We鈥檝e all heard the saying, often attributed to Confucius, 鈥淐hoose a job you love, and you will never have to work a day in your life."
But for many people, this is easier said than done, leaving workers searching for meaning in the tasks they perform each day. But new research paper co-authored by a Boston College professor suggests that those who don't think a job is significant and worth doing may not understand how to evaluate the work.
Michael Pratt discussed his research with Money magazine. .
鈥淔or some, the source of meaninglessness is clear, such as when you perform dull or repetitive tasks all day.听 But we found that many people whose jobs seem pretty good in that they are challenging and non-routine听鈥 professionals, bankers, lawyers, managers听鈥 are still not finding meaning in their work,鈥 says co-author Michael Pratt, the O鈥機onnor Family Professor of Management and Organization at 精东影业's Carroll School of Management. 鈥淭o them, jobs are not meaningful because they lack a standard for what makes work good and what makes work bad. This lack of standards among groups or societies is sometimes is referred to as 'anomie.'鈥
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Publication of the paper 鈥淢eaningful Work as Realization and Justification: Toward a Dual Conceptualization鈥 鈥 co-authored by Douglas A. Lepisto, an assistant professor of management at Western Michigan University who earned his doctorate at the Carroll School 鈥 is forthcoming in Organizational Psychology Review.
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鈥淚 think the biggest surprise for us was the number of people who found their work meaningless despite the fact they had pretty good jobs,鈥 says Pratt. 鈥淭hey had jobs that by many metrics should have been really meaningful. They had high task significance, their work was important to people, they had high job complexity, they got to do a lot of different things, they had autonomy, they got feedback about their work, and they got to do whole tasks. In theory, all of these people should be quite happy about the work that they鈥檝e done. Meaningfulness should not be a problem.鈥
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But it is, largely because of the intangibles.
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鈥淲hen you look at very hands on work, like making chairs or tables where you are producing something tangible, it鈥檚 easier to figure whether you had a good work day because you made something,鈥 says Pratt. But many people, he said, reach the day's end and ask themselves "What did I do? Did I have a good day?" and have a hard time answering because there are now fewer standards for defining what is good work versus not good work.听 "So we鈥檙e finding a lot of people听鈥 millennials and older听鈥 asking, what jobs are worth doing? What makes work meaningful?鈥
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Pratt and Lepisto note that there are two main barriers to meaningfulness at work. The first is 鈥渁lienation鈥; people feel separated from the work that they do. This is frequently the problem with assembly line work.
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鈥淲e know a lot about solving this problem,鈥 says Pratt.听 鈥淚t involves either redesigning people鈥檚 work, or allowing them to craft it in a way that makes it more interesting.鈥 听
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When that strategy is successful, workers have more of their personal needs met. Thinking about meaningful work in this way provides a 鈥渞ealization perspective.鈥 听
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However, when the barrier is anomie听鈥 that is, when people lack standards for evaluating their work听鈥 then redesigning work is not the answer. Instead, meanings around the work itself have to change, which the researchers refer to as a 鈥渏ustification perspective.鈥
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鈥淭he justification perspective is much more about the kind of stories that we as a society share with each other about what makes work worth doing,鈥 says Pratt. 鈥淭he focus is on helping people find their story and find a rationale for why they鈥檙e doing what they鈥檙e doing.
Think about a burger flipper, " he said. "One way to create meaningfulness is to allow him or her to open the store and interact with customers.听 That is, change the job itself 鈥 the realization perspective.听 The justification perspective would focus on why the burger flipper is doing the job, perhaps to help feed others."
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It's also helpful to not focus solely on money. If bricklayers are asked what why they are doing the job, the answers听 "earning a wage" versus "building a cathedral" are two very different stories about the same job, said Pratt.
Back in the late 80s and early 90s, "good work" was tied to making as much money as possible; the Gordon Gekko mantra of "greed is good," said Pratt. Now when people talk about work, especially in relation to millennials, "the dominant cultural narrative is that meaningful work serves a higher purpose," he said. "It helps the environment, helps other people, or has some kind of greater good. The stories we tell ourselves about what makes work meaningful have changed over time. They also may vary by geographic location and economic circumstances."
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Pratt says one thing organizations can do is to find out what stories workers are already telling themselves about why the work is worth doing, and align messages with that. For example, if a worker believes work is worth doing if it helps others, then point out ways in which the job does 鈥 or could 鈥 contribute to society.
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Linking the work with a purpose or mission is a good start, says Pratt. 鈥淏ut this has to be done with good intentions. If purpose and mission purposes and missions doesn鈥檛 come from the core of the organization and isn鈥檛 seen as authentic, then it鈥檚 likely to fail miserably. You have to go in really wanting to help people find meaning in their work and not use it in a manipulative way. People tend to see through that, which is why these kinds of interventions can backfire.鈥
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