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How work friendships could be the secret to productivity

Busi­ness mag­nate Hen­ry Ford may have cap­tured the pow­er of friend­ship in the work­place when he said: “My best friend is the one who brings out the best in me”, but can that spe­cial rela­tion­ship be the key to employ­ee hap­pi­ness and pro­duc­tiv­i­ty?

Research seems to point that way with Gallup find­ing a link between hav­ing a best friend at work and the amount of effort employ­ees put in.

Few­er safe­ty inci­dents, more engaged cus­tomers and a boost in prof­its are among the ben­e­fits when employ­ees have a work best friend, accord­ing to the per­for­mance man­age­ment con­sul­tan­cy.

Work friendships can lead to greater productivity and engagement

It comes down to trust and bond­ing, says Har­vard Busi­ness School Pro­fes­sor Tere­sa Ama­bile. “Peo­ple are more cre­ative and pro­duc­tive when they expe­ri­ence more pos­i­tive inner work life, includ­ing more pos­i­tive emo­tions, stronger moti­va­tion toward the work itself and more pos­i­tive per­cep­tions of the organ­i­sa­tion,” says Pro­fes­sor Ama­bile, who co-authored The Progress Prin­ci­ple after analysing 12,000 dai­ly diary reports from 239 pro­fes­sion­als work­ing in inno­va­tion teams.

“And one of the things that con­tributes to pos­i­tive inner work life is a sense of cama­raderie with team­mates and close co-work­ers – a sense of bond­ing and mutu­al trust.”

work friendships dataset

But fos­ter­ing that gen­uine rap­port can be a chal­lenge, espe­cial­ly in com­pa­nies that may not val­ue close work friend­ships.

“I’ve had my share of encoun­ters with lead­ers and man­agers who frown at chitchat and shared lunch breaks, and view work friend­ships as detri­men­tal to pro­duc­tiv­i­ty,” says Anna­marie Mann, employ­ee engage­ment and well­be­ing prac­tice man­ag­er at Gallup.

How­ev­er, that cama­raderie can pay div­i­dends as employ­ees with a best friend at work are up to sev­en times as engaged as those with­out, accord­ing to Gallup.

Team projects could be key to forming productive friendships

Off-site retreats and social events can be a cat­a­lyst for friend­ship, but work-focused activ­i­ties such as a team project launch that allows peo­ple to share a per­son­al sto­ry, their pre­ferred work styles and what they can bring to the project can be equal­ly ben­e­fi­cial, says Pro­fes­sor Ama­bile.

It is an approach that has worked for busi­ness­es lead­ing the lat­est Sun­day Times Best Com­pa­nies to Work For report, includ­ing the top two firms, Chess ICT and MVF Glob­al.

At tele­coms reseller Chess ICT, which has grown to 505 staff and a turnover of £110 mil­lion since launch­ing 25 years ago, work friend­ships are seen as cru­cial to meet­ing busi­ness objec­tives.

“Friend­ships and what we term ‘work fam­i­ly’ are a mas­sive part of what we are try­ing to achieve,” says Chess head of cul­ture Kate Wood. “Peo­ple who are hap­pi­er are more engaged and will give a bet­ter ser­vice to cus­tomers.”

Teams have a dai­ly ‘hud­dle’, with remote work­ers join­ing by Skype, while social activ­i­ties such as yoga and well­be­ing class­es, pub clubs and com­pa­ny-fund­ed ideas lunch­es are a chance to forge work friend­ships, along with its annu­al Chessti­val event, and social col­lab­o­ra­tion tools like Yam­mer, Microsoft Teams and its own Engage app.

“Hav­ing close rela­tion­ships in which peo­ple care and trust each oth­er enables them to work bet­ter and have that sense of team, which leads to get­ting things done in a more pro­duc­tive way,” says Ms Wood.

Work friendships are a natural part of a strong company culture

Mar­ket­ing busi­ness MVF Global’s chief peo­ple offi­cer Andrea Pat­ti­co explains: “Our busi­ness is fast paced and dynam­ic, which involves col­lab­o­ra­tion and com­mu­ni­ca­tion. We find fos­ter­ing a social work­place is crit­i­cal to being able to achieve our goals.”

The firm was found­ed by five friends in 2009, and has grown to more than 350 employ­ees and now has rev­enue of £54.3 mil­lion.

“We spend the major­i­ty of our time at work, so why not be in the com­pa­ny of peo­ple you’d be hap­py to call a friend?” says Ms Pat­ti­co. “Hap­py teams are pro­duc­tive teams and social inter­ac­tion is a huge part of this.”

Hap­py teams are pro­duc­tive teams and social inter­ac­tion is a huge part of this

How­ev­er, fos­ter­ing valu­able work friend­ships isn’t as sim­ple as set­ting up fun activ­i­ties. If not part of a wider engage­ment strat­e­gy and strong com­pa­ny cul­ture that val­ues employ­ees, pro­vides devel­op­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties and chal­leng­ing work enabling every­one to per­form to their best, friend­ships can become a chance for neg­a­tive dis­cus­sion, gripe ses­sions or even harm­ful cliques.

“Pro­fes­sion­al bound­aries are still nec­es­sary,” says Ms Pat­ti­co. “We’ve prob­a­bly all seen instances where there is a down­side, for exam­ple some­one pro­mot­ed above their peers who might strug­gle to gain respect as a leader or employ­ees who feel that their man­ag­er favours some­one over anoth­er.”

Mean­while, researchers from Rut­gers Uni­ver­si­ty in New Jer­sey high­light the “mixed bless­ing” of work friend­ships that can some­times lead to emo­tion­al exhaus­tion, despite enhanc­ing job per­for­mance.

Char­tered Insti­tute of Per­son­nel and Devel­op­ment employ­ee rela­tions advis­er Rachel Suff adds that issues can arise if per­son­al con­flict devel­ops in a friend­ship and has an adverse impact on wider work­ing rela­tion­ships.

“Social inter­ac­tion at work is good for our well­be­ing, but man­agers need to set clear expec­ta­tions of behav­iour in the work­place,” she says.