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STARTING OUT

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FINANCIAL ADVICE FOR YOUR 20s & 30s

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ON THE JOB
Making Work Fun
Eight ways to increase your enjoyment on the job.

Big whoop: your boss comes to the spring picnic dressed as the Easter Bunny.

Just as the maraschino cherry doesn't make a sundae, tacked-on frivolity doesn't make an enjoyable work life. Here are eight things you can do that will make your job fun ... well, at least more pleasant.


1. Have the right job. Nothing makes your work life more pleasant than having a good job: a moderate amount of moderately difficult work, a good boss and co-workers, reasonable pay and commute, and a place of employment you're proud to work for.

Your job isn't anything like that? The most important thing you can do to have more fun at work is to find a better job. Or tweak your job description so you spend more time doing things you enjoy.


2. Don't fight work. Many people expend inordinate effort trying to get out of work. Don't you know people whose most productive at-work activity is shopping online? (Except, of course, when the boss comes by, whereupon, they click onto a spreadsheet.) They end up feeling guilty that they're slackers or terrified they'll get caught -- neither of which is much fun.

Fact is, work is key to a meaningful life, even if you're just a payroll clerk whose job is to recount the beans counted by a co-bean counter. Most employees don't check their paycheck's accuracy -- they rely on you. Nearly all ethical work is more fun than not working. At least think that way.


3. Remember, a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down. Mary Poppins famously said, "In every task that must be done there is an element of fun. You find the fun and snap! The job's a game."

Whatever task you're doing, ask yourself "What's the most fun way I could do this?" You'll be surprised how often the fun way is at least as effective as a more painful way. (See my example in point #8.)


4. Reward yourself. Many of us are motivated by concrete rewards -- how many of us would show up to work every day if we didn't get paid?

But wouldn't it be more fun if you got paid more often? Well, you can get "paid" as often as you'd like. For example, why not promise yourself that if you finish that stupid task in 59 minutes or less, you'll give yourself ten minutes to flirt in the break room. That ticking clock can be fun to compete against.


5. Threaten yourself with punishment. This can be just the motivation you need to stay on task -- and keep things interesting.

For example, if you're a Democrat, write a $100 check to the McCain campaign, if you're Republican, to Obama's or Clinton's. Give a friend the check. If you haven't completed the agreed-on-work by the agreed-on time, he mails it. You'll enjoy your work more knowing you'll get the $100 back if you get it done and that the good-for-nothing candidate won't get a dime from you.


6. Think of difficult problems as challenges rather than annoyances. That's more fun. And if you can't meet a challenge by yourself, find someone who'd be fun to solve it with.


7. Think of your work life as an endless series of choices. Even if you're a peon with a micromanaging boss, you are the emperor of your (admittedly small) dominion, with many choices: What do I wear today? Which task should I do first? Should I wear headphones? Should I make the report pretty or no-nonsense? Should I spend my break chatting with my honey or schmoozing with someone who might help me get a better job?

See Make the Most of Your Job to learn how to use a menial job as a springboard to a more fulfilling position.


8. Consult this compendium: For a cornucopia of capers and other condiments to catalyze your colorless career, see Leslie Yerkes' book, Fun Works. But caution: continual cavorting can cause catastrophic calamity, culminating in career carrion. Curses.

(Excuse the alliteration ... I'm just having a little fun with my job.)


Marty Nemko (bio) is a career coach and author of Cool Careers for Dummies.


READER COMMENTS

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POSTED BY: Ivan (March 06, 2008 11:29 PM)
Great perspective, especially number 8. A long, long time ago, I came upon an older, but quite intelligent subordinate, doing a dull and basically meaningless job, and I asked him why he did it. He answered that he did what he was doing so that he could spend his free time doing what he wanted to do. I did the math. And from that day forward, resolved -- and for my working life -- obeyed the resolution to not do anything for 'a living' that I didn't enjoy. So when the subject arises, I can, in truth, say I retired in 1963, but remained employed for over thirty more years.

POSTED BY: Scott (March 07, 2008 04:37 PM)
Here, here. As Peter Handel from Dale Carnegie said, " The right job is a place where you do what you like and have fun in what you do." I keep that posted on my wall and ask myself, when doing a "meaningless" task or having a slow day, how I am doing with "liking and having fun in what I do..."

POSTED BY: cam (March 13, 2008 12:30 PM)
"The reason most people fail, instead of succeed, is that they trade what they want MOST for what they want at the MOMENT." (unknown) I find this true with many people while they work. They ultimately want success but they choose surfing the web for instant gratification instead of really kicking it into high gear and HAVING FUN while doing it...

POSTED BY: Janet Lombardo (March 26, 2008 07:47 AM)
Great suggestions!...So often I end a day exhausted and say - what did I do today. I know generally, but specifically would be better - just for the reasons you guys suggest!...

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