BOOK : How
to Have a Good Day at Work
Everyone wants to be happier at work. But how
do we get there? In her new book, How to Have
a Good Day: Harness the Power of Behavioral Science to Transform Your
Working Life, author Caroline Webb looks at some of the more
fascinating recent discoveries that could could help workplaces everywhere
become happier spaces. She recently spoke about her book on the Knowledge@Wharton show on Wharton Business Radio on SiriusXM
channel 111.
An
edited transcript of the conversation follows.
Knowledge@Wharton: Based
on the research that you have done, how many people on average are not having a
good day when they are going to work?
Caroline Webb: There
are a lot of surveys that suggest that around half of the workforce are not
particularly enjoying their everyday working life. That’s pretty sad when you
think about how many of our hours each day we spend at work. Even for the rest
of us, those of us who might love our jobs, deep down the day-to-day can be not
as great as the big picture. Small stuff can get us down, even when we love our
jobs. I became very interested in what it would take to make everyday life a
little bit easier as we go through our tasks and our priorities for the day.
Knowledge@Wharton: Can
you give us a little bit of the backstory about how you accumulated this data,
and tell us about the themes behind the book?
Webb: I’ve been working with
people for more than 15 years now to help them thrive at work. That’s been my
day job. It’s a pretty fantastic day job to be helping people to be at their
best. I did that first as a consultant for many years, and then struck out on
my own about four years ago. The core of it is really one-to-one coaching work,
but there’s also working with teams, with boards, with whole organizations to
shift cultures in a more positive direction.
I became aware that when a company is trying to improve its
culture, it often thinks about the big-ticket interventions — the big CEO
speech or whatever. That stuff is needed, but often, what doesn’t get focused
on is the small stuff: How do you handle disagreements? How do you handle days
when the workload is very heavy? Often, the way that people deal with things
like that is actually what really defines the way that an organization feels.
I became more and more interested in the small space aspects of
our lives, and my coaching and consulting went more and more in that direction.
This book comes out of years and years of practice.
Knowledge@Wharton: There
is so much research trying to figure out how to help people have a good day —
and how to make the workday better just in general. Clearly, a lot of
scientists and behavioral economists see this as an important piece to not only
personal success, but corporate success, as well.
Webb: Yes, there’s so much
great research out there being done by behavioral scientists, which is the
umbrella term for neuroscientists, psychologists and economists who look at why
we behave the way we do. But a lot of it isn’t really making the leap from the
lab into real life, so that’s really where my work focuses. It’s translational.
I’m interested in translating this amazing research into, what does it mean for
how we should handle a conversation like this differently? How we should handle
a meeting differently or a to-do list differently? There’s still a long way to
go in that practical translation, but I’m hoping my work makes a bit of a dent
in it.
Knowledge@Wharton: I’m guessing
you have been asked this question a few times: What’s a good day to you?
Webb: The book was really
based on asking that question to hundreds and hundreds of people over the
years. I used to ask them, “What’s a good day for you? What’s a bad day for
you? And what would it take to get more good days?” So I feel pretty confident
in giving a kind of general answer that everyone’s different.
I think it is about getting to the end of the day and feeling
that your attention and time has gone toward what really matters to you.
Second, I think it’s about feeling good about what you’ve done. Third, I think
it’s about enjoying yourself — or at least feeling that you’ve bounced back
from what’s not been great, so that you’ve got enough energy and resilience in the
tank for the next day.
Knowledge@Wharton: You
have three themes about to how to make the science work in today’s business
world. Could you go into those, please?
Webb: Well, I was trying to
create this grand synthesis of decades of work in psychology and neuroscience
and behavioral economics, and I was trying to really identify what the three
essential big themes were that cut across all of those disciplines and really
are useful for us to understand.
First is the two-system brain. The idea there is that we’ve got
a “deliberate system” in our brain that takes care of everything we do
deliberately and consciously: That’s reasoning, self-control, planning,
forward-thinking, all the grown-up stuff. Then, we have an “automatic system,”
which takes care of just about everything else. Those systems have strengths
and weaknesses, and we don’t really play to those strengths and weaknesses as
much we might. And that’s so central to actually having a better day.
For example, the deliberate system gets overloaded really
quickly, and has huge capacity constraints. If we understand how that works, it
becomes much easier to see how we can get overloaded so easily, and what it
takes to lighten the load on our deliberate system. For example, having a to-do
list that has three things on it rather than 23. You know, these things
actually help us think more clearly. So, recognizing that we have a two-system
brain and playing to the strengths of each system.
The second big theme is the discover-defend axis. The idea there
is, your brain has a couple of different modes. One is defending you against
threats, and the other is going out and seeking and discovering rewards.
These modes result in quite different approaches to life. When
you are in defensive mode, you are quite tunnel-visioned. You’re closing down:
It’s fight, flight or freeze. What happens in defensive mode — and we know this
when we’re put on the spot — is it becomes harder to think straight. What’s
been found is that there’s actually less activity in the prefrontal cortex when
people are even mildly stressed. In other words, when we’re on the defensive
against some kind of threat — and it can be as small as being cut off in a
meeting or being put on the spot — it’s enough to actually make us seize up
slightly and not be able to think straight, just at the moment when we want to
raise our game.
Knowledge@Wharton:
Dealing with that in the workplace — being put on the defensive — is certainly
something that most people would like to be able to avoid, but it’s almost become
the norm in terms of being in an office.
Webb: Absolutely. A lot of my
work focuses on how to get people into discovery mode, where you’re focused
more on the rewards than the threats in a situation. For example, if you’re
dealing with a really tough discussion topic, you don’t have to be soft about
it, but you can get people to think more clearly and, indeed, yourself more
clearly if you first ask, “What’s our ideal outcome here? And what’s our first
step towards that?”
Competence and purpose are inherently rewarding for the brain.
If you can get the brain to focus more on the rewards than the threats in the
situation, then you’ll get to clearer thinking.
The third big theme is the mind-body loop. It’s interesting,
because what it says is the way we treat our body has an immediate impact on
the way that our brain functions, rather than just a long-term impact. We know
that over time, if we keep fit, there are all sorts of health benefits that
flow from that. But what’s fascinating is that sleep, exercise, mindfulness —
these things have an immediate effect on how clearly we think and how well we
feel.
Knowledge@Wharton: It
seems we’re in a time when more people understand that exercise of some kind
has to be an important ingredient in your daily life.
Webb: Yes, I’m really cheered
by that. And I am someone who has never been a gym bunny. I played a lot of
team sports when I was younger, but it gets a lot harder when you’re older to
fit that in. So for me, it was really transformational to realize that just
going for a brisk walk for 15 minutes was enough to boost my mood and my focus.
And I did that knowing the research that underlies it. I have this rickety
elliptical machine in my office — it’s really not a high-end thing — but when I
was writing the book, I learned that if jumped on it for 10, 15 minutes
whenever I was feeling stuck, I would have the breakthrough that I needed.
Seeing it as an immediate boost to your ability to think and to
feel good is really the big shift. It doesn’t have to be much — a few jumping
jacks, a little bit of a walk, and that’s enough.
Knowledge@Wharton: In
the book, you make it clear from the beginning that if you don’t have your
priorities straight, you’re fighting an uphill battle right from the get-go.
Webb: Yes, absolutely. When
we think of priorities, we think of, perhaps, goals or to-do lists, and there’s
some science there that tells us that actually, the way you articulate your
goals really matters to whether you are able to achieve them. One example is,
we tend to achieve goals more readily if they are articulated as doing more of
a good thing rather than less of a bad thing. For example, “I will stay focused
today during this meeting,” rather than “I will not check my phone.”
It turns out there’s something about the discovery-defense modes
that gets triggered there. If you are focusing on negative language, then it
seems to trigger more of a defensive response. We perform better when we’re in
discovery mode. There are all sorts of little things like that that are quite
interesting that most people don’t know — but even more than that, what’s
perhaps even less well known is that when we carry a certain set of assumptions
of attitudes into any interaction or any task, it’s going to affect what we
perceive. That’s because our brain can only actually perceive consciously part
of what’s going on around us at any time. What we tend to see is whatever
matches what’s already top-of-mind for us. This is one of those “head explodes”
moments, where you think, “Oh my gosh. I thought I was perceiving reality
pretty objectively.”
But it’s a bit like when you buy a new car, and then you
suddenly see every car on the road that is that exact model, because it’s
top-of-mind for you, that’s what you see. There’s real power to being more
deliberate about setting your intentions before you go into anything during the
day, because you will see more of it. If you go into a conversation expecting
someone to be a jerk, you will see everything confirmed that they are, indeed,
a complete jerk. And you may miss moments where they smile or where they’re
more conciliatory or more cooperative. That’s really profound, and most of us
don’t realize it, and it can make a big difference every day.
Knowledge@Wharton: So
once you get that “jerk” mentality in your head, it’s really hard to get it
out, right?
Webb: Yes, and it’s
subconscious. What we don’t realize is, we’re then filtering out everything
that suggests the world is a nicer place than our attitude going into the day
suggests.
Knowledge@Wharton: You
also talk in the book about relationships, both the good and the bad, and also
something I think is important, but that’s not talked about enough — that your
success also really reflects on other people, and is able to help other people
have success, as well.
Webb: Yes, absolutely. Very
few of us are hermits sitting in a cave on our own. Our success depends so much
on the people around us, and not just our success, but also our happiness and
our feeling of connectedness. Researchers have shown that the quality of our
relationships is one of the most reliable predictors of our view of how happy
we are and how much we feel good about our lives.
It’s super important. It’s so easy if you’re a very technical,
analytical person to think that the relationship stuff is soft and doesn’t
really need as much focus. But it can be transformational just to know a few
things about, for example, how to get other people out of defensive mode and
into discovery mode, so that they’re behaving more like their best selves. I think
one of the most powerful things to know is that autonomy is an enormously
motivating force.
We know it when it’s taken away from us — when someone treads on
our toes, we feel terrible. But that has a big implication for how we handle
and deal with other people, even if they are peers — to give people space to
contribute and provide input rather than telling people what to do. It suggests
that there’s a huge premium on really being a better listener, that there are
certain benefits to coaching rather than telling, there are certain benefits to
really giving people space to think. And it’s not always people’s natural style
in working with coworkers.…
Autonomy can be really in the small stuff. For example, if I’m
running a workshop with a group of clients, I always try and make sure that if
we’re running over time on one part of the day, just simply asking people, “Do
you want to continue or should we take a break?” It can be really small ways of
inviting people to feel that they own part of what’s going on. Once you realize
that it can be as small as asking people’s advice — “Well, what do you think
about this topic?” — it becomes a lot easier to imagine how you might build it
into your natural interactions with people, without necessarily needing to shift
the whole culture of an organization.
Knowledge@Wharton: You
also talk in the book about the fact that people should think about having an
impact — somehow, some way, in their job, in their company — almost every day.
Webb: This is about feeling
that you have some usefulness. When I was talking about what a “good day” is,
feeling good about what you’ve done is partly about having great interactions,
it’s partly about doing your best thinking, but it’s also about feeling that
those conversations and that thinking isn’t wasted. A lot of that comes from
whether our communications are really landing the way that we want, whether
we’re able to make change happen, even if it’s in tiny ways. And having the
confidence to really come across as our best selves, perhaps, when we are not
feeling that confident. And those are topics that we often think about if we’re
in advertising or marketing. We think about, “How do we influence the
customer?” We don’t think about it quite so much in, “Well, how do I write this
email so that it really gets the effect that I want?” Or “I’d like my colleague
to stop spilling coffee in the kitchen.” I mean, it can be really small stuff,
but actually understanding what it takes to make change happen can make you
feel pretty good at the end of the day. It can make you feel that, “Oh, yeah,
OK, I actually made a difference.”
So when I say impact, it doesn’t have to be necessarily on kind
of a grand scale. It just makes you feel good if you feel like, “I was listened
to and I made a difference.”
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/160523b_kwradio_webb-caroline-webb/?utm_source=kw_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2016-07-07
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