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Your Employee Matters

Editors Column: Who’s Happy at Work?

By January 6, 2015No Comments
To work we love, with delight we go. William Shakespeare
There has been much discussion about happiness at work. We are constantly reminded of the Gallup survey indicating 72% of employees are disengaged. According to a September 2014 Money Magazine poll roughly 54% of those surveyed said their job is “okay”, 26% said “they can’t stand it” and 20% felt it was their “dream gig”. Other surveys talk about what jobs have the happiest workers, what cities have a happiest workers and how much you have to earn to be happy.
What we make of all of this? A few thoughts:

1. As Abraham Lincoln once said “People are about as happy as they choose to be”. How is it so many people allow themselves to work at jobs they can’t stand, where they are disengaged, or even worse? How many of these people try to educate themselves so they can move to a job where they can be engaged and happy? Many people like being victims because it gives them something to complain about.

2. Who is hiring these people? And why? Apparently Zappos is not. After initial orientation and training they offer their employees some $3000 to get up and leave. The math is clear: if you have a less than engaged $30,000 yr. employee they will be at least one 10th less productive, if not more so, and who wants that cancer in the workplace anyway? Bottom line: don’t hire disengage people and if you accidentally do, provide them a severance and get rid of them.

3. Don’t ignore the reality of the bell curve. Most employees a more intent on being comfortable then they are anything else. They want to make enough money so they can live comfortable by cultural standards, watch TV, eat junk and hang out with friends. Less than 10% of employees have any desire to be great at what they do. As they say, there’s plenty of room at the top.

4. Perhaps the best idea is to hire people already happy knowing it’s an internal choice. Then put them in an environment where they can be happy growing and contributing on it ever improving basis. For these people mediocrity is death. If they’re not doing something exciting or meaningful there’s no opportunity for them to be happy. But if they are in that sweet spot they will be the most valuable of all employees.

5. Pay a “fair day’s wage”. This means you pay at market rate or better. Remember: “when you pay peanuts you get monkeys” …and disengaged employees.

6. Last, look at what makes you happy…or not happy… in the work at your company. Others probably are similarly affected. Use the power of a Positive Mental Attitude to make amazing things happen at your company!

Don Phin, Esq. is VP of Strategic Business Solutions at ThinkHR, which helps companies resolve urgent workforce issues, mitigate risk and ensure HR compliance. Phin has more than three decades of experience as an HR expert, published author and speaker, and spent 17 years in employment practices litigation. For more information, visit www.ThinkHR.com.