menu

The power of gratitude in the workplace

Listen to this article

The power of gratitude in the workplace

If you knew that expressing gratitude to a colleague would improve their life and yours, would you do it more often?

A new study proves there is a positive relationship between expressed workplace gratitude and physical and mental health. The findings show that being thanked more often at work predicted better sleep, fewer headaches and healthier eating, because it improved employees’ work satisfaction.

The study involved a group of Oregon nurses, a profession that has a particularly high rate of burnout. The researchers show that applying the research can have a significant impact on quality of life and job retention by preventing stress-related illnesses and disease.

What the researchers say: “Nurses tend to have a thankless job. It’s very physical, and they’re often being screamed at by patients who are at their lowest and bullied by physicians who themselves are under great stress. When nurses receive gratitude, it boosts them,” explains the lead author.

“This type of study helps us understand how to keep nurses in the workforce in a healthy way. Nurses strongly align their profession with their identity and often look out for patients more than themselves. The gratitude matches up with their identity, gives them satisfaction in a job well done and ultimately increases self-care.”

Many people inherently connect their identity to their job and feelings of appreciation within their roles. Employers who understand and react to this can create positive social and economic change.

From an organizational, policy and leadership perspective, the researchers say, employers should create formal or informal opportunities for people to express gratitude. Including gratitude in a business plan is an essential step that many business leaders miss, and that omission can have financial consequences.

“Employees that receive positive feedback are healthier, and that can impact the bottom line,” adds the lead researcher. “Preventing headaches and other stress-related symptoms means fewer sick days, and, in this case, cuts down the cost of replacement nurses and overtime pay.”

These small changes can have a dramatic fiscal impact over time, which can result in more staff, better pay rates and increased benefits.

So, what? The big takeaway if you’re a leader at any level—express gratitude when you see someone doing a good job. A positive feedback loop impacts you and those around you and can ultimately shape a healthier and happier workplace or even community.

Dr Bob Murray

Bob Murray, MBA, PhD (Clinical Psychology), is an internationally recognised expert in strategy, leadership, influencing, human motivation and behavioural change.

Join the discussion

More from this issue of TR

No items found.

Join our tribe

Subscribe to Dr. Bob Murray’s Today’s Research, a free weekly roundup of the latest research in a wide range of scientific disciplines. Explore leadership, strategy, culture, business and social trends, and executive health.

Thank you for subscribing.
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form. Check your details and try again.