Kindness and happiness at work

O.S. Curry, C. San Miguel, M.N. Tunç

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

What is the relationship between kindness and happiness at work? Previous research has shown that kindness is a cause
and a correlate of happiness in general, and that kinder companies have happier employees. Here we build on this
research by using a new measure—the The Kindness Questionnaire (KQ)—to look at the relationship between kindness
to and from specific individuals at work, and workplace happiness. In Study 1 (n = 1151) we find that kindness to and
from bosses, colleagues and subordinates, and a more general measure of kindness at work, predicts happiness at work.
In Study 2 (n = 781) we find that kindness to bosses, colleagues and subordinates, and kindness from bosses, colleagues
but not subordinates, as well as more general measures of kindness at work, predict happiness at work. However, in
both studies, the simpler general measures of kindness at work are better predictors of happiness at work than the more
complicated specific measures. We also find that fair pay, meaningful work, and a competent boss predict happiness at
work. The implications, limitations and future directions of this research are discussed.
Keywords: Kindness · Organizational behavior · Happiness
Original languageEnglish
JournalDiscover Psychology
Volume4
Issue number167
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024
Externally publishedYes

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