Subscribe
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
Home Wellness & Health

Which Comes First: Happiness or Success?

The Carousel by The Carousel
29/04/2023
in Wellness & Health
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Article contributed by Amanda Gordon, Psychologist at Indeed.

Our view of happiness and success is similar to the age-old ‘chicken or egg’ debate – what comes first? Does happiness lead to success, or does success lead to happiness?

Recent research by global hiring platform Indeed found 68% of Australians believe happiness leads to success, rather than success leading to happiness. And while 94% of us believe it’s possible to be happy at work, only 26% of unhappy workers are actively looking for new jobs – suggesting many of us aren’t prioritising our happiness, even though we say we are.

Related articles

6 Quick Tips For A More Eco-Friendly Christmas

5 Game-Changing Foods That Keep Your Blood Sugar Rock-Steady

Happiness is a subjective feeling. Each of us feel happiness in different ways and through different means. Happiness is self-reported and a common goal to which many of us aspire. Success, on the other hand, is often judged or measured by comparison. Often, we measure our success based on our progression, positive change over time, achievement, and recognition from others.

When it comes to our professional lives, it’s common to feel elation after a promotion or a pay rise. While we often attribute this feeling to happiness, this type of positive emotion can be fleeting as we return to the daily grind, striving for more, and hunting for the next buzz of external reward. But when we measure success by our ability to cultivate happiness or fulfilment at work, we are more likely to find lasting contentment in both the workplace and in ourselves.

Happiness and success are not mutually exclusive – we can have both. But it’s important to be aware of the risks in prioritising success over happiness so we can understand how to blend the two to both enjoy the moment and continue striving for more. Here are 3 things that happen when we prioritise happiness over success.

Connection

The unblinkered pursuit of success can be lonely – and loneliness doesn’t lead to happiness. In the workplace, we often measure performance in ways that look at individual success. For example, to help an employee work towards pay rises, bonuses, or promotions, workplaces often set individual goals or targets, such as an annual KPI that the employee must meet. When focusing solely on these as measures of success, the employee might fall into a habit of caring for their individual goals, over the success of their team.

What this approach doesn’t consider is that looking out for others and working together to achieve a common goal gives us a sense of meaningful human connection, builds our relationships with others, and enhances our happiness.

teamwork success

Boundaries

Working remotely has offered many of us the opportunity to better balance our lives. Many have found this refreshing, but for others, remote work has provided a constant and unhealthy connection to work. Some workers who focus solely on professional success have lost the capacity to close their laptops at a sensible time – people who now take calls any time of the day or night, who respond to emails on their commute, and who feel overwhelmed by work demands. They tend to feel that work is never-ending, and that they are always under pressure to relentlessly prove themselves and to meet professional goals, opening the door to workaholism and burnout.

Success can be achieved when firm boundaries are in place. Setting boundaries at work can help to reclaim time, which in turn gives us space to elevate our happiness. Blocking time in a shared diary, setting an out of office and switching off your work alerts at the end of the day can help structure our time, making us more efficient and focused, reducing stress and increasing productivity, motivation, and happiness.

Confidence

Solely seeking success at work can set us on a path of constant personal review and comparison. This can cause resentment to build up and affect our work ethic, performance, and trust. While comparison is natural for the human mind, too much comparison can lead to an unhealthy mindset that won’t lead to happiness, and often makes us feel bad about ourselves.

To achieve both success and happiness, we must focus on our strengths and development to build personal confidence. We need to find our own way to build connections and solve problems, and recognise our own unique perspectives as an asset to our workplaces. This will help foster happiness and ultimately lead to success.

Happiness and success aren’t mutually exclusive but chasing one over the other can lead to an imbalance. Seeking measurements of success in ways beyond financial reward or external approval – for example, through rewarding relationships with colleagues or working as a team to meet common goals – can provide us with a more sustained sense of personal fulfilment, happiness and a more permanent perception of what it means to be successful. 

success work doctor

Tips to achieve both happiness and success at work:

  • Set group goals as well as individual goals, and measure your progress towards them
  • Connect with your co-workers, taking breaks from the pressures of work to regroup through healthy engagement
  • Find opportunities to engage with others to achieve outcomes together – and celebrate the progress as well as the completion
  • Create separation between work and your personal life and devote yourself to each exclusively
Previous Post

The Science of Hydration: How 5 Weights of Hyaluronic Acid Can Transform Your Skin

Next Post

Explore 7 European Cities with the Most Enchanting Castles

The Carousel

The Carousel

The Carousel is devoted to inspiring you to live your best life - emotionally, physically, and sustainably.

Related Posts

Sustainability

6 Quick Tips For A More Eco-Friendly Christmas

05/12/2025
Foods for blood sugar
Health

5 Game-Changing Foods That Keep Your Blood Sugar Rock-Steady

01/12/2025
wombats
Environment

10 Things You Didn’t Know About Australia’s Wombats

30/11/2025
Is Being Overweight Really A Big Deal?1
Health

Is Being Overweight Really A Big Deal?

30/11/2025
Annie Leibovitz New Exhibit Celebrates Women
Arts & Culture

Annie Leibovitz: A Lifetime of Celebrating Women Through the Power of Portraiture

30/11/2025
Steve Wozniak
Careers

What Do Apple Co-Founder Steve Wozniak And Brad Pitt Have In Common?

30/11/2025

Recommended

Aussie mum heading to Oscars

Meet The Once Jobless Aussie Mum With A Starring Role At The Oscars!

15/02/2017
Wolf Moon

What Does the Wolf Moon Have in Store For Your Star Sign?

10/01/2025

Recent Posts

Serene sunset landscape over the Mekong River with scenic mountains in Bokeo Province, Laos.
Destinations

Retired Woman Travels the World Alone and Finds Love in Her 70s

by Robyn Foyster
08/12/2025
0

One of Lonely Planet’s latest roundups of inspiring solo female travellers features American psychologist Meri Murphy and her empowering retirement...

Read moreDetails
New Beauty Products

15 Excellent New Beauty Products We Tried This Week

07/12/2025
Easy Rocky Road Christmas Wreath

The Easiest Chocolate Wreath You’ll Ever Make … Warning: Santa May Swap His Cookies For a Slice!

06/12/2025

6 Quick Tips For A More Eco-Friendly Christmas

05/12/2025
7 Recipes To Keep Kids Busy In The Kitchen These School Holidays

7 Recipes To Keep Kids Busy In The Kitchen These School Holidays

04/12/2025

Subscribe to Newsletter

Be the first to get daily fitness news & tips from JNews Fitness.

  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
Foyster Media Pty Ltd Copyright 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us

© 2025 Foyster Media Pty Ltd. All rights reserved