The Science of Happiness: How To Build A Killer Culture in Your Company
The Science of Happiness: How To Build A Killer Culture in Your Company
The Science of Happiness: How To Build A Killer Culture in Your Company
WHITE PAPER
Culture is dictated from the top A good culture may have some perks, and it certainly needs involvement of execs, but neither alone will get you a great culture. It is tempting for many to think of company culture in terms of fringe benefits like funky offices, onsite massages and free soda. These outward trappings of companies with great culture are often what we think of when we think of Great Places to Work. But perks grow from culture, not the other way around. Perks are just the manifestation of what makes a particular group of people (your employees) happy.
py
em
plo
ye e s ar e
85%
t h e
ye
pl
oy
re es a
10X 0
Happ
Likewise, leaders tend to see culture in terms of things they can dolike setting goals and core values. Their participation is an important part of the picture, and trust in leaders is one of the key drivers of engagement, but execs cannot dictate a less likely great culture. They can only lay the groundwork for a great culture to take hold. It is your employees who control your culture. When they are happy, it thrives. If they are stomping around complaining well, your culture probably stinksno matter how great your mission statement is or how free your dry cleaning.
Happy employees are what make a culture great. How do we know this? An increasing body of research, for one thing. Consider this recent research posted by the Wall Street Journal and the iOpener Institute1. Happy H ap p ye m employees:
pl
Stay twice as long in their jobs as their least happy colleagues Believe they are achieving their potential 2x as much Spend 65% more time feeling energized Are 58% more likely to go out of the way to help their colleagues Identify 98% more strongly with the values of their organization Are 186% more likely to recommend their organization to a friend
50%
Unlike culture itself, we have hard numbers on the science of employee happiness and how to directly increase it. It all leads to one conclusion: Concentrating your efforts on making employees happy is the most direct and powerful way to impact your organizational culture.
oy
ees
are
ALIGNMEN
T
These universal drivers of employee happiness fall into three categories: alignment, positivity, and progress. Everything employees needand everything you need to build a killer culture that will attract and keep the best talentrolls up into one of these three things.
IT Y
I P OS
By pursuing them, you can create a groundswell of happiness that will grow your culture from the bottom up.
IV
PRO GRES
Feedback is another important element of alignment. Happiness is a daily journey, says James Key Lim, an early leader at Zappos. In a recent Fast Company article, Lim cited co-owned values as critical, along with regular and ongoing feedback to ensure that everyone stays aligned with them. Aligning people with their passions both on the job and in the rest of their lives will cultivate happier employees, says Lim, and feedback is a key way to reinforce this, daily.
And of course we must not forget flexibility. When employees are able align their work and personal lives, they are consistently happier. Each year, CareerBliss looks at the companies with the biggest leaps in employee happiness. Work-life balance, says CareerBliss CEO Heidi Golledge, is a key factor in determining employee happiness. Having programs that allow managers to offer employees flexibility can be a key component in creating a happy work environment.
Overall emphasis on positive feedback is another critical element of employee happiness. In at same Mood Tracker report, we found that 89% of employees prefer to be told what they are doing right, rather than being told what they are doing wrong. In our SHRM Globoforce Spring 2013 Report, 94% HR leaders said positive feedback has a greater impact on improving employee performance. Says Gretchen Rubin, author of the New York Times best-seller The Happiness Project: A workplace is far likelier to be a happy place when policies are in place to ensure that people regularly get acknowledgement and praise for a job well done, and where people feel that their happiness at work matters to their employers.8
Another important piece of the puzzle is to identify those employees who are your cultural energizerswho drive the progress of your organization and influence their peers. Finding and growing these important employeeswhether they are meant for the management track or simply important single contributors, is a key way to keep your culture on track. And finally, it is mandatory to reward employees for their progress and achievements. Michael Civello at Plum Benefits sums it up well: Increasing employee happiness is based on a strong foundation of effective and proactive communication and recognition, along with a commitment to facilitating relationship-building across all levels and departments.9
SOURCES
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
http://www.iopenerinstitute.com/what-are-the-financial-benefits.aspx http://www.fastcompany.com/3004595/secrets-americas-happiest-companies http://www.kellyocg.com/Knowledge/Whitepaper_Content/Happiness_and_Meaning_at_Work_White_Paper/ http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/11/081126122317.htm http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203388804576612943738516996.html http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hrdq.20070/abstract http://www.kent.edu/research/newsdetail.cfm?newsitem=AEC1631B-E717-E289-CAF38E98A14FF8B4 http://www.happiness-project.com/ http://quickbase.intuit.com/blog/2013/01/04/4-strategies-for-happier-employees/#sthash.sV0Q8MQn.dpuf http://www.fastcompany.com/1835578/sharp-drop-worker-happiness-and-what-your-company-can-do-about-it
10
Contact us to learn more about what Globoforce can do to help you drive happiness in your company and develop a magnetic culture.
Email Us:
globoforce.com
Read our Blog:
info@globoforce.com
Call us:
globoforce.com/gfblog
+1 888 7-GFORCE
WP HAP 0913