How to tell a joke: theories of successful humor and applications to the workplace
ISSN: 2040-8269
Article publication date: 28 April 2023
Issue publication date: 31 October 2023
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of the current study is to explain best practices for attempting humor in the workplace. Research on humor in the workplace has emphasized the use of leader humor but has neglected to provide guidance on how to successfully use humor. This is an important gap because unsuccessful humor attempts are associated with lowered status and disruptive behavior.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper summarizes three types of humor theories (i.e. cognitive, social and contextual) and derives principles from these theories that can be applied to improve humor success. Then, the authors apply the understanding of humor to workplace applications, providing suggestions for future empirical research inferred from the humor theories.
Findings
Humor attempts are most likely to land (i.e. invoke mirth) when they include a benign violation of mental schemas, societal norms or other expectations or when humor evokes shared feelings of benign superiority in the audience. Humor is less effective in goal-directed situations. Mirth is expected to increase group cohesion, leader trust and organizational identification and mitigate the effects of job stressors. Finally, employee learning and development activities (e.g. onboarding, training) seem like a good place to use humor to facilitate cognitive flexibility.
Originality/value
These suggestions from across psychological disciplines are synthesized to inform best practices for leader humor.
Keywords
Citation
Sizemore, S. and O'Brien, K. (2023), "How to tell a joke: theories of successful humor and applications to the workplace", Management Research Review, Vol. 46 No. 12, pp. 1679-1693. https://doi.org/10.1108/MRR-10-2022-0724
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited