Naysayers
take note: Encouraging fun at work produces positive results for employees and
employers
By
Jim Collison, President, Employers of America
Coach to America's Employers
Stop
having fun at work? That's what Joan O'C. Hamilton urges, writing in Business
Week E.Biz (May 15, 2000).
The thrust of her article is that "workers -and their families -can do
with less company-sponsored merriment." "Can We Stop Having Fun
Yet?" the headline blares. She reports examples of organized, employer-sponsored
fun-and-games, then ends with this: "I must close with a sentiment that
I've heard muttered at plenty of (Silicon) Valley shindigs: 'W ouldn 't it
be great if we could just have the cash they spent on all this?'"
I'll give Hamilton this: There certainly are people who go too far in goofing
off. And there are workplaces where having fun gets turned into having frat
parties. Hamilton, in her column, says, "...1 am here today to speak
for the victims. The poor, downtrodden employees yearning to go home. The
party-pooping, costume- hating working stiffs."
The reality is that too
few people are having fun at work. And there is plenty of evidence (in addition
to common sense) that suggests employees who have fun at work also make more
money for their employers. Hamilton, referring to comments from bankroller
George Zachery of Mohr, Davidow Ventures, writes, "he notes that the
real game is making money, not mischief." Well, the fact is that people
who are having fun in their work are helping make the money grow.
Ideas to inject
more fun into your workplace
It's
easy for you and your employees and associates to have more fun
in your workplace. You'll find 301 ways in the book 301 Ways
to Have Fun at Work.
Some examples
you'll find in this book:
g In late October have
a Haunted House
of Horrors and challenge employees to spot the "horrors"
of unsafe situations. g
Start a meeting by asking everyone to complete the sentence. "The
funniest thing I've seen at work is..." g
Change your breakroom to a humor room and fill it with puzzles, comic
books, games and toys so your employees get a little "en-lighten-ment."
It's just possible that working
stiffs (to some degree, isn't that all of us drawing paychecks?) can have fun
now and then while they work, just as professional athletes get some pleasure
in their work. Here's Paul Sullivan, writing in the Chicago Tribune of
Sammy Sosa's slamming a two-run home run to tie a game with the White Sox: "...Sosa
hopped high into the air and instantly went into air- plane mode, running to
first with his arms extended outward like a little kid in this back yard."
What's wrong with working stiffs enjoying their work like little kids in their
back yards?
Nothings
wrong with it! In fact, it makes good, bottom line business sense to en- courage
fun at work. Here's some evidence for Hamilton and other scowling naysayers:
Ninety-six
percent of execs (in a survey by Accountemps) believe people with a sense
of humor do better in their jobs than those who have little or no sense
of humor. (HRFocus, Feb. '93)
Employees
who take part in silly games think more creatively and develop more innovative
solutions to problems. A Cornell University study found that people who'd
just seen a funny movie increased their "creative flexibility."
(HR Focus, Feb. '93)
Employees
with the Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver, after viewing humorous
training films and attending workshops, showed a 25% decrease in downtime
and a 60% increase in job satisfaction. (HR Focus, Feb. '93)
Twenty
middle managers at Digital Equipment Corp., in Colorado Springs, in- creased
their productivity by 15% and reduced their sick days by half...in the nine
months following a workshop conducted by a humor consultant. (HR Focus,
Feb. '93)
A
survey of 329 company executives found that 97% agreed that humor is valuable
in business...and 60% felt that a sense of humor can be a deciding factor
in deter- mining how successful a person can be in the work world. Another
survey found that 84% of personnel di- rectors interviewed said that employees
with a sense of humor do better work. (Terry Braverman, Training and
Development magazine, July '93.)
An
HR survey found that a majority of workers think their offices are too bleak.
("Let the Good Times Roll: Building a fun culture," in Harvard
Management Up- date.)
Here's
one for Hamilton and other sour skeptics to consider: Pessimists die earlier.
That's the conclusion of a study of 839 patients who originally came to
the Mayo Clinic in the early 1960s. They were given a detailed personality
test, including an optimism-pessimism scale. Researchers followed up 30
years later. They found that the optimists in the tested group lived longer
than the pessimists. (Mayo Clinic Proceedings)
For
those, like Hamilton and people she quotes, who grouse that they'd rather
have the money than the fun...consider the study by Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co.. In a test, the manager of special accounts marketing offered
cash rewards to half the participants in the test. He offered non-cash rewards
to the other half of the participants. Those participating were sales associates
and managers at 900 company-owned stores and service centers. Result: Those
rewarded with non-cash produced results almost 50% greater than those offered
just cash.
The
studies confirm that almost always people will for- get the little extra money...but
will remember, and appreciate, the little extra fun.
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