12 Ways To Be Happier At Work In Less Than 10 Minutes
zappos happy employees
zappos happy employees

Flickr/Spreenkler

What’s the key to workplace happiness?

If you ask bestselling author Sharon Salzberg, she'll tell you that it's a combination of knowing what you're doing in the moment and feeling like your work is meaningful.

At the intersection of that in-the-moment awareness and overall meaning is mindfulness, Salzberg argues in her new book, " Real Happiness at Work." As one of America's leading meditation teachers, the book is a toolkit for incorporating mindfulness — and thus real happiness — into our daily working lives.

Don't worry, "mindfulness" doesn't require sitting cross-legged in your conference room. As Salzberg explains, it's about having a "balanced awareness" of what's happening around you, so that you can understand it rather than just react to it.

With that in mind, here are a dozen simple ways to be happier at work, in less than 10 minutes each:

1. Remember that happiness at work comes from having a sense of meaning.

"People say that the largest contributing factor in happiness at work is meaning, which you sometimes find in the job description or sometimes outside of it," Salzberg says , "and one of the largest sources (of unhappiness) is feeling unappreciated."

Research backs it up. Harvard professor Teresa Amabile has found that feeling like you're making even incremental progress in your career leads to happiness at work, while experiments by Wharton professor Adam Grant have shown that people are more engaged when they feel appreciated — and they perform better, too.

2. Take note of how many people you rely on — and how many rely on you.

"One of the reflections I ask people to do is: How many people need to do their jobs well for you to do your job well?" Salzberg says. It helps you realize how much you rely on everybody else.

A programmer can't make the next great app without a designer, and that product won't move without a sales team. In this way, you get a greater sense of how much your work is linked to others, and it feels more meaningful as a result.

3. Before a big meeting, think about the outcome.

Before you have a major conversation or get on an important phone call, Salzberg says to think about what you want to get out of the encounter.

"You can just ask, 'Do I want to be harmful? Do I want to be helpful? Do I want to put the other person down? Do I want to find a resolution?'" Salzberg says. Then you'll have an idea of the outcome you're hoping for, which will make the day feel much more under your control.

4. Find ways to "break the momentum" of the day.

Our workdays are full of emails, meetings, spreadsheets, presentations, and more. That can lead to feeling out of control. A lot of the work of injecting happiness into our days is stopping that momentum, which you could do by pausing to breathe for a few seconds before you talk to, call, or email someone.