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End of the year : why stress levels skyrocket
 and how to change the situation? 🎄

📌 Key takeaways
  • A period of intense pressure: the end of the year brings a concentration of targets to meet, reviews, assessments and personal commitments, leading to a significant rise in stress and fatigue.
  • A direct impact on performance and engagement: mental overload and emotional fatigue can reduce motivation, the quality of decision-making and team cohesion.
  • The key role of management: clarifying priorities, adjusting targets and recognising efforts help to reduce pressure and maintain team momentum.
  • Simple actions to turn the tide: encouraging breaks, celebrating successes and fostering a supportive environment transform this period into a source of motivation rather than a cause of exhaustion.

December should be a month of wrapping things up, satisfaction, and (a little) hot chocolate.
In reality? It’s often the opposite.
Deadlines pile up, projects get tangled up, teams get tired, and energy levels drop. End-of-year stress is not a myth: it’s a very real collective phenomenon.

We can take action.
And sometimes, a few simple adjustments can really make all the difference.

Why does stress increase in December?

The stress of the end of the year is not just a feeling.
It can be explained by four very concrete factors :

The accumulation of expenses (the famous “everything must be finished before the 31st”)

We want to close, move forward, deliver, secure.
Sometimes more out of tradition than actual necessity.

Fatigue accumulated over 12 months

Even the most committed teams arrive in December with their batteries at 20%.

62% of employees say they arrive “tired or exhausted” in the last quarter of the year.
(Source: OpinionWay – QWL Barometer 2023)

Organizational pressure

Annual targets, budgets, reporting, balance sheets…
December brings together everything that should be spread out over the year.

Personal pressure

Holidays, gifts, family planning, travel…

Your professional and personal calendars collide.

The result: your mental load explodes, sometimes without anyone even noticing.

How can we change the situation? Best practices that make a difference

Here are some simple, concrete, and effective tools that organizations use to make December a manageable, even productive month.

Stop trying to get everything done before the 31st.

Not everything has to be finished before the end of the year.
Some deadlines can be rescheduled, others lightened, others simplified.

Best practice:
→ Organize a 30-minute “realignment meeting” in early December

What we are finishing
What we are postponing
What we are simplifying
What we are abandoning

Objective: remove 15 to 20% of unnecessary workload.

Make the month readable (visually)

A clear schedule means a calmer mind.

Best practices:
→ Shorter meetings
→ Red days/green days in the calendar
→ Highlighting priorities
→ Fairer distribution of work

Objective: reduce mental load through clarity.

Establish an end-of-year anti-stress ritual

Because stress is often collective, the response must be too.

Some easy examples:

A very short weekly team meeting: “What we are simplifying / What we are postponing / Where we need help”
A recovery ritual (5 minutes of guided breathing, group walk, etc.)
A social event organized by the team

52% of employees say they lack team rituals to reduce stress and make their work easier
(Source: Malakoff Humanis – Health & Quality of Life at Work Barometer 2024)

Protect concentration ranges

In December, demands skyrocket.
Effective managers protect essential time.

Best practices:
→ 1 hour of “deep work” as a team each day
→ Notifications turned off
→ Strict prioritization of meetings

🎯 Goal: reduce cognitive load, increase real progress.

Saying no to emotional overload

Fatigue amplifies everything: stress, irritability, emotional strain.

Best practices:
→ Encourage prompt feedback (rather than letting tensions linger)
→ Provide opportunities for brief expressions of opinion
→ Be alert to subtle signals

Objective: prevent silent escalation.

Recognize efforts, even small ones

Recognizing work accomplished immediately reduces stress.

Best practices:
→ A personalized message
→ A “3 successes of the year” ritual
→ Collective recognition

Why does it work?
Because recognition is a powerful emotional regulator.

Prepare for January

And most importantly : stop “holding on” until the holidays.
Preparing for January means reestablishing focus and control.

Best practices:
→ Set three priorities for the beginning of the year
→ Organize a smooth return to work
→ Schedule a team meeting
→ Keep one day free as a “buffer” for getting back into the swing of things

Goal: start the year without immediate overload.

Conclusion : December doesn't have to be a month of survival.

With a few adjustments to your approach, organization, and routines, the end of the year can:

  • become more peaceful
  • protect your teams
  • improve efficiency
  • strengthen cohesion
  • avoid stress-related tensions and mistakes

And above all: set the stage for a smooth start in January.

🚀 Do you want to support your managers in stress management, posture, and organization?

DMM offers highly practical training courses and workshops to help you:
✔ manage mental load
✔ prevent stress
✔ establish effective rituals
✔ strengthen your managerial approach
✔ create a calm and productive working environment