| 1. Dress
for fun |
Wear something frivolous – every day if
appropriate. It doesn’t have to be visible: ‘naughty’
underwear, silly socks, etc. The fact that you have this on will
remind you not to take yourself so seriously.
Make this philosophy visible by having a
‘Dress for Fun Friday’ – just like a Casual Friday, except
staff have to add something specifically for fun – silly
earrings, bad ties, fun hats, etc. |
| 2.
Fun Decor |
Encourage staff to introduce fun into
their own work-space. Toys, stickers, photos, whatever will
lighten up their day. Don’t let ‘office neatness’ rules get
in the way – anything less that a safety hazard should be
allowed. The
boss sets the example with a hat rack full of silly
hats and a Goofy soft toy sitting atop the computer screen. Follow
the same rule in areas where clients go. Who wants to deal with
people who don’t have a sense of humor? |
| 3.
Visit the toy store |
Introduce fun into the workplace with
childish things. Look around your local toy store for anything
that could introduce fun to your meetings, staff interactions
(like lunch time) or just to make people smile. |
| 4. Make meetings fun…at the start |
Make humour a KPI of your meetings.
Boring meetings are the enemy of effective, creative communication
– ban them! Put ‘Opening humour’ down as the first agenda
item. Appoint a different person each meeting to start with a
joke, funny story, game – whatever they can to lighten the mood.
Give them a time limit, but that’s all! They need the permission
of management to be as creative, silly and irreverent as possible. |
| 5.
Make meetings fun…during proceedings |
Make fun part of the proceedings. Hand
out noisemakers (hooters, whistles, clickers, etc) to all present
with the rule that you have to use your noisemaker before you
speak. Take votes with: "All those in favour, make your
noise." Have something silly that participants need to hold
or place in front of them before they make their contribution.
(This is also a great way to ensure that only one person speaks at
a time.) |
| 6.
Make meetings fun…at the end |
Appoint a person to end the meeting with
some humour. One way is to have them nominate certain meeting
members for frivolous ‘awards’ based on what happened during
the meeting. Some examples: Silliest Statement, Wittiest Comment,
Best Excuse, Most Imaginative Statement, Best/Worst Jargon. Finish
your meetings with a touch of humour and this is what people
remember as they leave – so they’ll be more willing to attend
the next meeting. |
| 7.
Have a fun library |
Have a section next to the reference
books full of joke books, cartoon books (Dilbert, Calvin &
Hobbes, etc) and any other fun literature. Encourage staff to
borrow them for lunchtime reading, etc (Don’t let them leave the
office – or you’ll never see them again. Regularly add to it.
The discount tables at bookstores have loads of cheap material. |
| 8.
Have fun with logos and signs |
Have a contest to design a fun logo for
each department; and, if appropriate, put it up. Enlarge relevant
cartoons and place them next to the instructional and safety signs
– and have people notice signs that, in the past, they ignored. |
No comments:
Post a Comment