Mindfulness in the Workplace Improves Employee Focus, Attention, Behavior, Study Says

Research concludes that mindfulness not only improves focus, but the ability to manage stress and how employees work together

Written byCase Western Reserve University
| 3 min read
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CLEVELAND—Mindfulness is often viewed as either a touchy-feely fad or valuable management tool that can lift an entire workplace.

A new comprehensive analysis of mindfulness research, co-directed by a management scientist at Case Western Reserve University, suggests the latter—that injecting a corporate culture of mindfulness not only improves focus, but the ability to manage stress and how employees work together.

“Historically, companies have been reticent to offer mindfulness training because it was seen as something fluffy, esoteric, and spiritual,” said Christopher Lyddy, an organizational behavior doctoral candidate at Case Western Reserve’s Weatherhead School of Management. “But that’s changing.”

Mindfulness, defined as present-centered attention and awareness, emerged from Buddhist philosophy and has been cultivated for millennia through meditation practices.

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