The Hamilton Spectator

We all need to lighten up at work

- Jay Robb Jay Robb serves as communicat­ions manager at McMaster University’s Faculty of Science, lives in Hamilton and has reviewed business books for The Hamilton Spectator since 1999.

I used to have a sense of humour.

In university, I drew a daily cartoon strip for the student paper about a sorority sister and fraternity brother. Profs taped the strip to their office doors. A candidate for student council president promised to ban the strip if elected. He lost.

Early in my career, I made newsletter­s that said what everyone was thinking in boardrooms and town halls. These were the early days of PowerPoint presentati­ons, the high water mark for management consultant­s and the peak of reengineer­ing the corporatio­n. The zingers wrote themselves.

But, somewhere along the way, I fell off the humour cliff. I can go days without cracking a smile.

“The collective loss of our sense of humour is a serious problem afflicting people and organizati­ons globally,” say professor Jennifer Aaker and executive coach Naomi Bagdonas, authors of “Humor, Seriously.”

“We’re all going over the humour cliff together, tumbling down into the abyss of solemnity below.”

Aaker and Bagdonas, who teach a humour course at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, know the way back up humour mountain. It’s a climb that’ll restore some much needed levity to balance out the gravity of our situations at work and home.

“We don’t need more ‘profession­alism’ in our workplaces,” say Aaker and Bagdonas. “Instead, we need more of ourselves, and more human connection — especially as in-person meetings are replaced by video chats and more relationsh­ips are sustained entirely by email. Often, all it takes is a hint of levity to shift a moment, or a relationsh­ip, from transactio­nal and robotic to relational and authentic.”

Humour serves up a cocktail of hormones that can make us happier, more trusting and productive, less stressed and even euphoric.

Aaker and Bagdonas have identified four humour styles.

While we all have a default mode, our humour styles vary based on our moods, situation and audience.

There are standups who come alive in front of crowds, earnest and honest sweetheart­s who never tease, magnets with their unwavering good cheer and the edgy, sarcastic snipers with their dry sense of humour and deadpan delivery.

As with everything else, leaders set the tone when it comes to humour at work. It’s less about being funny and more about letting your team know you actually have a sense of humour.

Be quick to smile, laugh at other people’s jokes, lean into selfdeprec­ating humour and continuall­y look for ways to break the tension and lighten the mood.

Solemnity can seem like the safer bet. No one gets cancelled for being humourless. Yet, you can be funny and stay employed by following two cardinal rules. Never punch down by making fun of someone who’s lower on the organizati­onal chart. For example, a president who makes fun of an intern is a bully and a jerk.

And never make someone’s identity a prop, plot point or punchline. “Derogatory humour doesn’t just push boundaries or highlight divisions. It can perpetuate prejudice and impact behaviour by those with prejudiced views. It further divides.”

Aaker and Bagdonas close their book with a compelling argument for more levity and humour. No one on their death bed says “if only I had laughed less and taken myself more seriously.”

Sharing a laugh is a tiny expression of love, say Aaker and Bagdonas.

“Where there is love, humour is not far behind. A life of purpose and meaning is a life filled with laughter and levity.”

It’s time we get out of the abyss of solemnity and start scaling humour mountain with Aaker and Bagdonas as our sherpas.

 ??  ?? Scan this code for more on business books by Jay Robb.
Scan this code for more on business books by Jay Robb.
 ??  ?? ”Humor, Seriously: Why Humor is a Secret Weapon in Business and Life.” Jennifer Aaker and Naomi Bagdonas. Currency. $37.
”Humor, Seriously: Why Humor is a Secret Weapon in Business and Life.” Jennifer Aaker and Naomi Bagdonas. Currency. $37.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada