Want your team to be happy? Here are the 4 components of happiness

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    There’s been a lot of talk about happiness and general well-being of late. Here we explore the four components of happiness and ask if busy teams can ever achieve a happy team.

    Workplace Happiness Cartoon
    Unfortunately, this is not an option in the real world

    Since becoming the Conservative leader and Prime Minister in the UK David Cameron has argued that we should be monitoring GWB (General Well Being) alongside GDP (Gross Domestic Product). This is an idea possibly inspired by the Kingdom of Bhutan’s GNH measure (Gross National Happiness), but Bhutan isn’t facing huge state spending cuts and bailing out neighboring countries.

    It’s not easy being happy in a 24/7 twenty-first century world. Many believe true happiness can only come to those fortunate few who win record lottery jackpots or sell old Chinese vases for £53 million. The rest of the population is too busy working or paying down their own debts to be happy.

    In fact, research into lottery winners’ well-being suggests that a year after their win lotto winners return to their pre-win state of happiness, or even depression.

    In his excellent book Delivering Happiness, Tony Hsieh identifies four factors that influence our state of happiness. None of these is money; Hsieh knows this from experience having sold his first business to Microsoft for $290 million and another company Zappos last year to Amazon for $807 Million.

    According to Tony Hsieh, the four components of happiness are:

    1. Feeling CONNECTED to a group of close friends and colleagues
    2. Having CONTROL over work and life
    3. Making PROGRESS towards goals, whether they be career, knowledge or fitness
    4. Having a clear sense of PURPOSE in life and work.

    Deficits in any of these four areas are likely to bring us down. As the corporate world demands more from its people for purposes far removed from individual goals there’s a real and present danger of making those valuable human assets miserable, demotivated and unproductive. Possibly so much that they’ll leave for smaller employers, able to offer the above.

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    For more resources, see our Library topic Team Building.

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    This blog is written by Fresh Tracks: Experts in running team building and team development programmes and conference organising.
    Website: www.freshtracks.co.uk