Share The Love

Showing posts with label achivement and happiness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label achivement and happiness. Show all posts

Friday, April 6, 2012

Poland 53rd in UN World Happiness Report - Warsaw Business Journal

Follow Us

The first-ever World Happiness Report has just been released by the United Nations. It shows that the happiest countries in the world are in northern Europe, with Denmark, Norway, Finland and the Netherlands, respectively, taking the top four spots. On a 0-10 scale, the average 'happiness' score for those countries is 7.6.

Poland took a mediocre 53rd place in the happiness league, Rzeczpospolita wrote.

Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa were found to be least happy, with Togo at the bottom of the UN's report.

Happier countries tend to be richer countries, according to the survey. However, more important for happiness than income are social factors such as the strength of social support, the absence of corruption and a high degree of personal freedom.

At work, job security and good relationships do more for job satisfaction than high pay and convenient hours, the report suggests.

Poland A.M. via wbj.pl

 

Study of the Day: Ambition May Bring Success, but Not Happiness

Follow Us

New research from Notre Dame suggests that the enviable careers of go-getters may be incompatible with life satisfaction and longevity.

Paramount Pictures

PROBLEM: People who are ambitious tend to attend the best universities and go on to have prestigious careers with high salaries. But do they necessarily lead happier and healthier lives as well?

METHODOLOGY: University of Notre Dame management professor Timothy Judge used data from the Terman life-cycle study to track 717 high-ability individuals over seven decades. He measured the participants' ambition from childhood to the beginning of their careers. The educational backgrounds of the subjects ranged from finishing with high school diplomas to attending some of the world's best universities -- Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Columbia, Cornell, Northwestern, Berkeley, and Oxford.

RESULTS: Ambition was predicted by individual differences -- conscientiousness, extraversion, neuroticism, and general mental ability -- and a socioeconomic background variable: parents' occupational prestige. Despite their many accomplishments in school and at work, go-getters tend to live somewhat shorter lives and are only slightly happier than their less-motivated peers.

CONCLUSION: High achievers may be sacrificing the quality of their lives for success.

IMPLICATION: Parents should know that ambition has its limits. Judge said in a statement, "If your biggest wish for your children is that they lead happy and healthy lives, you might not want to overemphasize professional success."

SOURCE: The full study, "On the Value of Aiming High: The Causes and Consequences of Ambition," is published in the Journal of Applied Psychology.

via theatlantic.com

Thank you for visiting my blog. Jim

Jim Woods is president and founder of InnoThink Group. A global management consulting firms specialized solely in helping organizations of all sizes in all industries catalyzing top line growth through strategic innovation and hypercompetition. Jim has over 25 years consulting experience in working with small, mid size and Fortune 1000 companies. He is a former U.S. Navy Seabee and grandfather of five. Jim is board president of a charter school located in Colorado Springs whose sole purpose is to prepare otherwise disadvantaged students more competitively for college. To arrange for Jim to speak at your next event or devise an effective hypercompetition strategy email or call us at 719-649-4118 for availability. Subscribe to our innovation and hypercompetition newsletter.   

Follow us on Twitter

Follow us on Linkedin

Follow us on Facebook