A Harvard
psychology researcher explains that rather than thinking of success as the
source of happiness, we should think of happiness as a source of success--and
one that's more under out control than we imagine.
Entrepreneurs, in general, are strivers. We set targets, battle to
meet them, and believe that getting to that point, whatever it is, will bring us
increased satisfaction. But according to one positive psychology researcher out
of Harvard, as commonsensical as this tendency to chase achievement in order to
attain greater happiness may sound, it's actually got the equation
reversed.
In a fascinating
(and funny) TEDxBloomington talk, Shawn Achor, author of The
Happiness Advantage, argues that while we may think success will bring
us happiness, the lab-validated truth is that happiness brings us more success.
And understanding this is particularly valuable for entrepreneurs, Achor said in
an interview. Business owners, he said, need to reverse the happiness and
success formula. We think if we work harder and achieve some entrepreneurial
goal, then we'll be happier. But the research is clear that every time you have
a success, your brain changes what success means. So for you and for your team,
if happiness is on the opposite side of success, you'll never get there. But if
you increase your levels of happiness in the midst of a challenge—in the midst
of searching for investment, in the midst of a down economy—what we find is that
all of your success rates rise dramatically – every business outcomes
improves.
The brain, it turns out, works significantly better when you're feeling
positive, so developing a sunny outlook allows you to be smarter and more
creative. "We found that optimism is the greatest predictor of entrepreneurial
success because it allows your brain to perceive more possibilities," said
Achor. "Only 25 percent of job success is based upon IQ. Seventy-five percent is
about how your brain believes your behavior matters, connects to other people,
and manages stress."
If you're all set to argue that your level of optimism or ability to handle
stress is out of your control and determined by either your genes or your
childhood, requiring a Woody Allen-level commitment to psychiatric intervention
to reverse, Achor would like to correct you. "It's a cultural myth that we
cannot change our happiness," he said, explaining that:
Genes are really important to happiness, but that's based upon the cult of
the average. What that means is that the average person doesn't fight their
genes. So if you're born with genes for obesity or for pessimism, and you don't
change your behavior then your genes win. Happiness comes easier to some people,
but happiness is a possibility for all if we change our behavior or our
mindset.
And changing your mindset is probably less difficult than you imagine. "No
one would think that something small could change patterns of pessimism from
decades or from genes," conceded Achor, but he said research proves the doubters
wrong. "What we found was something as simple as writing down three things
you're grateful for every day for 21 days in a row significantly increases your
level of optimism and it holds for the next six months. The research is amazing.
It proves we actually can change."
So if you're looking for more ways to boost your personal happiness quotient,
than check out Achor's TED talk below for some simple interventions that have
been proven to help (they're towards the end). Or if you're more focused on
helping your team perform better by being happier, check out Achor's recent
Harvard Business Review Magazine cover
story, explaining, as Achor put it, that "happiness leads to greater levels
of profits. In the article I described some things you can do at a team
organizational level" to promote it.
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