford University.
- Teams in the top engagement quartile showed 14–18% higher productivity, 23% higher profitability, and 41% lower absenteeism. Gallup.
- Disengaged employees are costing the world $8.8 trillion in lost productivity—about 9% of global GDP. Gallup.
These results illustrate that genuine investment in human connection and meaning isn’t a luxury—it’s essential to business success.
2. Enter Relationship Systems Intelligence (RSI)
ORSC views organisations not as collections of individuals, but as living systems. RSI is about recognising and engaging the relational dynamics and emotional field within any group.
- Leaders often try to fix individuals, but look instead at what the system as a whole is calling for.
- Healthy systems self-regulate—but only when their voices are heard.
When systems feel seen, heard, and included, trust grows. Trust drives engagement—and engagement drives performance.
3. Office Mandates: A Trust Misstep
Many companies have issued blanket “return to office” orders, citing reasons like restoring culture and reinforcing collaboration.
Yet these unilateral decisions often:
- Undermine trust and autonomy, suggesting workers can’t be relied on remotely.
- Reflect a top-down mindset—contradicting the agency and voice of the system.
- Miss the opportunity to co-create workplace norms, failing to lean on the intelligence of the system.
As RSI teaches, resistance is data. When policies are imposed, they often trigger quiet disengagement—even if overt productivity remains intact.
4. Systems-Focused Leadership: An Alternative Approach
An ORSC-trained leader engages differently. They might:
- Use a Designed Team Alliance (DTA) to co-create norms around in-office and remote work.
- Tune into the emotional field—what’s being felt but not yet expressed.
- Use Alignment Coaching or Constellations to surface hidden tensions and shape collective agreements.
- Help their teams navigate polarity, rather than forcing a rigid choice between office or remote.
By participating in the system rather than imposing on it, leaders build trust, buy-in, and sustainable performance.
5. Trust → Happiness → Performance
Engaging employees in decisions about their working lives builds trust. Trust fuels happiness. And happiness—empowerment, autonomy, connection—drives performance.
In ORSC terms:
- We shift from directive leadership to facilitative systems coaching.
- We design workplaces where trust is the currency, not control.
- We enable teams to do their best work from wherever they are—together.
6. Are You Ready to Coach the System, Not Just Manage It?
If you’re aspiring to lead with connection and clarity—especially in hybrid or complex environments—consider investing in your relational leadership.
Societal best practice:
Join one of our upcoming introductory ORSC modules and equip yourself with tools, skills, and meta-skills to lead real, relational systems—on or offsite.
In a world where happiness and productivity are inseparable, relational intelligence isn’t optional—it’s essential leadership.
Lead differently. Trust your system. Encourage happiness—and watch performance flourish.
