Wednesday, May 13, 2020

What makes people happy at work - The Chief Happiness Officer Blog

What makes people happy at work - The Chief Happiness Officer Blog Marias new job had it all: An organization with loads of money, interesting tasks, great salary, impressive offices, a french chef, a gym, free fruit, massages and a view out of her office windows that took your breath away. Maria is an easy-going, attractive woman in her forties with a broad business background, but even in her first month at the new job she noticed that things were very wrong. As wealthy as the organization was, it still completely lacked human and social values. The workplace was plagued by distrust, infighting, slander, backstabbing, sexual harassment, lack of respect, repression and veiled threats. She spent the second month pondering how she could change things. By the third month Maria realized that she probably wouldnt be able to change much and that she might get crushed trying. She quit without having found a new job. Maria is now a publishing editor, and is also responsible for HR and the work environment at her new workplace. Her salary may be lower, but her quality of life is much higher, and she told me: ?Im now a believer when it comes to happiness at work, and want to help spread the happy message.??? While all the traditional trappings of a good job dont hurt, theyre just not enough. It doesnt matter how nice your office, how large your salary or how good the food is, if the mood at the company is bad. I think that some of the things we strive for at work (the title, salary, perks, etc.) arent the things that make us happy. Im not saying that a high salary will make you unhappy, at least that never happened to me :o), but it wont make you particularly happy either. So what will? Lets look at that. Good relationships In 2003 ServiceGruppen, a Danish IT service provider, bought up a small department from IBM and consequently took over ten of their IT technicians. It all happened quickly and with plenty of open questions left for both the 100 existing employees of ServiceGruppen and for their ten new colleagues. But one thing made a difference: On their first work day, each new employee was greeted with a bouquet of flowers. Remember, were talking about tough working men in their 40s and 50s , but this simple gesture made a huge difference for them, and they still remember it happily and talk about it to this day. The result: From the first moment, they felt a part of the company. And that may be the most basic human needs: The need to belong. Our species has evolved very much in groups, and few of us can be happy unless we belong to well-functioning group. Which brings us to relationships. When you ask employees what makes them happy at work, they consistently rate these things highest: Nice co-workers A good manager Good communication A sense of humor in the workplace Each of which is a sign of good relations. A sign that people like each other and communicate well. And remember: Good relations dont have to stop with co-workers and managers, it can also apply to customers, suppliers, shareholders and the companys community. One company that gets the importance of relations, is Southwest Airlines. At Southwest Airlines, they hire people first for their personalities and secondly for their skills. Or as they put it: Hire for attitude, train for skill. To them a nice, fun and outgoing personality matters more than degrees or experience. The result: Southwest is not only a happy place to work, theyre also insanely efficient and profitable. Meaning People love to make a difference. We all want to know, that what we do at work has contributed somehow ? that it has meaning. It can be either that we have contributed to the companys success, or that the work we do somehow makes the world better. When we know that we contribute, we feel much better about work. And almost any job has meaning. You clean at a hospital? Well, without efficient cleaning, people get sick and die in hospitals. Youre a teacher? Youre shaping the next generation. You write software? Youre helping your customers become more efficient. Youre a secretary? Youre making your co-workers more efficient To find meaning in your job, ask yourself this: Who am I helping? Whose lives am I improving? Its true that with some jobs it gets tricky. If your company produces, say, land mines, it may be difficult to find meaning in that. And that makes it hard to be happy at work. Recognition Thyra Frank is the leader of a home for the elderly. She is in her mid-fifties, outspoken, constantly cracks jokes and has a loud, infectious laugh. Working in the public sector means facing a certain set of constraints: Not much money, plenty of red tape and very little leeway. In the face of this, she has created what may be the best functioning home for the elderly in Denmark. Her employees love working there, and the clients (the elderly) love living there. The only people who arent crazy about her work are the authorities, because she continues to flaunt the rules and do things her own way. During her first christmas as a leader, her husband persuaded her to give the employees christmas presents. This is not normally done in the public sector, and the home had no buuget for it, so Thyra went to a local supermarket and bought a cheap bottle of red wine for each of her employees at her own expense. She also wrote a note to each of her employees, explaining what she enjoyed about working with that person. It was such a small thing, but several of her employees ended up crying with joy. Not so much at the cheap bottle of wine, but at the positive recognition of the hand-written letter. Recognition is vital, and it is extremely easy to give. It takes no time and it costs no money. And yet some companies seem to say that ?as long as you hear nothing, youre doing a good job.??? Well, thats just not how people work, and I cant count the number of times Ive heard employees say If only I got more recognition for the work I do. Recognize good work and bad ? that makes people happy at work. Fun A senior executive [at Southwest Airlines] spent a day working at the ticket counter and with the ground crew to have a better understanding of their roles. While she was helping direct a plane to the gate using those long orange directional devices, one of the seasoned ground crew members told her to rotate her wrists in a circular manner. When she did this, the plane did a 360 degree turn! She began to scream thinking she had sent a confusing signal to the pilot. In reality, the ground crew had contacted the pilot and told them they had a ?greeny??? directing the plane and that they wanted to have some fun with her. The pilot enthusiastically agreed to play along. (Told by Mary McMurtry from Southwest Airlines, featured in Ronald Culbersons excellent newsletter) When people are free to have fun and enjoy themselves at work, they are much happier. Some companies cultivate a very serious, business-like attitude in which fun is regarded as frivolous and something that detracts from real work. I could not disagree more and neither could Pat Kane who wrote the excellent book The Play Ethic. He talks about play rather than fun, but the point is the same: Welcome to the play ethic. First of all, don?t take ?play? to mean anything idle, wasteful or frivolous. The trivialisation of play was the work ethic?s most lasting, and most regrettable achievement. This is ?play? as the great philosophers understood it: the experience of being an active, creative and fully autonomous person. The play ethic is about having the confidence to be spontaneous, creative and empathetic across every area of you life in relationships, in the community, in your cultural life, as well as paid employment. It?s about placing yourself, your passions and enthusiasms at the centre of your world. ? So to call yourself a ?player?, rather than a ?worker?, is to immediately widen your conception of who you are and what you might be capable of doing. It is to dedicate yourself to realising your full human potential; to be active, not passive. So that was a look at the most important factors, that make people happy at work. It really is that simple. Which is great news, because this means that almost any company can become a happy place to work. Everything needed is already present or can easily be found. Thanks for visiting my blog. If you're new here, you should check out this list of my 10 most popular articles. And if you want more great tips and ideas you should check out our newsletter about happiness at work. It's great and it's free :-)Share this:LinkedInFacebookTwitterRedditPinterest Related

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