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Business at the Speed of Happiness

Keeping your best talent in our competitive marketplace

By Stephen Garber

“When I was 5 years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school they asked me what I want to be when I grew up. I wrote down ‘happy.’ They told me I didn’t understand the assignment, and I told them they didn’t understand life.”
— Attributed (apocryphally) to musician John Lennon

In most of our businesses and organizations, our model, our “unique selling proposition,” our service, or our “technology” is not our differentiator. It’s the quality of our people and how they relate and communicate with each other and the world around them—our stakeholders and our customers—that determines our success.

Attracting and keeping great people is the pathway to sustainable success. And it’s a very challenging market out there for notable talent, particularly in South Florida.

“Management,” as a concept, often seems complicated, sophisticated and even obtuse. “Leadership” is even more esoteric, and harder to qualify and quantify. They’re both about understanding human motivation, and what makes people happy. As Abraham Maslow taught us in his 1943 hierarchy of needs, once our basic needs (wellness and safety) are met, it’s the higher needs of love, esteem and growth that keep us motivated—and happy.   

Assuming your people are healthy—and working in a healthy environment—and they’re receiving a fair compensation for their contribution to your organization’s success, creating an environment of “likeable” and “happy” is the best way to keep your best people engaged and loyal.

The Association of Accounting Technicians in the United Kingdom did research that was absolute in its result: Good colleagues beat high pay: Eight in 10 workers would turn down a higher salary if it meant working with people they didn’t like.

Happy people make delighted customers, which make happy shareholders. They’re all people.

When you look deeply into Apple, Google, Zappos and other hugely successful, standout companies, you’ll find they nearly all have something in common that helps separate them and keep them soaring. From the bottom to the top of the organization, their people:

• Are passionately engaged advocates for their business.

• Understand what the business strategy is, and their part in delivering it.

• Go above and beyond what they’re paid to do.

• Have an emotional engagement with the business, the product and with their client or customer.

• They are happy where—and with whom—they work.

This is what separates the mundane from the good. And, more important, the good from the great.

On the flip side, the cost of having a disengaged culture is huge—probably a lot larger than you realize. Factoring absenteeism, low morale, poor customer service, lost sales, lost long-term customers … the costs of unhappy people are obvious.

The most important business and leadership objective for sustaining business growth is to attract, retain and grow great people—and keep them happy.

Are you happy at work? Do you help others be happy? It is the direct path to so many rewards in business and life.♦

Stephen Garber is director of Third Level Ltd. Contact him at 561.752.5505 or sgarber@thirdlevel.com.

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Drew Limsky

Drew Limsky

Editor-in-Chief

BIOGRAPHY

Drew Limsky joined Lifestyle Media Group in August 2020 as Editor-in-Chief of South Florida Business & Wealth. His first issue of SFBW, October 2020, heralded a reimagined structure, with new content categories and a slew of fresh visual themes. “As sort of a cross between Forbes and Robb Report, with a dash of GQ and Vogue,” Limsky says, “SFBW reflects South Florida’s increasingly sophisticated and dynamic business and cultural landscape.”

Limsky, an avid traveler, swimmer and film buff who holds a law degree and Ph.D. from New York University, likes to say, “I’m a doctor, but I can’t operate—except on your brand.” He wrote his dissertation on the nonfiction work of Joan Didion. Prior to that, Limsky received his B.A. in English, summa cum laude, from Emory University and earned his M.A. in literature at American University in connection with a Masters Scholar Award fellowship.

Limsky came to SFBW at the apex of a storied career in journalism and publishing that includes six previous lead editorial roles, including for some of the world’s best-known brands. He served as global editor-in-chief of Lexus magazine, founding editor-in-chief of custom lifestyle magazines for Cadillac and Holland America Line, and was the founding editor-in-chief of Modern Luxury Interiors South Florida. He also was the executive editor for B2B magazines for Acura and Honda Financial Services, and he served as travel editor for Conde Nast. Magazines under Limsky’s editorship have garnered more than 75 industry awards.

He has also written for many of the country’s top newspapers and magazines, including The New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Miami Herald, Boston Globe, USA Today, Worth, Robb Report, Afar, Time Out New York, National Geographic Traveler, Men’s Journal, Ritz-Carlton, Elite Traveler, Florida Design, Metropolis and Architectural Digest Mexico. His other clients have included Four Seasons, Acqualina Resort & Residences, Yahoo!, American Airlines, Wynn, Douglas Elliman and Corcoran. As an adjunct assistant professor, Limsky has taught journalism, film and creative writing at the City University of New York, Pace University, American University and other colleges.