Your employees really can be happy, healthy, and fulfilled in their professional lives.
While you may not need to hire a Chief Happiness Officer – yes, that’s an actual job — you can make tweaks to boost workplace happiness. Not only is a happy workplace a nicer atmosphere for everyone who enters, but it also makes productivity levels shoot through the roof.
A study from The University of Warwick found joyful professionals are up to 12% more productive than unhappy workers. More importantly, being happy at work is also tied to overall better well-being and health.
Interested in keeping your workers happy?
Here’s a look at five ways to create more joy and real smiles in your workplace this year.
Psychology Today defined happiness as “more than simply a positive mood.” It’s actually “a state of well-being that encompasses living a good life, one with a sense of meaning and deep contentment.”
Workers who feel a deep sense of contentment are generally more enthused to come to work in the morning. In turn, it makes it easier to show up and do the work instead of feeling like it’s a drag to get through “another workday.”
One study by iOpener Institute found employees who feel happy at work are 65% more energetic than employees who don’t. They also tend to stick with their jobs over a longer period of time, too.
Why are happy employees better employees? They generally are:
Additionally, happy workers are more committed to the company’s success and customer satisfaction.
The cost savings are apparent, too, when workers are content.
Workplace happiness lowers health care costs, reduces accidents, improves relationships between employees, reduces turnover, supports customer loyalty, and overall improves the company’s bottom line.
As a leader, when you look around your workplace, it’s much more inspiring to see smiling faces instead of stressed-out individuals.
When stress does pile up, more satisfied employees aren’t likely to throw in the towel ASAP.
Unfortunately, employee burnout is a real challenge in high-pressure work environments. Workplace burn-out is such a problem that even the World Health Organization (WHO) added it as an official condition in its International Classification of Diseases.
Yikes.
Not interested in seeing your employees burn the candle at both ends for too long?
Here’s a look at five tips to start implementing to improve your office spaces and culture for a productive 2020:
Your company culture is all about what you say, do, and work on every single day. It’s the “feel” of your office, so to speak. It’s how you treat one another, customers, and the community. The mission of your company is deeply entwined in your culture. By sticking to those mission words, you define your company culture.
Here’s how to keep your culture positive:
We all want to be heard. That’s especially the case of employees. If an unhappy employee thinks their opinion won’t count, they’ll remain silent and nothing will change. Engage workers to get a better understanding of what’s happening within the company that’s of concern, working well, etc.
Here’s how to do it:
Employees need to disengage from work during breaks and downtime. Leadership that embraces this aspect of a workplace culture generally have an easier time getting employees to follow suit. Doing so allows for creativity and productivity to flourish upon returning to work tasks.
How to do it:
Employees need to have a healthy work-life balance in order to feel refreshed and relaxed. Balancing work and play enables time for creative thinking and problem-solving that can’t always be done during structured work time. All of a person’s purpose shouldn’t be focused on work.
Here’s how to encourage life activities outside of work:
When your wellness committees make it a priority to focus on employee health on a regular basis, happiness automatically jumps. When you feel well, your mood improves and you have energy to do the things you love with enthusiasm — inside and outside of work.
To promote workplace wellness:
Happiness is contagious.
Most people love being around others who are positive and uplifting. If your entire team feels that way, they’ll be more energized and engaged to take on company projects — individually and as a team.
Not only does happiness matter to employees, but it should also matter to leadership as workplace happiness creates an overall more efficient and exciting workplace culture.
Workplace happiness makes for more productive employees, effective collaboration efforts, and an overall more enjoyable work environment. While happiness is certainly subjective, listening to your employees and watching their actions can show leadership where office morale boosters may be needed.
Feed the happiness wildfire as much as you can with the above office morale boosters. When you do, sit back and watch the workplace happiness fire spread.
How do you encourage workplace happiness? Share your thoughts on office morale boosters on social media using the hashtag #happinessatwork and tag us!