Burnout and the One Question That Changes Everything
Dr. Joey A. CollinsYou're not alone in this. A nurse in her car after a twelve-hour shift — not because she lost a patient, but because the handoffs, the workarounds, the constant redoing left her more drained than the hours can explain.
Different roles. Different industries. Same feeling: something about the work isn't working.
For years, the answer to burnout has been personal: work less, rest more, build resilience. Nothing wrong with any of that — except burnout keeps increasing.
So maybe the problem isn't the person.
"How do we help people handle more pressure?"
When my people put in effort — does work actually work?
People don't burn out from working hard. They burn out from working hard and nothing moves.
of professionals were working in conditions directly linked to burnout by occupational health research
The burning-out group worked 60+ hour weeks — some of the hardest-working people in their profession
The differentiator wasn't resilience or role — it was whether effort converted to progress
Managing partners, chief nursing officers, VPs of engineering, CEOs — anyone whose job is to create conditions where people can do their best work.
Still showing up, still delivering — but quietly wondering why the effort never seems to land anywhere. They haven't burned out yet. They're learning not to expect very much.
Those absorbing the friction, catching what falls through the gaps, never complaining — because that's what professionals do. The last people anyone expects to break.
But prevention requires catching the signal early — and the signal is almost always the same: work is not working.
Not when someone is fully burned out. Not after the departure you didn't see coming. The moment that matters is when effort stops converting to progress — before disengagement becomes damage.
"This gives you a way to see it early — before your best people stop expecting things to get better."Enter your email and the Introduction + Chapter 1 will be on their way.
Dr. Joey Collins is the founder of Collins Alliance and a practitioner-researcher focused on the organizational conditions that make professional work sustainable. His research spans accounting firms, healthcare systems, and professional services organizations.
His work challenges the prevailing narrative that burnout is a personal problem. When the data consistently shows that hard-working, resilient professionals burn out in broken systems, the question shifts: not "what's wrong with these people?" but "what's wrong with how this work is organized?"