Mental Health Awareness Week (11 – 17 May 2026)
This week is Mental Health Awareness Week and an important reminder that behind every organisation, project, leadership team and career journey are real people navigating real pressures.
This year’s theme, “Take Action”, feels particularly relevant.
For many organisations, conversations around mental health have improved significantly over the last decade. The stigma has reduced, policies have evolved, and wellbeing has become a recognised part of workplace culture.
But awareness alone is no longer enough.
The challenge now is action.
At TYP, we cast our net across professional networks, strategic advisory services and talent communities. One thing has become increasingly clear: high-performing people are often carrying invisible pressures.
Burnout, isolation, career uncertainty, financial stress, leadership fatigue and constant digital connectivity are just some of the pressures affecting professionals across every sector. In many cases, individuals continue to deliver externally while struggling internally.
This is particularly true within modern working environments where expectations remain high, change is constant, and people are expected to adapt quickly without always having the right support structures around them.
Mental health should not be viewed as a HR initiative or a once-a-year campaign; It should be considered part of how organisations build sustainable, resilient and human-centred cultures.
Actions matter
Sometimes action means creating environments where people can speak honestly without fear of judgement.
Sometimes it means leaders checking in with their teams rather than simply checking performance
metrics.
Sometimes it means recognising when someone needs flexibility, support or time to reset before they reach burnout.
Importantly, action also means recognising that wellbeing looks different for everyone.
There is no universal solution to mental health challenges. Some people benefit from professional support networks. Others benefit from mentoring, meaningful work, stronger community connections or simply having access to trusted conversations during difficult periods.
we strongly believe that trusted networks and authentic human connection play an important role in professional wellbeing. People perform better when they feel supported, understood and connected to others.
In increasingly digital and transactional environments, genuine human interaction has never been
more valuable.
This year’s Mental Health Awareness Week theme also highlights something many organisations are beginning to recognise; prevention matters just as much as intervention.
Waiting until someone is already overwhelmed is often too late.
Creating healthier working cultures requires consistent effort across leadership, communication, workload management and psychological safety. It requires organisations to move beyond surface-level awareness and towards practical, everyday behaviours that support people long term.
Structural change can’t happen overnight. Often, meaningful impact starts with relatively simple actions:
- creating space for honest conversations
- encouraging balance and recovery time
- improving access to trusted support
- reducing unnecessary pressure
- recognising people, not just performance
- building communities where individuals feel valued and connected
Mental health is not a weakness and supporting it should not be viewed as optional.
Healthy organisations are built by healthy people.
As Mental Health Awareness Week reminds us, awareness starts conversations — but action creates change.
We can all find 5 minutes in our busy days to support Mental Health Foundation’s campaign and Take Action today to support ourselves and others inside and outside of the workplace – Mental Health Awareness Week | Mental Health Foundation
At TYP, we know the future of work, leadership and professional communities must continue moving towards environments that prioritise both performance and people equally.






