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The Pongo Blog

Why Most Workers Can't Get No Job Satisfaction

January 07, 2010 (11:30AM) by Rick Saia, CPRW

Job SatisfactionIf you’re working, are you happy with what you’re doing and where you’re doing it?

If you are, you’re in the minority, according to the The Conference Board, whose recent research found that only 45% of employed Americans are satisfied with their jobs. Which means 55% are not.

The dissatisfaction is widespread across age groups, which goes to show that there is equality in fear, anger, and tension as we slowly emerge from a recession (which is what experts tell us). Almost everyone in the workplace has relatives or friends who've lost jobs, and many have also seen coworkers who got laid off, and had to pick up some of the work that went out the door with them. That combination can easily erode job happiness for the "lucky" ones left behind. When there is gloom all around you, chances are it will envelop you too.

But there’s something else happening here. When The Conference Board started measuring job satisfaction in 1987, it found that 61% of workers were satisfied with their jobs. Granted, we weren’t coming out of a recession then, but that figure has been dropping steadily since. What’s happening?

For starters, the days of mutual, everlasting loyalty between employer and employee are long gone. Mass layoffs have become more common and workers  are more willing to take risks by moving on to more challenging roles elsewhere. So if the employee is miserable at work, he or she is less likely to prolong the misery and more likely to tune up the resume and find another job.

One of our favorite bloggers, Laurie Ruettimann at Punk Rock HR, cited a few other contributing factors in her take on The Conference Board’s findings, specifically the erosion of raises and pensions, the higher costs of premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance, and the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs to other side of the globe.

Put it all together, and you might wonder why job satisfaction isn’t lower.

What about you? If you’re dissatisfied at work, why do you feel that way? Share your frustration in a comment below.

RELATED LINKS

When Bosses Make Hotheaded Decisions
4 Visions of the Post-Recession Workforce
Wanna Tell Off Your Boss? Do It Here!

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Comments (4)

If you think we are "coming out" of the recession, prepare to be surprised. Google "Gerald Celente" of Trends Research.

Posted by: Kurt | January 08, 2010 at 9:45 PM | Quote This Comment

Truer words have never been spoken! I grew up during the 60's and 70's and remember my father being at the same place for years!Sure,the same stuff went on back then,but it was the exception,not the norm.the problem today is two-fold in that some of the employers of the older generation want to run business today like they did back then and are unwilling to come up to speed with an ever changing world. On the flip side of that is the younger generation trying to cram there ideas down the older generations throats! We all know what the solution is:Better communication(not just hearing,listening as well),compromise(not pacification,but a willingness to solve problems so that no one walks away feeling that there input meant nothing-not any one person has all the right answers!

Posted by: Richard W. Leach | January 08, 2010 at 10:17 PM | Quote This Comment

I think that we live in very interesting times in terms of employment. With pensions disappearing and less companies offering health insurance coupled with employees being less and less willing to put up with corporate nonsense, It will be interesting to see what the landscape will look like in a few years!

Posted by: DC Jobs | January 09, 2010 at 1:41 PM | Quote This Comment

@ Kurt -- That's why I dropped in the parenthetical "which is what experts tell us."

@ Richard -- Agree. Everyone has something to offer, no matter how young they are. The trick is for each generation to make a serious effort to understand the other and their motivations. Easier said than done.

@ DC -- True, employees' "BS meters" get better and better with time.

Posted by: Rick Saia, CPRW | January 11, 2010 at 4:31 PM | Quote This Comment

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