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Laughter and happiness has a huge effect on our emotional wellbeing and our performance at work. Sometimes we forget how good it feels to share a big, roaring belly laugh. There's a film starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman called 'The Bucket List' which shows how enriching it can be to let our guard down and laugh at the absurdities of life and how sad it is when we become so vacant in our day to day existence, that we forget to do this.
Edward (played by Nicholson) works his whole life to build his hospital corporation into a Fortune 500 company. He is diagnosed with cancer and put into a room with another cancer patient, Carter Chambers (Morgan Freeman). The doctors give both the news that they have six-months to a year to live. Carter decides to write a 'Bucket List' of the things to do in life before you kick the bucket. One of the final items on the list Carter crosses off before he passes away is to "laugh until he cries". Against doctor's orders and all good sense, these two virtual strangers check themselves out of the hospital and hit the road together for the adventure of a lifetime.
Compared to all the items they see and do – from the Taj Mahal to the Serengeti, the finest restaurants to the seediest tattoo parlours, the cockpit of vintage race cars to the open door of a prop plane – sharing a heartfelt laugh and a connection with another person seems so simple. When the moment comes at the end of the film it's the climactic point in the movie and you're left laughing and crying along with both characters.
A little fun and laughter in the workplace is just as powerful when it comes to our emotional health and wellbeing, productivity and your company's bottom line. Let's not pretend all it takes is a few belly laughs to lift discretionary effort at work, but quite simply, the more we enjoy what we do, the more productive we are.
We're talking about employee engagement. It's a person's emotional and intellectual commitment to an organisation. The key: capturing the hearts and minds of employees. The catch: finding out what inspires employees to make that extra discretionary effort. The pay offs: work becomes pleasurable, more productive and more profitable.
Gallup estimate the overall cost of disengagement for Australian businesses to be as high as $42billion, more than three times the federal budget surplus – enough to comfortably build new hospitals, better rail networks, or reduce pay roll tax.
International Human Capital experts Hewitt Associates found more than half of Australian businesses find engaging and motivating their employees a challenge, with the average employee engagement score in Australian businesses at 54%.
At RedBalloon, we certainly practice what we preach as experts on reward and recognition and we have been privileged to receive an employee engagement score of 97% by Hewitt and recently been awarded a Top 10 place for the BRW Best Places To Work Study behind Google.
Below Naomi Simson, RedBalloon CEO, shares her tips on creating a culture of alignment, fostered by bonding and good times.
Edward and Carter may have had cash to splash, but the reality was they reaped more benefits from the simple pleasures they ticked off the list that they shared together. Having fun in business and creating an emotional attachment to your employer brand doesn't have to cost your business a mint. Sometimes it is the simplest things that make a difference.
Author: Kate Rolfe, Communications Champion, kate@redballoon.com.au
Date: 11/05/2009