Fortune | FORTUNE 10月09日 14:27
北欧企业为何幸福感高且受员工青睐
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北欧国家以高幸福感、高收入和完善的福利体系著称,其企业也成为全球最佳雇主的热门选择。文章深入探讨了北欧企业在减少层级、营造高信任度文化、强调工作生活平衡以及推崇协作与共识等方面的独特之处。通过Bengt Dahlgren和Novo Nordisk等公司的实例,展现了这些原则如何转化为实际行动,如尊重员工个人生活、鼓励坦诚沟通以及建立心理安全感。尽管这种模式存在潜在风险,如决策效率可能受影响,但其核心在于领导者与员工共同努力,构建一个真正赋权和支持性的工作环境,从而实现员工和企业的共同繁荣。

🤝 **扁平化管理与高信任度文化:** 北欧企业普遍采用扁平化的组织结构,减少了层级间的距离,并在此基础上建立了高信任度的文化。这种环境鼓励员工拥有高度的自主权,敢于表达自己的想法和意见,从而营造出一种心理安全感,让员工感到被尊重和重视。

⚖️ **工作与生活平衡的深度实践:** 北欧企业将工作与生活平衡视为核心价值,并通过多种方式将其融入日常运营。这包括鼓励员工准时下一班、提供定期的休息时间(如“fika”咖啡和蛋糕时间)以及组织促进身心健康的活动。公司创始人理念的传承,如“饥饿的工程师不是好工程师”,也体现了对员工福祉的长期承诺。

🤝 **协作与共识驱动的决策模式:** 与传统的自上而下指令式管理不同,北欧企业更倾向于通过协作和共识来做出决策。尽管这种模式可能在某些情况下影响决策速度,但它能确保团队成员对最终决定有高度的认同感和参与感,一旦达成共识,执行效率反而可能更高。例如,Bengt Dahlgren的CEO甚至需要根据团队的决定进行调整,这凸显了民主在企业文化中的重要性。

💖 **强调个体关怀与整体人性的融入:** 北欧企业文化鼓励员工在工作中展现真实自我,包括分享个人生活中的挑战,如经历离婚或面临困难。这种坦诚的沟通方式能够深化同事间的信任,并使员工感受到公司对其个人生活的关心。这种以人为本的理念,使得工作场所成为一个更具包容性和支持性的环境。

Nordic countries are known for being happy, with high incomes, robust welfare support and easy access to nature. Finland, Denmark, Iceland and Sweden are in fact the world’s four happiest countries according to the latest UN-sponsored World Happiness Report, with Norway coming in 7th.  

It turns out, many people are happy at work there too. Nordic-headquartered businesses occupy ten spaces on Fortune’s 100 Best Companies to Work For – Europe list, despite their countries constituting under 4% of the continent’s population.  

Denmark and Norway each have three of the top 100—Novo Nordisk, Beierholm and JYSK for the former; Sector Alarm, Norgehus and Reitan Retail for the latter—while Sweden has four: Svea, Tre, Bengt Dahlgren and Sparbanken. 

Is there something in the region’s glacial waters that firms in other parts of the world can learn from?  

Erkko Autio, professor and chair in technology venturing and entrepreneurship at Imperial College Business School, points to four distinguishing features. “Nordic businesses are much less hierarchical. That’s one thing. The second is that these are high-trust cultures that give employees a high level of autonomy. Work life balance is the third factor. Finally, there’s an emphasis on collaboration and consensus rather than dictation,” he explains.  

Anna Nivala, CEO of the Gothenburg branch of Swedish civil engineering consultancy Bengt Dahlgren, says that Swedes joke that “[we’re] the only country where the coworkers make decisions and then the CEO has to adjust. Democracy in that sense is very important, but it makes for a solid ground for psychological safety when you can say to anyone what’s on your mind.” 

The Nordic model in practice 

The four pillars of happy, Nordic companies that Autio highlights—autonomy, low power distance, work-life balance and collaboration—come as a package.  

“Nordic businesses are much less hierarchical.”Erkko Autio, professor and chair in technology venturing and entrepreneurship at Imperial College Business School

A commitment to work-life balance, for example, is critical for empowerment, says Nivala. “When Bengt Dahlgren founded the company 74 years ago, he had a slogan that a hungry engineer was not a good engineer, and he used to treat his employees to blueberry pies and invite them to his house,” she says.  

Today, there are “a lot of small things all of the time that happen to make you feel that your personal life also matters,” including regular fika—coffee and cake breaks where teams get to know each other without talking about work—subsidized company ski trips, and lectures about mindfulness or preventing calendar creep.  

This level of caring and personal openness—owning mistakes is part of being present as a whole person—filters into the business culture. “Sharing with each other that you’re going through a divorce or having difficulties with this or that makes you trust each other more,” Nivala explains.  

It’s a familiar story in the Nordics. Danish pharma firm Novo Nordisk, which also makes the top 100, is similarly known for a culture where employees call the CEO by their first name, and don’t feel pressure to stay at work late. 

Not for everyone  

These principles—however virtuous—do come with risks. Autio points to Nokia, Finland’s one-time giant mobile maker, as an example of the pros and cons of the Nordic approach. 

Nokia started out in forestry and heavy industries before pivoting to electronics in the 1960s and 1970s, later rising to dominate the global mobile phone market in the 1990s and early 2000s. At the time, it credited this position to its flat hierarchy, pushing decision-making closer to customers.  

“Sharing with each other that you’re going through a divorce or having difficulties with this or that makes you trust each other more.”

Anna Nivala, CEO of the Gothenburg branch of Bengt Dahlgren

But when the iPhone ushered in the smartphone era, the company couldn’t make the transition a second time and eventually exited the market; it now specializes in telecommunications equipment.  

The much-dissected failure partly came from strategic errors, but Autio also blames the company’s system of middle management committees: “The committees were empowered to decide which approaches to move ahead with. They ended up in a situation where the middle managers kept voting down each other’s initiatives, and that reduced Nokia’s capability to respond to industry change.” 

That isn’t to say that consensus culture prevents innovation or agility—Autio offers Sweden’s vibrant start-up sector as evidence to the contrary. Nivala also says that once consensus is secured, things tend to move faster because everyone is aligned.  

Getting the balance right does take skilful execution. Perhaps the most important—and apt—lesson from the Nordic companies on this year’s Best Companies to Work For – Europe list is that leaders cannot impose a collaborative culture from the top down.  

“Often you can think it’s the leader’s responsibility, but you need to talk to every coworker about creating this kind of environment,” says Nivala. “It’s not just what is the boss going to do, it’s how are you going to contribute? And what do you need to contribute?” 

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北欧企业 幸福感 工作生活平衡 高信任度 扁平化管理 协作文化 Nordic companies happiness work-life balance high trust flat hierarchy collaborative culture
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