Self-employed people happier and more engaged at work, study finds

Authored by sheffield.ac.uk and submitted by butterflykiller

Self-employed people happier and more engaged at work, study finds

Self-employed people are happier and more engaged in their work than those in any other profession, according to a new study of 5,000 workers.

The study by Professor Peter Warr from the Management School and Professor Ilke Inceoglu from the University of Exeter found that despite working longer hours and having less job security, self-employed workers were among the happiest with more freedom and control over their work life.

Researchers analysed data collected from workers in the UK, the United States, Australia and New Zealand across a number of industries including retail, IT, health, finance and education.

The study, published in the journal Work, Employment and Society, carried out further analysis of employees across four job grades: non-managerial workers, supervisors, middle managers, and senior managers and directors.

The self-employed workers who took part in the research worked in a range of industries, including management consultancy, financial services, retail, education, insurance and real estate.

The study reported that workers in organisations with non-managerial roles had the lowest levels of job satisfaction and engagement. Researchers noted that both satisfaction and engagement improved with each increase in job grade.

Professor Warr said: “Professional workers who are self-employed really value the autonomy they have. They have the freedom to innovate, express their own views, have influence beyond their own role and compete with other companies and people.

“They really get to use their own expertise, so don’t seem to mind working long hours. They can find meeting high standards really fulfilling.”

Co-author Professor Ilke Inceoglu added: "Being engaged in their jobs makes people feel energised and pleased with their own contribution.

"Measuring how engaged people are in their work is therefore a really useful way to gauge their wellbeing and shows we must move beyond just looking at job satisfaction."

whatthebunghole on March 19th, 2018 at 19:16 UTC »

As someone who recently had to give up full time freelance work after having to let go of a client, I completely agree.

Since aquiring a day job again I don't stress about money but have woken up depressed everyday, knowing I'm spending my day doing what I don't want to do, and now feel i'm easily agitated along with being the most antisocial I have ever been in my life.

zyl0x on March 19th, 2018 at 18:40 UTC »

A lot of self-selection would be involved in a study like this. Is it possible the people who are happier working longer hours for themselves are more likely to be self-employed? Generally speaking, it takes a certain kind of person to become an entrepreneur. There are people who don't even want to work for themselves. I'm not too sure about the accuracy of this statement.

Jewnadian on March 19th, 2018 at 17:14 UTC »

This is kind of self selection in play here. Since having a job is the default, if you aren't happier being self employed then you simply stop being self employed and go back to having a job.