• Happy link roundup

    Stress killsHere are this week’s highest rated links and stories from the Happy at Work Link Collection.

    Stress kills. Though rarely this literally. (thx Lars).

    Ricardo Semler: granddaddy of the democratic workplace. “Ricardo Semler’s employees set their hours, determine their salaries and choose their bosses. Meet the Brazilian businessman who does everything differently.” (thx Kareem).

    The Danes are the happiest workers in Europe. Yaaaaaay! At the bottom of the list: Hungary, Russia, Slovenia, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic. And Japan.

    How listening saved a company. “Dave began meeting with a different crew for an hour every Tuesday afternoon. Dave and his HR manager were there, but none of the managers or supervisors between him and the crew. Dave simply asked, “What do you want to talk about?” and then waited.”

    A valentine’s day story of love at work. A sweet story from Southwest Airlines.

    You can find many more links, vote on the ones you like and submit your own stories, articles or blogposts at the link collection.


  • More interviews with me

    MikeI’ve been interviewed a few more times around the web recently.

    John Wesley of the excellent Pick the Brain blog interviewed me, and asked questions like “What would you say to someone who finds the work they do, of even the entire industry, to be terribly dull?” and “What is the hardest part of standing in front of a large group of employees and telling them they should be happy at work?”.

    And I’m this mont’s guru at Oddpodz. Abe Sauer asked stuff like “If there is one pragmatic piece of advice everyone should know about being happy at and with work, what would it be?” and “How did you get into the profession of helping people be happier?”

    Also, 2 weeks ago, I was the guest on a radio program on national Danish radio. A panel consisting of three members of parliament and yours truly had a discussion on workplace stress and bad management, based on two of my previous posts, namely 5 myths about workplace stress and How to deal with a bad boss.

    That was a lot of fun, partly because the three parliament members are outspoken, smart, media-savvy people – but particularly because the three have wildly varying political opinions. Ellen Trane Nørby is from a right-wing party (by Danish standards), Margrethe Vestager is from a centrist party and Pernille Rosenkrantz-Theil is from a party called the Red-Green Alliance which was formed by merging the Left Socialist Party, the Communist Party of Denmark and the Socialist Workers Party and independent socialists.

    That is pretty much a guarantee of a lively debate right there :o) You can hear the entire radio program here – in Danish, I’m afraid.

    And continuing my recent media exposure, a journalist wrote this piece about making room for emotions at work, based on my blogpost on the same topic.

    Btw: If you’d like to interview me for your blog, I’m game. Email me some questions, and I’ll shoot the answers right back to you.


  • Some famous leaders on happiness at work

    Some of the world’s most successful business leaders believe strongly in having fun and being happy at work.

    Check out these quotes:

    Steve Jobs“Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle.”
    – Steve Jobs, co-founder of Apple

    Ingvar Kamprad“Work should always be fun for all colleagues. We all only have one life. A third of life is work. Without desire and fun, work becomes hell.”
    – Ingvar Kamprad, founder of IKEA

    Soichiro Honda“Each individual should work for himself. People will not sacrifice themselves for the company. They come to work at the company to enjoy themselves.???
    – Soichiro Honda, founder of (surprise!) Honda

    Richard Branson“Fun is at the core of the way I like to do business and it has been the key to everything I’ve done from the outset. More than any other element, fun is the secret of Virgin’s success.???
    – Richard Branson, founder of Virgin

    Saaaaaay… maybe there’s something to this happiness at work thing after all :o)


  • Reception for my book Today!

    Happy Hour is 9 to 5I’m having a reception to celebrate my brand new book at Café Enter today Thursday February 15th from 4PM-6PM, and you’re invited.

    Read all about it. I hope to see you there!


  • The Feel Factor – Why no workplace can afford to ignore what people feel

    Emotions at work

    According to a study many employees do not want their co-workers to express any type of strong emotion — positive or negative.

    Employees expect others to hide negative emotions in order to maintain what they call “professionalism.” They also expect co-workers to hide positive ones by not showing too much pleasure with promotions or raises because someone else might have missed out.

    Emotions have been getting a bad rap in the workplace. If you’re a true professional, the thinking goes, you never show emotions at work. In fact, the really true professional has no emotions at work. He’s a little like Spock from Star Trek who said that “Emotions are alien to me. I’m a scientist.”

    Consequently, in many workplaces showing strong emotions, good or bad, can be career suicide. If you allow your frustration at a bad decision or your elation at a victory to shine through, you will be seen as volatile, untrustworthy and, of course, unprofessional.

    There’s only one problem: Human beings don’t work that way.

    We have emotions. We have them in our private lives, and it’s not like we can leave them in the car in the parking lot at work. Whether we want them to or not, they’re coming to work with us.

    The best workplaces know this, and leave room for both positive and negative emotions. As a result, people are happier at work, are more creative, function better in teams and are more productive and motivated.

    On the other hand, companies that ignore and/or stifle emotions are setting themselves up for massive doses of conflict, frustration, disengagement and unhappiness at work.

    Read on to see why no company can afford to ignore emotions in the workplace.

    1: We make no decisions without emotions

    The evidence has been piling up throughout history, and now neuroscientists have proved it’s true: The brain’s wiring emphatically relies on emotion over intellect in decision-making.

    “We found everyone showed emotional biases, more or less; no one was totally free of them,” De Martino says. Even among the four participants who were aware they were inconsistent in decision-making, “they said, ‘I know, I just couldn’t help myself,’ ” he says.(source)

    Many, many people think that decisions (especially business decisions) should be made rationally. You know, we coolly list the pros and cons, the risks and opportunities and then choose the best possible course.

    Well I’ve got news for ya: That’s not how we make decisions. In reality, our emotions play a huge role in each and every decision we make, and if our decision making process does not acknowledge this, the process is sure to suffer. And so will the qualities of the decisions we make.

    2: Emotions guide workplace relationships

    No team, department, workgroup or company can function without good working relationships between people. What’s more, good workplace relations are one of the largest causes of happiness at work.

    And once again, we form workplace relations with our emotions. The reason you work well with George and Tina isn’t that you’ve rationally decided to create a good relationship with them, because “that would be good for the project.” No, you work well with George and Tina because you like them and they like you.

    And when you have those kinds of relationships in a team, the team functions much, much better. Contrast that with the team where everyone can kinda see that the other guys are good at what they do, but nobody cares about each other.

    3: Emotions are at the core of employee engagement and motivation

    Workplaces today want employees to be more than just wage slaves who only come in for the salary. Companies want people to be motivated and engaged at work and exert a lot of effort in team building, bonus schemes, motivational speakers etc. to further this.

    And guess what: Engagement and motivation are emotions. It’s not like employees rationally tally up all the pros and cons of being motivated and then decide to be it or not to be it. Whether or not we care about our workplace is a non-rational, emotional process. The caring itself is an emotion.

    4: Emotions are crucial to creativity and innovation

    Businesses are also crying out for more creativity and innovation from their people and unsurprisingly, since I mention it here, this also relies in people’s emotional state.

    Teresa M. Amabile has studied how employees’ emotional state affect creativity and has found that:

    One, people have incredibly rich, intense, daily inner work lives; emotions, motivations, and perceptions about their work environment permeate their daily experience at work. Second, these feelings powerfully affect people’s day-to-day performance.

    And that:

    If people are in a good mood on a given day, they’re more likely to have creative ideas that day, as well as the next day, even if we take into account their mood that next day.

    There seems to be a cognitive process that gets set up when people are feeling good that leads to more flexible, fluent, and original thinking, and there’s actually a carryover, an incubation effect, to the next day.

    So if we want people to be creative, we need them to feel good at work. More emotions!

    5: Emotions are integral to learning at work

    Learning on the job is also hugely important today. Few people get to work a job that never changes, and many employees are regularly learning new procedures, IT systems, regulations, etc. Again, many companies view learning as a purely rational process. As in “There’s a chunk of knowledge in the teacher’s head – we shall now transfer that knowledge into your head.”

    But all theories of learning show, that emotions play a huge role in learning. When we are scared, upset or stressed, we are terrible learners. We’re less able to concentrate, less able to recall past learnings and less able to make mental connections in the things we learn. When we’re relaxed and having fun, learning happens much faster.

    6: It’s not like we can leave our emotions at home

    Emotions are a huge part of us human beings. What we love and hate and enjoy and fear is a large part of who we are. Placing us in a situation where we have emotions but can’t show them is stressful and unpleasant.

    7: When we stifle bad emotions we strengthen them

    If an employee is angry, disappointed or frustrated over something at work and is not allowed to display that emotion, there’s a good chance the emotion will grow stronger because that person can’t get it out in the open and deal with it.

    A study shows that these negative emotions should not be ignored:

    “If employees have emotional reactions and their employers don’t pay attention to those reactions, they can withdraw. They are more likely to take sick days, and if their frustration continues to grow they will actually leave their jobs.” (Source)

    8: When we stifle good emotions we weaken them

    And when we stifle positive emotions the opposite happens: We weaken them.

    Let’s say you make that huge sale you’ve been working on for weeks. This is your best work for the company yet. A true triumph. It feels really good.

    If you’re not allowed to show your elation, that positive feeling will soon dissipate. That is why the best workplaces are very good at celebrating victories, big or small. Celebrating keeps the good feeling alive for a longer period of time, and motivates people to go out and create more victories.

    9: Emotions are a sign that people care about the workplace

    The only emotionless workplace is the one where no one gives a damn! If people feel happy when they’re successful and sad when they’re not, it’s a sign that they care about their work. This is a good thing.

    The upshot: How the best workplaces handle emotions

    So, should all business devolve into endless meetings where we can talk about our feelings? Should all meeting rooms be equipped with Kleenex in case someone starts crying? Should we express our tiniest, most fleeting emotions and go into full-on tantrums whenever we feel like it?

    No.

    But workplaces should:

    1. Make room for the emotions that employees have. They’re there, might as well deal with it.
    2. Learn how emotions influence business success factors like learning, creativity and teamwork.
    3. Learn how to deal constructively – and even appreciatively – with displays of emotion – negative and positive.

    Southwest Airlines get this – they’re fine with people showing what they feel, good or bad. One manager leaving the company after 22 years wrote this after his farewell party at the company:

    Damn, that was brutal…brutal in the sense that it makes leaving all of this even harder…I think it’s a conspiracy, a torturous way to keep you from leaving. They have all this food for you, balloons everywhere, and gifts galore…even a new sports coat to wear in lieu of the polo and shorts I wear today. And the People…my friends…the smiles, tears, comments, and stories…man this is killing me. Anyone that ever questioned the Southwest Culture and Spirit never understood it to begin with…Why am I leaving? Confusing huh?

    Smiles and tears. That’s what I would want, leaving a company after 22 years. Not just a gold watch and a carefully prepared, professional(!) send-off. Smiles and tears :o)

    Kent Blumberg tells a great story about Listening meetings in a company – where the CEO meets with various teams and simply sits down to listen to whatever is said.

    And that’s how the best companies handle emotions. They ask questions like:

    • “So, how do you feel about this meeting/decision/project/whatever?”
    • “How are you doing?”
    • “I can tell you’re not happy with this meeting. What’s your take?”

    And then they shut up and listen!

    What about you? Do you show how you feel at work? The good or the bad? How does your company receive displays of emotions? Write a comment, I’d really like to know.

    Related:


  • Graph of the year

    I know it’s only February, but I would like to nominate this nifty little illustration from the Slow Leadership blog for the coveted “graph of the year” award:

    Killers

    The accompanying blogpost ain’t too shabby either:

    If a thing is worth doing, it’s worth doing badly first. In the real world, doing something new almost always means doing it poorly the first few times… To do something new, you have to make a conscious decision to let yourself try things that you know you can’t do.


  • Book Review: The No Asshole Rule

    The No Asshole RuleWhen Bob Sutton started to write a book about the hidden costs of jerks at work he wanted to go full monty and call the book “The No Asshole Rule.

    Gasp! Yes! The A-word. He wasn’t writing about jerks or bullies – he was writing about flaming assholes and what they cost people and businesses.

    His first choice of publisher, The Harvard Business School Press, were happy to publish the book if he would change the title to something less offensive. So he changed… publishers :o)

    Once in a while a book comes along where you just immediately think “Yes! What a great idea for a book!” You know, the right book at the right time. A book that simply deserves success and wide recognition.

    The No Asshole Rule by Bob Sutton is such a book. This book and Bob’s excellent blog have already generated massive amounts of well-deserved buzz, and I’d like to add my whole-hearted recommendation! It’s a great book, highly readable and massively important.

    Why exactly have we tolerated jerks in business for so long? Bob convincingly demonstrates using surveys, psychological studies and anecdotal evidence that workplace jerks are far more trouble than they’re worth. They mat be getting results and making the numbers, but they do so at a huge cost to the rest of the organization and to the well-being of the people around them.

    Not only that, but assholes breed. No, not with each other (a horrible thought in itself)! But not only do jerks tend to bring out the worst in others (creating more jerks) they also tend to hire jerks like themselves. Or they make sure to hire people who are too weak to oppose them.

    The book has some very gripping (in the same way that car crash footage is gripping) stories of workplace assholes, including some flaming assholes like the Hollywood studio boss who goes through hundreds of personal assistants, firing them for such gruesome offenses as bringing him the wrong kind of coffee.

    But more interesting than this, are the stories of workplaces that do NOT tolerate this type of behavior. Successfactors, a Californian HR company make every new hire agree to 12 rules of workplace behavior, including a “no asshole” rule.

    I have always been convinced, that jerks should never be tolerated in a workplace. Quirky personalities are fine. Occasional disagreement and conflict are a necessity. We don’t all need to be slick, polished and on our best behavior all the time.

    But the people who systematically abuse other people for their own gain or just for fun should never be tolerated and it’s nice to read in Bob’s book that more and more companies are coming to this realization and are implementing “no asshole rules.”

    “The No Asshole Rule” is a great read and a crucial addition to any business library. Read it if your workplace is beset by assholes, if you’re afraid you might be one or if you just want to be convinced once and for all that jerks have NO place in a modern business.

    Related:


  • Quote

    I Quit!“I don’t want to wake up in the morning and dread going to work. The first time I feel that I can’t be myself in my job, I’m gone. Employers need to understand that.”

    – Leticia Gonzalez, a 23-year old San Diego restaurant employee (source)

    Yes! Gen-X’ers and -Y’ers are much less likely to treat a job as just a job and to conform to standards and behaviors they don’t see the point of. This is a good thing, not something they need to grow out of or have beaten out of them.

    If you ask me, being yourself is one of the most fundamental factors that make us happy at work.


  • More reviews of my book. Apparently it’s really good :o)

    Alexander Kjerulf jumpingGreat reviews of my book Happy Hour is 9 to 5 are still coming in from all over the world. I still haven’t seen a bad review – or even a less-than-glowing one!

    Here are some examples:

    Frederik Petersen says:

    I can only recommend this book to everybody who wants an input to the positive and happy side of work-life – meaning there must be a great potential for this book -;)

    Phinias says:

    I sat down yesterday night after a rough week….I just finished it 30 minutes ago. I am planning a meeting with my boss to get her to start doing these exercises as soon as we can.

    Challa S.S.J.Ram Phani from Hyderabad, India says:

    It is really inspiring, interesting and highly readable and incredibly helpful to make my workplace happy to facilitate my fellow employees become more productive and happy not just 9 to 5, but before 9 and after 5 pm

    It is a great support to my mission of making my workplace better wherever I work.

    Fellow Dane Allan says:

    Once in a while on my daily hikes around the Internet, I strike gold.

    I did so today.

    Over at lulu.com where the book is for sale, cr_duckworth writes:

    I browsed through the book and ordered a copy for my boss after telling her how good it is!

    She LOVED it! She’s tried to keep as professional and fun of an atmosphere at work as possible, and now it’s even better!

    If you are management, BUY THIS BOOK
    If you are an employee, BUY THIS BOOK

    You cannot go wrong!

    Woo-hooooooo!!!

    UPDATE:
    Clint James has this to say:

    No, this isn’t a panacea for workplace woes, nor a magic happy pill, but a comprehensive guide on how to make a very important part of your life better. It affected me deeply.

    More reviews here. You can also add your own review!

    Buy the book or read it free online here.


  • No good deed… Nah, scratch that!

    WalletSomeone stole my wallet yesterday. Not in any dramatic way – I was out doing a presentation on happiness at work for a group here in Copenhagen. I’d left my coat hanging in their wardrobe, and when I left after the presentation my wallet was gone.

    I immediately called to cancel my credit cards, and there was only 100 kroner in it, so, hey, no big deal.

    But it did give rise to two interesting thoughts.

    1: I’m not as annoyed as I thought I’d be
    I really thought I’d be mad as hell at something like this. It means replacing my credit cards, drivers license and other ID, not to mention the fact that “someone took my wallet!” A few years ago, I might easily have spent a LOT of time fuming at that fact that someone stole my wallet, and at all the inconvenience that means.

    But yesterday I was kinda annoyed for about five minutes, and then I shrugged and thought “Hey, so what?” Today I hardly even think about it.

    Know what? That’s really, really nice. Losing my wallet even means a chance to replace my old drivers license which has a truly horrible picture of me :o)

    2: One negative thought did creep in
    I did the presentation yesterday for free – it’s for a group of people who do great work, but don’t have a lot of money, so I was only happy to be able to help them.

    But one thought kept coming back to me after I found my wallet missing: “This is what I get for helping people out.” Or its close cousin “No good deed goes unpunished.”

    Funny, isn’t it? There is absolutely no relationship between the fact that I was out helping others, and the fact that my wallet was stolen. It could have happened anywhere. And yet, my mind makes this mental connection between the two, and I can sense a distinct desire to not help others out again in that way.

    It’s a good thing we’re capable of analyzing our own thoughts, and don’t have to take every single notion as fact! Have you ever noticed something similar?

    Here are more phrases to avoid here. And some good phrases here that we should use more.



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