Happy Hour is 9 to 5 is a book by Alexander Kjerulf, straddling the sometimes awkward genres of self-help and business advice. There's little in the way of financial advice, with much more emphasis placed on the human side of the workplace.
The book
I don't recall the last book I read by a Scandinavian author. My background knowledge of Alexander Kjerulf was precisely nil as I started to read, though if he's like the other Scandinavians I know, he'd be telling me things that I perhaps didn't want to hear or accept as truth, make me quietly mad or in denial at something, throw the infernal book across the room, retrieve it shortly after and then do something about my situation.
Sweeping generalisations aside, and without any hint of xenophobia, I went head-first into Happy Hour as a sole trader, or Company Owner With Zero Employees. My timing for reading Happy Hour was as inconvenient as could be; having recently decided to increase the amount of work I do each day, by way of longer hours, I was intrigued how I would balance the happiness of my job with the sole trader harsh truth tenet of if I don't do it, no-one else will or — worse — if I don't help that person, some other business will.
The book is very much aimed at office, or team-based working with managers, employees and a hierarchy, whether it's loosely defined or an engrained part of the culture. What was surprising to me was the insight into other companies operated; their view from the trenches was very similar to the corporations I'd been employed by in the past: Tesco and Sophos.
The book has advice from Kjerulf, interspersed with case studies and subsequent commentary. I was a little wary at the beginning of the book that it may have been flung together without much thought at the coffee shop Kjerulf professed to be writing from. The other small fear I had was that the same chunks of advice gleaned from his years of experience might be rehashed and padded out into a book for dazzling go-getters to bray about.
I was, thankfully, wrong on both counts. There is quoted evidence, links for further reading, footnotes, and other things to back up what he's saying. The case studies are edited and presented well, without coming over as holier-than-thou or boring. Much of the book addresses the resolution of workplace problems, either explicit or implicit, with processes or people.
My only gripe, and it's minor, is a little more inline detail on some parts would have been nice. For example, Kjerulf introduced me to a new term: giraffe speak. It's a form of non-violent, compassionate communication. Having poked around on the Internet I know now more about it, but a primer in the book would've been great. It's likely that it was left out for good reason, editing or otherwise; I just don't know what reason it was.
Business books can polarise readers, just like real-life business does. There are very mixed signals all across the business literature and publishing landscape, and a modicum of sensible balance is always a good idea. On the one hand, there's this traditional notion that hard work pays off. The people that do the work, especially with smaller organisations, will see the benefit.
My business background is that of doing the work, and getting the reward for it. At the same time as working long hours, I'm wondering whether I will find my calling elsewhere. Will my creativity peak sooner, later or at all? Will I awake from slumber and have a eureka moment? Will my endless rhetorical questions ever stop? They won't, that I know for certain.
There were a few points where I got a mad with Kjerulf for saying what he said. I still read on, of course, and it's totally OK to disagree with the author of any book. The book was pretty hard to put down once I'd started it, and my conventional (traditional) business wisdom was being tested. I didn't feel like my point of view was being forcibly debated, but I listened and learned stuff. And that's what reading business books is about, reader.
I won't ever stop working hard, but I am now more conscious of working fewer hours and balancing my personal needs. Heck, I love spreadsheets more than most people, and if I can use them to back up a case to get my work done sooner and go surfing, so be it.
The bottom line
I wasn't the main target demographic for this book, and yet I picked up a bunch of things to make me rethink some of my approaches to my day. For me, every day is a work day, but I'm now more conscious that every day should also be a happy day. I'm not at that point right now, but I'm actively working on it.
Give this book two or three hours of your day, and you'll understand what I mean. Just remember that ebook devices don't take kindly to being thrown across the room very often.