Though AI may be dominating workplace conversations, technology alone doesn’t create stronger teams. Research increasingly suggests that happier employees are more engaged, more resilient, and more productive. At a time when burnout, stress, and disconnection remain persistent challenges, workplace happiness has been elevated from a workplace perk to a business necessity.
In a recent Fast Company article, Mark Price, author of Work Happier: How to be Happy & Successful at Work, points out that “Happier teams are higher-performing teams. AI can shrink a task, but only people can grow a business…The sustainable edge therefore comes from engineering happiness first and then letting technology amplify it.”
This post delves into what workplace happiness actually means, why it’s so important, which factors most influence it, and how to foster workplace happiness through practical strategies.
What Workplace Happiness Really Means
Workplace happiness is a sustainable emotional state that stems from a combination of psychological well-being, a sense of purpose and connection, and a sense of feeling valued at work. It goes beyond the short-term satisfaction of perks and benefits to a sustained feeling rooted in culture, relationships, and engagement.
Though workplace happiness looks different across teams, it follows common foundation principles such as purpose (finding meaning in work); autonomy (a sense of agency and control); connection (strong relationships with coworkers, even if not close friends); and recognition (acknowledgment of one’s efforts and achievements).
Why Workplace Happiness Is So Important
Happy employees tend to be more engaged at work, self-motivated, and productive. As Mark Price noted, “happier workers are 13% more productive” according to one study, while other research connected workplace happiness to “a 35% average revenue increase (and) 57% lower attrition.” Enterprises that prioritize happiness benefit not only from lower turnover but also from a stronger employer brand.
Menar Morales, a recognized thought leader on workplace flexibility, the hybrid workplace, and the future of work, wrote in 5 Ways Great Managers Make Their Teams Happier—Without Sacrificing Productivity that:
“When companies take steps to increase engagement and reduce burnout, they enjoy the benefits…organizations that ‘doubled down on employee engagement in times of economic uncertainty’ performed twice as well financially compared to organizations that did not prioritize engagement” and workplace happiness.
A focus on happiness at work helps improve organizational resilience, adaptability, and long-term business performance.
The Business Impact of Unhappy Workplaces
In unhappy workplaces, a combination of employee disengagement, burnout, and low morale directly reduces productivity and collaboration. Per Mark Price, unhappiness comes with significant costs. When employees aren’t happy, they’re also not engaged, and “low employee engagement drains $8.9 trillion from the global economy, roughly 9% of the world’s GDP.”
The hidden costs of workplace unhappiness include higher absenteeism and turnover, as well as reduced team trust. As a result, those workplaces struggle with a lack of innovation, poor communication, and less accountability. As noted previously in our post on why there’s so much workplace unhappiness and how to fix it, unhappy employees in general “are disengaged with their jobs, disconnected from their company’s mission, and have an unhealthy relationship with their work.”
Key Factors That Influence Workplace Happiness
Happiness is a key component of workplace culture, and that is shaped from the top of the organization. By demonstrating consistent and ethical behavior along with open communication, leadership practices shape both employees’ long-term feelings about work and their day-to-day job experience.
Those actions build trust, and it’s hard to overstate the importance of trust to employee happiness. In their article, There’s a happiness gap at work. Here’s what we learned from leaders in Finland and Denmark, the happiest countries in the world, professors Tiffany Danko and Susan Vroman write:
“Trust is an essential element that contributes to happiness. Research shows that people are happier when they find those they interact with to be trustworthy. With trust, individual well-being improves…An organization should prioritize developing trust in and among the workforce to cultivate happiness. Trust is perhaps the most vital form of capital leaders have today.”
Factors like recognition, autonomy, and growth opportunities form the cornerstone of workplace happiness. Along with a sense of social connection and belonging within teams, they help transform a mere job into a meaningful career.
6 Practical Ways to Foster Happiness in the Workplace in 2026
Workplace happiness can’t be forced, of course, but it can be nurtured and cultivated. Here are half a dozen practical ways to encourage and advance happiness among employees.
1. Build Strong Team Relationships
Positive workplace relationships improve collaboration and increase trust, support, and a sense of psychological safety. Shared effort and events strengthen team bonds by creating common experiences of challenges and accomplishments.
Journalist Gwen Moran writes in 6 Ways to be Happier at Work, According to Experts, “Building the ability to be more resilient (and) developing supportive relationships and friendships are among the strongest indicators of happiness at work.
Developing strong relationships requires more than working in proximity or getting together for meetings. It depends on fostering intentional connection through off-site activities and team building events that strengthen your team dynamics.
2. Encourage Open and Honest Communication
Open communication reduces uncertainty and workplace anxiety. Employees are happier when they understand decisions and feel informed. A regular cadence of feedback from and dialogue with their managers helps employees feel heard and valued.
As Tiffany Danko and Susan Vroman observe, “When workers feel like they know what is going on, that their well-being is formally on the company’s agenda, and that their voices are valued…they feel comfortable coming to work and doing their best. They will feel happy.”
The quality of communication matters more than the quantity. Employees don’t need to be overwhelmed with the details of what’s happening everywhere in the organization—only to feel confident that they’re being kept in the loop about what matters in their role and to their team.
Our post on activities to improve communication skills in the workplace highlights programs like Total Recall, which helps teams improve their communication skills, and our Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) Training, which helps team members better understand their personality differences and styles to reduce conflict and increase understanding
3. Recognize Contributions and Celebrate Wins
Employee recognition reinforces purpose and motivation by connecting individual tasks to larger team or business goals. It validates the worker’s value and positively supports behaviors that drive company success.
Celebrating progress and milestones—not just final results or year-end—builds and maintains morale. As Mark Price advises, “don’t wait for annual reviews to say thank you. Build weekly recognition rituals tied to outcomes…Managers should set and co-set clear goals with their teams so recognition feels earned and specific.”
Public acknowledgment from company leaders, whether formal or informal, makes employees feel seen and valued. Recognition from peers also has a powerful, positive impact on happiness and improves team cohesion.
4. Support Growth and Development
Providing employees with learning opportunities contributed to their confidence and long-term satisfaction. As detailed in our post on improving business performance by fixing corporate training issues:
- 68% of employees say training and development is the company’s most important policy.
- 93% of employees said that well-planned employee training programs positively affect their level of engagement.
- And an astonishing 94% of employees say they will stay at a company longer if it invests in training and development.
Investing in employee training communicates that they have a future with the company. Not surprisingly, workers who are confident about their future employment report higher levels of happiness. Per Mark Price, “A range of factors influence job satisfaction, but two stand out: opportunities for personal growth and the quality of the employee-manager relationship.”
Professional development should be seen as an investment in people, not just in skills. That’s why, for example, leadership training is important for every employee.
5. Create Trust Through Transparency
Trust within an organization acts much like motor oil in an engine: it reduces friction, helping all parts of the business work together more smoothly. Trust reduces uncertainty by making employees feel informed and in the know about important information, and it strengthens workplace relationships.
According to Tiffany Danko and Susan Vroman:
“Trust is an essential element that contributes to happiness…(and) is perhaps the most vital form of capital leaders have today. Workers need to trust that leaders will follow through on commitments and maintain support of a designated agenda…Teams expect leaders to act with expertise and alignment with an organization’s values. This builds trust that leaders are acting with both competence and character. When there is mutual trust in organizations, there is a positive impact on the bottom line.”
Transparency around goals, decisions, and expectations keeps employees in the loop, makes them feel respected, and instills a sense of psychological safety.
6. Create Opportunities for Connection Through Team Building
Modern team building programs are a natural way to keep employees happy. Team building activities enable teams to reset, reconnect, and recharge while having fun together. Experiences outside the workplace and normal flow of work—whether primarily for fun competition and bonding or for giving back to the community through charity team building activities—deepen relationships, trust, and empathy.
Engaging in team building exercises on a regular basis counters isolation (especially for remote or hybrid teams), increases employee engagement, and helps prevent burnout. It increases employee happiness by breaking the routine and improving collaboration through fun, stress-free activities.
How Professional Development Supports Workplace Happiness
Professional development training courses and workshops teach employees new skills, leadership decision-making, and problem-solving approaches. They make workers more valuable and make them feel more valued.
When organizations invest time and money in training, employees feel supported and more confident about their future. Not only does this investment open up growth opportunities, but among the key professional development goals is fostering a growth mindset, “a learner’s belief that their intelligence can expand and develop.” This has been shown to make workers more resilient, creative, and happy in their work over the long term.
Ready to Create a Happier Workplace?
The first step in creating a happier workplace is to do an honest assessment of your current workplace culture and employee experience. Are you building trust through open and transparent communication, acknowledging employee contributions, supporting the growth and development of your people, and creating opportunities to strengthen workplace relationships?
If not, it’s time to develop and implement a plan to increase workplace happiness. Employers who succeed in that endeavor will build a sustainable advantage in employee engagement, retention, and recruitment, as well as business performance.
Our team building and professional development programs are engineered to support happier, more connected, and more productive teams. They can help organizations address a wide range of business situations, from managing mergers to fostering innovation, and can be customized to meet specific needs.
When you’re ready to explore how team building and professional development programs can support your efforts to create a happier workplace, contact Best Corporate Events to start the conversation.