Friday, September 11, 2015

WORKPLACE SPECIAL....................Should we aspire to be happy at work?

 Should we aspire to be happy
 at work?


It still hasn't been shown that happy workers are necessarily more productive

For a number of years now, I have dedicated my final class in the Human Capital
Management course to the topic of happiness in the workplace. It is always
 interesting to see how my students, who are all experienced managers, discuss
the issue, with some highly skeptical, and others curious. Happy at work?
Since when? Why? My attention is particularly called to the contrast between
 the reluctancy of Catholic societies and the view of Protestant cultures, which
 tend to see work as something that can make a positive contribution to our lives,
 while providing us with the means to improve them. Overall, most people
 believe that we aspire to be happy in other areas of our lives, but not at work;
 at best, it is a necessary means to improve our wellbeing, but hardly a source
of happiness in itself.
Scientific insight into the nature of our spiritual wellbeing comes in the form
 of the recently published UN Happiness World Report 2015, based on solid
interdisciplinary work led by a team of prestigious economists. The report
 provides a well-rounded approach to the topic, from economic, educational,
 psychological, and even neuroscience perspectives. The report shows that
 perceptions of happiness depend on six main factors. Three are purely
macroeconomic: financial wellbeing, healthy life expectancy, and the level of
corruption in the country under study. At the individual level, social factors such
 as the number of friends, family support or social groups, play a key role in
measuring how happy we are, along with free dom of choice and solidarity with
 the rest of society.
Can we transfer any of these factors to the world of work? At least two of them
 can, based on the results of previous studies. Freedom to make decisions about
 how best to carry out one's job, along with the relationship with our workmates are
 once again at the top of the list, and so should be the mission of managers and
the job of human resources. Give your team some room to maneuver
 (in other words, trust them), and make sure that the atmosphere at work is
 pleasant. At first glance they may not seem like difficult objectives, but they
most definitely are.
In the first place, giving employees greater autonomy is a radical shift away
From traditional management practices, which are based on control and hierarchies. Since the 1960s, organisations have learned to obey their superiors, with only labor unions prepared
 to challenge authority.As we move up the management ladder, we exercise
control over others with varying degrees of elegance or good manners.
Many companies have their own urban myths about the time such and such
 took the initiative, with disastrous results, all of which are designed to reinforce
 the idea that “we don't come here to think“. At the same time, contemplated
as social systems, organisations are quite artificial. Rarely are we able to pick
 and choose our colleagues (let alone our bosses), as would be the case with
 other organisations or groups. Equally, what companies do is not necessarily
 of interest to all concerned, and competition doesn't help matters. Finally,
despite a long tradition of research into the subject, it still hasn't been shown
that happy workers are necessar ily more productive, which has been used by
companies as a reason for not investing in ways to cheer up their employees.
In conclusion, there is no reason to assume that work is going to make us any
happier than we are already, although, given the amount of time and energy
 we spend in the activity, it's a shame it doesn't.
By Cristina Simon
The Author is a faculty of IE Business School, Spain.

CDET 4SEP15

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