Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
News

New model a SMART way to tackle burnout

28 January 2025
A woman in a grey sweater looking frustratingly at her computer
Employees can often face high demands and this can have an impact on their overall job performance. Image: Adobe

(Photo credit: Adobe.  )

Managers are often at a loss on how to increase morale and reduce burnout for their employees, but a University of Queensland researcher has helped develop a framework that could be the perfect tool.

The SMART Work Design Model was created to provide employers with a guideline on the five key work design characteristics they should consider when designing work: stimulating, mastery, autonomy, relational and tolerable demands.

Dr Caroline Knight from UQ Business School worked with Professor Sharon K. Parker from Curtin University to develop the framework and said good work design is often overlooked by organisations and managers who often try to fix the employee rather than the work.

“Managers play a pivotal role in shaping work for their employees, but many roles aren’t designed to foster a positive and healthy workplace environment,” she said.

“Offering an already overworked and burnt-out employee productivity tips and ways to assert healthy boundaries isn’t helpful, when it’s clear the job entails long hours and unreasonable workloads.

“The SMART framework encourages managers to think more broadly about how they curate work that allow their employees to thrive.”

The framework was validated by a series of studies involving quantitative surveys.

In one core study, the researchers measured employee job satisfaction in a variety of industries as well as the five characteristics and looked at relationships between the two.

“Employees can often face high demands or feel as though they are not challenged, stimulated, or even supported enough in the workplace and this can have an impact on their overall job performance,” Dr Knight said.

“We find that intense workloads, coupled with low autonomy and support, can lead to a high risk of employee burnout.”

Dr Knight said the digestible nature of the SMART framework meant it can be easily implemented in the workplace.

“It can be implemented to redesign teamwork, align people management systems, guide and evaluate operational change, or encourage and support employee job crafting,” Dr Knight said.

“Managers can use the model is to have regular check-ins with their employees using the model as a basis for conversation about their work.

“Ask them if their work is stimulating enough. Does it offer opportunities to showcase their craft? Does it offer them enough autonomy?

“At a higher level, the framework can be used as a guide when designing roles before the recruitment process begins.”

The framework has already been implemented in hospitals, government organisations and universities in Australia.

The research was published in MIT Sloan Management Review. 

Click here to find out more about the SMART Model.

Related articles

decorative.
Feature

The lab that doesn’t lie

Imagine a playground for researchers, decked out with the latest gadgets to peek into the human mind. UQ’s Behavioural Science Lab is designed to determine how people actually think and behave.
17 July 2025
A person in high-vis and helmet rides an e-scooter across a road on a rainy day.

Safety check for Brisbane e-scooter riders

A UQ study has examined the behaviour of e-scooter riders in Brisbane before and after the introduction of tighter regulations.
26 June 2025

Media contact

Subscribe to UQ News

Get the latest from our newsroom.