Hawaii is the State With the Happiest Workers in America; D.C Has the Unhappiest: Study by Sokanu
- Hawaii claimed the top spot for America’s happiest workers for the second year in a row
- 4 out of 5 of the unhappiest states are on the East Coast in New England
- Creativity is key — the happiest workers in the country are Video Game Producers, Film Directors, Music Producers and Comedians
- Service-based workers such as telemarketers and cashiers are the least satisfied
LONDON, January 9, 2018 (Newswire.com) - Career discovery platform and career test experts Sokanu has released an infographic detailing the results of their survey of the happiest workers and jobs in America. Their 2017 survey about job satisfaction in America reached 150,000 people across 599 career paths to discover which industries offered workers the best and happiest future. And it turns out that where in the country you live and work is an equally important factor.
Hawaii claimed the top spot with the happiest workforce in America for the second year in a row, with Alaska (up six places from last year’s survey) and Wyoming (up three places from last year’s survey) rounding up the top three. New Mexico climbed 42 places to earn itself the fourth spot, with West Virginia falling three spaces to fifth place.
It seems that the East Coast is where the country’s unhappiest workforce resides with 4 out of 5 of the least-satisfied states being from New England. Oregon made a debut in the bottom five falling 20 places to the 46th spot, with Rhode Island, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts following in 47th, 48th and 49th place respectively. Washington, D.C., was labelled the least-satisfied state, falling 12 places to the bottom spot.
Creativity was a big factor in job satisfaction — Video Game Producer, Film Director, Music Producer and Comedian were labelled as the happiest jobs in the country, along with Neurosurgeon.
Service-based location-dependent jobs such as Telemarketer, Store Clerk, Cashier, Janitor and Machine Feeder were rated as the nation’s unhappiest jobs, signalling that passion-based creative jobs offer more job satisfaction than service-based jobs.
Spencer Thompson, CEO of Sokanu, said: “The results from this year’s survey show a dramatic shift to passion-based careers where one has control over their work and a license to use their creativity in a way that allows them to make a living from their interests. The unhappiest jobs are those in the service industry where there is a lack of autonomy or variety in the work.”
For more information and to view the full infographic, click here.
Media Contact
Maria Hughes
[email protected]
Source: Sokanu
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Tags: Alaska, Career test, Careers, Hawaii, professions, States, United States