Posts tagged ‘happiness at work’

The Source – The Wall Street Journal – happiness at work

As reported by Simon Lutterbie in the Wall Street Journal on the 23rd October:

The Wall Street Journal Europe Global Survey of “happiness at work” has yielded some surprising findings. Over 2,000 individuals completed the recent survey hosted on this site over the past few weeks. People who completed it represent 90 nationalities, work in over 80 different countries and represent over 30 sectors of the global economy.”

Jessica Pryce-Jones’ article introducing the survey garnered over 15,000 hits, becoming one of the most successful articles ever on The Source, the Wall Street Journal blog on which it is posted.  You too can read the original article and complete the survey by clicking on the link.

The survey used the iOpener Institute’s iPPQ, a questionnaire that measures five components, the 5Cs, of happiness at work:

  • Contribution is the effort you feel you make
  • Conviction is your short-term motivation
  • Culture is the extent to which you feel you fit at work
  • Commitment is your long-term engagement
  • Confidence is your belief in your own abilities at work

There were five lessons learned from the first round of this research, which may surprise you:

  1. It’s an unhappy time in finance, but it’s not all bleak
  2. The happiest nationalities may surprise you
  3. Once again, the Netherlands is the place to be
  4. Happiness at work increases with age but you might have to wait for it
  5. The senior VP wobble

“People who are happy at work put in far more effort, work longer hours, and are more productive than those who aren’t. They remain at their jobs twice as long and they work 25% more time than an unhappy employee works”  Jessica Pryce-Jones

If you want to learn more about happiness at work and how it connects to ‘consciously causing the effect’ personally or for your company, contact me

Consciousness and Happiness at Work

If to be conscious is to be aware of the self and of others in a way that builds an ‘awakened existence’ then it is surely in the pursuit of happiness. Happiness in life in general and happiness at work.

Governments are debating how to measure Gross National Happiness (the life in general type), advocated by Robert F. Kennedy back in the 1968. Psychologists, philosophers and even the Dalai Lama have been adding to the literature on the subject and none agree exactly what happiness is but they do agree that it makes sense to strive to attain such a thing. Moreover, happiness in life is – and will always be – about subjective well-being, and who are we to say that one person’s definition is more correct than another’s? Each person in his or her world is entitled to be happy in the way that is meaningful to him or her.

On the other hand, the subject of happiness at work has been thoroughly researched by an Oxford U.K.-based consultancy, iOpener, over the past 5+ years. iOpener has carried this research out globally; obtaining data from 80 countries. The research findings are turning conventional business thinking on its head; showing that happiness at work precedes performance rather than the other way around; i.e. performance creating happiness at work.

So, Jessica Pryce-Jones, CEO of iOpener, has created a business model – The Science of Happiness at Work Model – that maps out the various elements that one must be conscious of nurturing in the workplace in order to maximize happiness and therefore success.

(more…)

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