• Fun links

    Ninjas at workA great podcast about fun.

    Two black T-shirts and you too can be a ninja at work. Team random at work.
    (Thank you Amy).

    Rob Paterson tells the story of silverorange, a company that sounds like they have a LOT of fun.

    From the you-did-how-much-research-to-find-this-out department: Feeling good matters at work. Well, duh!

    More great links about happiness at work here.


  • People who care, share

    Knowledge Sharing

    Knowledge Sharing is hot these days, and many companies are introducing processes and technologies that allow employees to learn from each other and to collect the implicit knowledge present in any company.

    And very often, it doesn’t work. Companies put a knowledge management system in place… and nothing happens. Nobody uses it. It then becomes a struggle to convince employees that knowledge sharing is good for them and for the company, based on a “what’s in it for me” approach.

    And that’s because the whole Knowledge Sharing approach is fundamentally flawed, and because businesses really need to focus on something else.

    That something else is Passion Sharing.
    (more…)


  • A question for ya

    QuestionWhat makes you happy or unhappy at work?

    The big stuff or the small stuff. The good stuff or the bad stuff. I’d really like to know.

    Write a comment.


  • Alison Young

    Alison YoungPlease go listen to the wonderful music of Alison Young, who I met and saw perform at the EuroGEL conference. What a voice!!

    Via Andrew Ferrier.


  • A faster and better way to recruit: Extreme Interviewing

    Extreme interviewing

    The way most companies recruit new people is in need of some serious improvement.

    Taking or not taking a job is a big decision, and yet you as an applicant are supposed to decide based on just one or two job interviews. The result is that when you show up for your first day at a new job you have little idea what the job, the manager or the co-workers are really like. You may be in for some surprises.

    Also, it’s difficult for a manager to know if she’s hiring the right person, when all she has to go on is a CV, a personality test and one or two job interviews with that person. How can she know what this person is really like? Some people interview very poorly but are great to work with. Others seem charming, elouquent and competent in interviews, and then turn out to be… not so great to work with.

    There’s gotta be a better way.

    This is why I was very happy to hear that the good people at Menlo Innovations in Ann Arbor, Michigan have found a way to hire people that is both faster and better than the traditional way.

    They call it Extreme Interviewing (a term they’ve trademarked, btw). It’s the coolest, most innovative way I have heard of to hire new people and the results are amazing! Read on to see how they do it.
    (more…)


  • International Quit-Your-Crappy-Job-Day

    Wake up!

    I had a straaaaaaange idea the other day: What if every single person on the planet who doesn’t like their job quit on the same day? Let’s call it International Quit-Your-Crappy-Job-Day.

    Yeah, yeah, I know, chaos would ensue because all the bad jobs are now not being done. Garbage wouldn’t get picked up, sewers wouldn’t be cleaned, etc. etc. etc. But… many garbage men love their jobs. So do many airport baggage handlers, inner city teachers, taxi drivers and other holders of jobs that many think “must be awful”.

    So maybe it’s not the jobs. Maybe it’s the workplaces, the managers, the culture, the whatever that make people hate their jobs… And maybe if all the people who hate their jobs quit at the same time, John Smith, the CEO who runs SmithCo with an iron fist and who just lost 63% of his employees would be forced to rethink his ways. Or would simply be out of business.

    This would be the ultimate, very loud wake-up call for every company where employees hate the boss, hate work, are bullied, are sexually harassed, are discriminated against and/or only come in for the pay check.

    And maybe on the same day where the mortuary worker quits the job he’s hated for years, that job as a park ranger becomes free and he can finally get that job outside in the fresh air he’s always dreamed about. The park ranger gets the bartending job he wanted, the bartender becomes a cab driver and the cab driver goes to work in the mortuary.

    Remember: One person’s dream job is another person’s living hell. The longer you stay in that crappy job, the longer you’re keeping someone who might actually love it from getting it.

    This is not an actual proposal for action. This is more of gedankenexperiment.

    What do you think?


  • Coming to London

    I’m coming to London at the end of this month from september 27th to October 2nd.

    If you’re in London at that time and would like to meet for a beer or cofee and a chat about happiness at work, write a comment or contact me.


  • Quote

    Work is much more fun than fun.

    – Noel Coward


  • The Great Canadian Homework Ban

    Ban HomeworkIt seems like the snowball is rolling for the anti-homework movement.

    Two weeks ago I blogged about an article that says that homework is bad for school kids. My canadian friend Chris Corrigan commented how he “unschools” his kids and wrote more about it on his (excellent) blog.

    Chris was then contacted by a national canadian paper and was on the front page last weekend. He wrote more about it here and here.

    Chris was also contacted by the authors of the books mentioned in the original article who both have much more material on this topic at their websites, namely Alfie Kohn and Sara Bennet. Check the sites out, they’re both excellent resources!

    Chris sums up the reaction to the article here:

    But many people are calling and emailing about this homework ban thing, and we seem to have struck a nerve. What has been really interesting to me is that without exception, every journalist and producer that has called (and we’re talking twelve or more at this point) has started out by talking about how much they hate what homework does to their kids and families. Usually when they call they get interviewed by ME, for the first ten minutes or so, so keen am I to hear their story. It has really strengthened my confidence in our decision to unschool, although I appreciate that that isn’t for everyone.

    This is excellent. Schools are one area of society in need of seeeeerious improvement, and getting rid of homework would make learning easier and more fun for kids, parents and teachers.

    Go Chris!!!


  • Monday Tip: Leave early for work – and smile

    The Chief Happiness Officer's monday tipsHere’s your mission this monday: Leave early for work so you have plenty of time to get there. Then smile at everyone along the way.

    If you’re in a car be extra courteous to everyone around you – give some other driver a great morning.

    If you commute by bike, bus or train smile at people around you and go out of your way to be helpful whenever you can.

    If you’re reading this at work, it’s actually too late to do it today – you can do it tomorrow instead.

    Thank you to my wonderful girlfriend for suggesting this one.

    I’ve long thought that a leading cause of unhappiness at work is a stressful morning commute. You get up in the morning and almost the first thing you do is fight your way through traffic along with other grumpy, barely awake commuters equally bent on getting there five minutes faster.

    If you relax and smile and focus on being helpful to others along the way the commute may take a little longer, but it will be a lot more pleasant and you may arrive at work in a much better mood.

    The Chief Happiness Officer’s monday tips are simple, easy, fun things you can do to make yourself and others happy at work and get the work-week off to a great start. Something everyone can do in five minutes, tops. When you try it, write a comment here to tell me how it went.

    Previous monday tips. Do you have a suggestion for a monday tip? Write a comment!



Get our newsletter

“I can’t believe it – a newsletter actually worth reading!”
– Subscriber

Over 6,000 people subscribe to our newsletter with tons of tips about happiness at work.


Get our books

“It’s very, very good. It’s incredibly well written, full of insights, and there are exercises to improve your own happiness at work. You can’t ask for more than that!”
– David Maister, author of Practice What You Preach

“What an inspiring book. Every leader should read it. This type of leadership has been integral to our success and I know it will boost your results too.
– Garry Ridge, CEO WD-40 Company


Get Our Free Newsletter

Over 6,000 people already get our free newsletter with useful tips, videos, links and articles about happiness at work.
Subscribe to our newsletter here.