There are almost 92,000 books being sold on Amazon.com right now that contain the word "happy" in the title. This does not necessarily include all of the books that are actually about happiness. Nor the ones that are about satisfaction, contentment or peace.
#WorkHuman was a conference recently held by +Globoforce in Orlando. And while it was a conference founded upon recognition thoughts and strategies, there was a push towards happiness that I found refreshingly interesting.
From a scientific approach, the concept of happiness was explored by Shawn Achor. What benefit is there to happiness in the workplace? Of course, we would rather people be happy than sad at work. It's not likely that any of us looks to see a line of sad people outside of our door that we need to convert to happy ones. However, there is something to be said about our ability to promote a happier culture. +JetBlue VP of People Michael Elliott shared how it's the job of HR, for example, to sell the success stories of the company. Preach the ways we shine. We have an opportunity to support the core values and encourage the mission of our organizations through a pursuit of happiness.
Consider, however, the concept of joy. Happiness tends to be an emotional consideration, and while there are fuller perspectives, joy is more of a state of being. What can we do to foster this level of consideration? How can pursuing the right perspective of such a state of being impact workplace culture?
None of this is meant to cover up the difficulties that come along with living. Sickness, financial strain, divorce, death...all of this and more vie for our attention and steal our joy. We should not look to be smiling idiots or attempt to gloss over the pain that others might have. We're still people, People!
The thoughts here are reflective of the measurable affect that happiness can bring to the workplace. While at this conference, +The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research founder was on-hand to share his perspective on life. To hear someone who could have become rather bitter and jaded at the unfairness of life, share that he loves his life, is humbling. The gripes about work - the amount to do, the managers that annoy and the lack of variety of coffee flavors - find a better context and become minimized in light of such a perspective. Michael J. Fox shared his heart and his joy. The lesson for all of us is to do the same.