Business Owners Are Very Happy People
by Sue Shellenbarger, WSJ
By
economic yardsticks, Roger the Plumber should be feeling pretty low. Roger
Peugeot, owner of the 14-employee Overland Park, Kan., plumbing company that
bears his name, is part of a sector hit hard by shrunken credit and slumping
sales. He has been forced to reduce staff and is battling new competition from
other plumbers fleeing the construction industry.
’Roger the Plumber’ owns his own business and is excited to go to work every
day.
..So why is Mr. Peugeot so happy? He genuinely likes fixing plumbing messes, for
one thing, and despite the worst recession he has seen, "I'm still excited to
get up and go to work every day," he says. He relishes running into people at
the local hardware store whom he has helped in the past. And in hard times, he
says, his fate is in his own hands, rather than those of a manager. "Even when
things get tough, I'm still in control," he says.
In the broadest, most-comprehensive survey yet of how occupation affects
happiness, business owners outrank 10 other occupational groups in overall
well-being, based on the landmark survey of 100,826 working adults set for
release today. Defined as self-employed store or factory owners, plumbers and so
on, business owners surpassed 10 other occupational groups on a composite
measure of six criteria of contentment, including emotional and physical health,
job satisfaction, healthy behavior, access to basic needs and self-reports of
overall life quality.
This puts Roger the Plumber well ahead of movers and shakers typically regarded
as the top of the heap in society—professionals such as doctors or lawyers, who
ranked second, and executives and managers in corporations or government, who
came in third—according to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, a
collaboration between Gallup and Healthways, a Franklin, Tenn.,
health-management concern. This is despite business owners ranking below those
more-prestigious occupations in physical health and access to basic needs, such
as health care.
The findings, psychologists say, reflect the importance of being free to choose
the work you do and how you do it, the way you manage your time, and the way you
respond to adversity. Regardless of occupational field, the survey suggests that
seeking out enjoyable work and finding a way to do it on your own terms, with
some control over both the process and the outcome, is likely for most people to
fuel satisfaction and contentment.
"Despite the recession, it still pays to be your own boss," says Frank Newport,
editor in chief of the Gallup Poll. The survey, adds John Howard, director of
the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, "reaffirms my view
that the more control you have over your work, the happier you are."
Smaller studies have shown links between certain kinds of stress and particular
job roles or employment groups. But the huge size of the Gallup-Healthways
project, which conducts 1,000 telephone surveys a day, makes it possible to draw
detailed, reliable distinctions among a large number of occupational groups. "I
know of no other survey of this size" on the subject, says Humphrey Taylor,
chairman of the Harris Poll, a competitor. The 11 occupational categories
surveyed also include farmers and sales, clerical, construction, installation
and service workers.
Business owners may seem unlikely winners. About half of the nation's full-time
small businesses typically fail within five years of start-up, and the rate has
risen in the recession, says William Dennis, a senior research fellow with the
National Federation of Independent Business Research Foundation. They are more
likely to work extremely long hours than people in any other occupation group,
other Gallup research shows.
The findings likely reflect declining quality-of-life in some professions, Dr.
Howard says. Rising cost controls in medicine, for example, and mounting
pressure to chalk up billable hours in law, have curtailed doctors' and lawyers'
flexibility to control their work.
"Where professionals may have had greater freedom 20 or 30 years ago, many are
now experiencing loss of control, erosion of satisfaction and increased stress,"
Dr. Howard says.
At the bottom of the heap, transportation and manufacturing workers scored
lowest on well-being. These occupations tend to foster conditions Niosh has
identified as contributors to unhealthy stress: lack of control or participation
in decision-making, conflicting or unclear job expectations, and hectic tasks
with little inherent meaning.
Management and executive jobs have gotten tougher, too, during the period the
Gallup-Healthways data were gathered, the first eight months of this year. Beset
by cost cuts and layoffs, corporate bosses at all levels now share more of these
stress-inducing conditions.
Business owners stand in stark contrast. Even in tough times, "you do your own
thinking and no one can tell you you're wrong," says Edwin Locke, an industrial
psychologist and professor emeritus of leadership and motivation at the Robert
H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland.
"You make your own
decisions, and if you're wrong, reality gives you the feedback," he says.
As a business owner, Mr. Peugeot says, "even when things are out of your
control, as they are with this economy, you're still in control of your
relationships" with customers. Corporate managers and executives may "sit and
wonder if they're going to be laid off, or get frustrated with the inabilities
of management," he says. "If you're the owner, you may have to say, 'I screwed
up,' but it's a lot better than saying, 'I didn't deserve that.' "
Other patterns among the self-employed help explain their psychological
well-being. Entrepreneurs tend by nature to be optimistic, evidenced in their
willingness to strike out on their own, psychologists say. Laura Street, of
Pleasanton, Calif., isn't making a profit in the handmade-jewelry business,
Ampersand Designs, which she co-founded last year. But to her, the glass is half
full: She says sales are rising, she expects to turn a profit soon, and she
loves her work.
"Yes, the economy is bad. But we aren't coming into a workplace wondering, 'Are
we going to get fired today?' " she says.
"If you control your destiny, the
well-being is something that just comes naturally."
The freedom business owners have to control their schedules enables them to
adhere more closely to their personal priorities, says Amy Neftzger, an
organizational psychologist for Healthways. They have the flexibility to "make
it to a child's play, or spend time with family," she says.
Many also have community ties that feed a sense of well-being. James Barnard,
chief financial officer of his family's business, Barnard Manufacturing in St.
Johns, Mich., didn't have a great summer. He and his cousin Gary Barnard,
president of the heavy-equipment parts maker, stopped drawing paychecks to help
the company through a steep sales drop. They agonized over a decision to lay off
dozens of workers, and Gary sat nearly alone in the plant for several weeks,
answering phones.
But their company has a good image in the community, and "it's a big deal to us
to keep that going," James says. He takes part in civic groups and enjoys
golfing with the mayor and police chief. Pressed to describe the rewards of
running a family business, he says,
"It's pride. Definitely pride."
Another surprise from the survey: Farmers and other outdoor workers, from
farmhands to forestry workers, scored No. 1 among all groups in "emotional
health," as measured mainly by the amount of smiling, laughter, enjoyment and
happiness they report experiencing the previous day—despite the fact that
farmers ranked near the bottom in access to basic needs.
Steve Swenka, a Tiffin, Iowa, farmer, had just finished mowing two fields of hay
when I reached him by phone last week to discuss the poll. The results didn't
surprise him. Farm work, he says, is pretty trying. "When you're out there in
the heat and the dust, sweating, you may feel miserable," he says. But over
time, "you can see the progress, the fruits of your labor.
"And when the day is over and you see the loads of hay stacked, there's
something fulfilling about hard manual labor like that," he says. "You forget
your little troubles, and start to see the bigger picture."