While employees are sounding the alarm, a shocking institutional gap has been laid bare: over 40% of theatre companies admit they are flying blind. According to the analysis of 50 participating companies, these institutions report feeling insufficiently sensitised and untrained regarding workplace wellbeing issues. This is a damning indictment of current administrative priorities. In an era where mental health is paramount, such a lack of preparedness in the cultural sector is unacceptable.
This negligence is not malicious, but it is dangerous. The survey highlights that companies actually recognize the potential upside: they identify "increasing employee motivation" as the single greatest benefit of promoting a healthy work-life balance. Yet, recognition without capability is futile. The gap between knowing that motivation matters and lacking the training to foster it creates a toxic stasis. Swiss theatres are effectively running on legacy systems of management that are incompatible with the modern workforce's needs. The industry is grappling with a structural deficit that requires immediate, top-down rectification before the burnout statistics climb even higher.