PsychChat

Episode Summary

Ever found yourself staring at your screen on a Wednesday afternoon wondering, "Why does this organisation even exist? What am I actually doing here that matters?" You're not alone. In this episode, Dr Austin Tay dives deep into the crisis of meaning at work, unpacking two groundbreaking research papers that finally explain what's missing when work feels meaningless—and more importantly, what makes organisations genuinely matter.

Learn the five-characteristic framework that helps you distinguish between organisations with a genuine purpose and those just performing it. By the end of this episode, you'll know exactly how to audit your workplace, assess your alignment, and decide your next steps.

What You'll Learn

🎯 The Purpose Crisis: Why trust in businesses is at historic lows and more people than ever are asking if their work actually matters
🎯 The VUCA/BANI World: How volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity have shattered the old "profit-only" playbook
🎯 The Golden Thread: The three elements that help people genuinely thrive at work (spoiler: it's not just about the salary)
🎯 Five Characteristics Framework: The diagnostic tool for determining if your organisation's purpose is genuine or just window dressing
  • Reason to exist
  • Guiding force
  • Collective endeavour
  • Inspiration
  • Pursuit of a better world
🎯 Purpose-Person Misalignment: Why even good organisations can make you miserable if your purposes don't align
🎯 The Purpose Paradox: Why meaningful work can lead to burnout—and how to avoid that trap

Key Takeaways

✅ Your frustration with meaningless work isn't a personal failing—it's actually a sign of something healthy
✅ Real purpose isn't decoration on the wall—it should guide actual decisions, especially when purpose conflicts with profit
✅ Genuine purpose is co-created, not handed down from leadership retreats
✅ You can have an organisation with a real purpose that still isn't YOUR purpose—and that's okay
✅ Even when you find perfect alignment, watch for the purpose paradox: sustainable impact matters more than burning yourself out

Who This Episode Is For
  • Anyone feeling disconnected from their work
  • Leaders trying to build genuinely purpose-driven organisations
  • People considering career transitions
  • HR professionals working on culture and engagement
  • Consultants and coaches supporting organisational development
Featured Research

Floris, M., Casulli, L., & Ferrari, L. (2023). Editorial: Searching for meaning in work and life: Happiness, wellbeing and the future of organizations. Frontiers in Psychology, 14, 1287404.

van Ingen, R., Peters, P., De Ruiter, M., & Robben, H. (2021). Exploring the meaning of organizational purpose at a new dawn: The development of a conceptual model through expert interviews. Frontiers in Psychology, 12, 675543.

Quotable Moments
💬 "The question isn't whether purpose matters—research makes it clear that it does. The real question is whether your organisation's purpose is genuine and if it aligns with yours."

💬 "Real purpose isn't decoration hanging on the wall. It shapes resource allocation, strategic priorities, hiring decisions, and how conflicts get resolved."

💬 "When there's a direct conflict between purpose and profit, what wins? If profit always wins, your purpose statement is just window dressing."

💬 "Real purpose should make you want to get up in the morning. It gives you energy rather than draining it."
Questions for Reflection

After listening to this episode, ask yourself:
  1. If my organisation disappeared tomorrow, what would the world actually lose?
  2. When purpose conflicts with profit in my organisation, which one actually wins?
  3. Was I part of creating our organisation's purpose, or was it handed down to me?
  4. Does my organisation's purpose genuinely inspire me, or does it feel like corporate speak?
  5. Am I experiencing purpose-person misalignment? If so, what are my options?
Take Action

Ready to apply what you learned? Here's your next step:

Audit Your Organisation: Go through the five characteristics honestly—not what your website says, but what actually happens in practice. Be brutally honest with yourself about the gap between aspirations and reality.

Assess Your Alignment: Even if your organisation has a genuine purpose, does it resonate with what matters to YOU? Do you sense that connection in your daily work?

Make a Conscious Choice: If there's misalignment, decide: Can you advocate for change? Do you have the energy for that battle? Or is it time to look elsewhere?

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Hashtags
#PsychChat #OrganisationalPurpose #WorkplaceMeaning #LeadershipDevelopment #OrganisationalPsychology #PurposeDriven #WorkplaceCulture #EmployeeEngagement #MeaningfulWork #OrganisationalDevelopment #WorkplaceWellbeing #LeadershipResearch #HRLeadership #FutureOfWork #WorkplacePsychology


About the Host: Dr Austin Tay is a Chartered Industrial Organisational Psychologist who serves as Founder and Principal Consultant of OmniPsi Consulting. He specialises in executive coaching, leadership assessment, and evidence-based organisational psychology interventions.

Remember: Your work matters. The question is whether your organisation is helping you see that.

What is PsychChat ?

Dr Austin Tay is an organizational psychologist. In each podcast episode, he will discuss work-related issues that matter in the workplace. Through the lens of a psychologist, Dr Austin will provide tips and advice to his listeners to help them navigate the complex world of work. Email psychchat@omnipsi.com or send via Twitter @psych_chat to send your comments or suggestions.

Dr Austin Tay is the founder of Omnipsi Consulting (www.omnipsi.com).
OmniPsi Consulting specialises in executive coaching, leadership assessment and development, career transitioning, training and workplace intervention.

Welcome back to PsychChat, where we share tips on navigating the complex world of work. I'm your host, Dr. Austin Tay.

To all new listeners—welcome! Hit subscribe so you don't miss future episodes. And if you're already subscribed, welcome back! If you're enjoying the show, leave us a review. Honestly, it helps more than you'd think—it's how other people discover the podcast.

It's 3 PM on a Wednesday. You're staring at your screen, halfway through some report that's due tomorrow. And this thought hits you out of nowhere: "Why does this organisation even exist? What am I actually doing here that matters?"

I'm not talking about some deep existential crisis. Just that uncomfortable moment when you realise you can't remember the last time your work felt like it meant something. To anyone. Including you.

My days in consulting have involved working with organisations that claim to want to make a difference. I was attracted by inspiring mission statements, believing that I could, in my own way and with the support of the organisations I work for, genuinely make a difference. Sadly, I often felt disillusioned after realising that stating a mission and actually fulfilling it are two very different things.

Why do some organisations make people feel alive while others make them feel like they're slowly disappearing?

And if you've felt this way—and I'm guessing you have, or you wouldn't be still listening—you're not alone. There's actually a bigger crisis unfolding. Trust in businesses? At historic lows. Burnout? Through the roof. And more people than ever are asking themselves, "Does any of this actually matter?"
Here's what we're covering today. I'll share two research papers that finally clarified what was missing from jobs I wasn't happy with. More importantly, by the end of this episode, you'll be able to tell if your organisation's purpose is genuine or just for show—and know what steps to take next.
This is a deep dive, so grab a coffee. But I promise you it'll be worth it. Once you understand this framework, you'll never view work the same way.

I found this editorial from 2023 by Floris, Casulli, and Ferrari called "Searching for meaning in work and life"—and that title truly captures what's going on. We're living in a time where people are desperately searching. Not just for a job. Not just for a salary. But for the purpose.

And here's what truly stood out about their editorial. They examined all this research on meaning, happiness, and well-being. And they discovered something that seems obvious when spoken aloud but has significant implications: in our post-scarcity world—at least for those of us in developed economies—people are no longer just working to survive. We're working to find purpose. To feel like we matter.

However, management consultants have been promoting "organisational purpose" as if it were the cure-all. Purpose-driven this, purpose-led that. But actual academic research? It's all over the place. Some say it's just "profit plus doing a little good." Others treat it like a fancy mission statement. Some confuse it with corporate social responsibility.

So Floris and colleagues essentially said: We need to understand this better. How do organisations actually contribute to human meaning and wellbeing? Not just employee wellbeing, but the wellbeing of everyone they come into contact with.

And that's when I found another paper—van Ingen and his team conducted a massive study, interviewing 44 global experts. Academics, practitioners, and founders. Just asked them: What does organisational purpose really mean?

These two papers together tell a complete story. The editorial explains why this matters—why people are searching. The empirical study reveals what they're searching for.
Let's dive in.

WHY EVERYONE'S SUDDENLY OBSESSED WITH THIS

Okay, so why is purpose even relevant today?
For decades, the answer was straightforward: companies exist to maximise shareholder value. Make a profit. Grow. That's it. Done.

That strategy worked for a time. During that period, we saw rapid technological advances, better living conditions, and the expansion of global markets—real progress that many could relate to.

But we also saw... well, let's be honest. Wealth inequality that looks like something from a science fiction dystopia. The 2008 financial crisis. Enron and all those accounting scandals.

Climate change is making parts of the world uninhabitable. We're consuming resources as if there's no tomorrow—and at this rate, there might not be.

The researchers refer to this as a "VUCA world"—one that is characterised by Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, and Ambiguity. And of course, post-COVID, the world has become Brittle, Anxious, Non-Linear and Incomprehensible—or known as BANI. The world as we know it has become fractured and unpredictable. The old playbook doesn't work.

People started to question whether our society is heading in the right direction. They wonder if focusing solely on profit and continuous growth will eventually cause us to destroy what we've worked so hard to build. These doubts have led to a notable decline in trust towards businesses and corporations. Many now feel disconnected and sceptical about the motives behind corporate actions.

WHAT THE RESEARCH ACTUALLY SHOWS

This is where the Floris editorial proves especially valuable. They didn't merely discuss purpose—they examined extensive research on meaning in work and life.

First, they discuss the idea of "bullshit jobs"—work where people cannot see the value they are contributing to society. Where they themselves view their work as pointless. And the psychological impact? Enormous.

The economic argument suggests that increasing wages compensates for subpar work. However, this perspective overlooks fundamental human needs such as self-worth, trust, agency, and purpose.
But the editorial also reviews research on what actually works. What helps people flourish?

They identified this pattern across several studies—what they refer to as "the golden thread." Three key elements keep recurring:

1. Purpose - the sense that what you're doing has meaning

2. Autonomy - having control over how you carry out your work

3. Mutual support - genuine relationships and backing from others

When organisations get these right, people don't just survive; they thrive. The editorial describes it as "a symphony of resilience, fulfilment, and flourishing." I love that phrase.

One study they reviewed really resonated with me. It asked people what "contributing to society" actually means. It turns out to be this profound sense of positively affecting other people.

And there are three dimensions to it:

1. Matching with your purpose - alignment between what you value and what you're doing

2. Investing personally - putting yourself into the work

3. Balancing contributions with costs - sustainable impact, not burning yourself out

This isn't simply about having a job. It's about how that job relates to something greater.

Here's something that genuinely challenged my thinking. The editorial reviews research on HR practices—specifically, whether organisations must choose between employee wellbeing or performance. Spoiler: they don't. When HR practices support wellbeing through elements such as job control, development opportunities, and supportive management, performance actually improves. It's not a tradeoff. It's synergistic. But here's the catch—it requires genuine commitment, not just checking boxes.

THE FRAMEWORK: FIVE CHARACTERISTICS OF REAL PURPOSE

Now we get to the van Ingen study. They interviewed 44 experts and identified five characteristics that define genuine organisational purpose. This is the diagnostic framework I promised you.

1. REASON TO EXIST

The organisation has an apparent reason for existing beyond making money. It's answering the question: Why do we exist? What would be lost if we disappeared?

Patagonia's "We're in business to save our home planet" isn't marketing—it drives everything. When faced with a decision, they ask: "Does this help save the planet?" That clarity filters throughout the organisation.

Here's your audit question: If your organisation disappeared tomorrow, what would the world actually lose? If the answer is just "some products people could buy elsewhere" or "some services competitors already provide," that's a problem. There's no genuine reason to exist beyond profit.

2. GUIDING FORCE

Purpose actually influences decisions—it's not decoration hanging on the wall. It shapes resource allocation, strategic priorities, hiring decisions, and how conflicts get resolved.

Here's the brutal test: When there's a direct conflict between purpose and profit, what wins? If profit always wins, your purpose statement is just window dressing. It's performative.

I've seen this repeatedly. Organisations with noble purpose statements that, when push comes to shove, make every decision based solely on quarterly earnings. That's not purpose guiding the organisation. That's PR.

3. COLLECTIVE ENDEAVOUR

Purpose involves everyone—not just the executive team. Employees, customers, suppliers, communities. It's built together, refined together, lived together. It's not handed down from on high.

The opposite? Those organisations where leadership goes on a retreat, announces the new purpose, hangs inspirational posters everywhere, and then wonders why nobody feels connected to it, because they weren't part of creating it.

Real purpose is co-created. It emerges from genuine dialogue about what matters and why the organisation exists.

4. INSPIRATION

Purpose inspires people. It connects to fundamental human needs—what self-determination theory identifies as autonomy, competence, and relatedness. When these needs are met, people are intrinsically motivated.

Real purpose makes you want to get up in the morning. It gives you energy rather than draining it. It makes difficult work feel worthwhile.

If your organisation's purpose leaves you completely cold, if it feels like corporate speak that could apply to any company in any industry, that tells you something important.

5. PURSUIT OF A BETTER WORLD

Purpose is about improving something beyond organisational boundaries. It's about net positive impact—making things genuinely better for people, communities, or the planet.

This is where it gets real and where the research is unflinching. Some organisations claim to have a purpose, but actually make things worse overall. You see it in companies with inspiring environmental missions that have supply chains devastating communities. Or firms talking about wellbeing while creating products designed to be addictive. The research calls this out directly—real purpose requires honest accounting of total impact. You can't cherry-pick the good parts and ignore the harm.

THE GAP THAT MATTERS

Here's where it gets intensely practical. The research identified a concept known as "purpose-person misalignment."

You can have an organisation with a genuine, well-articulated purpose. You can have an employee who deeply values meaningful work. But if those two don't connect? That's where the suffering happens.
Think about it. Someone passionate about environmental sustainability working for an oil company—even if that company has initiatives around renewables. Or someone who values creativity and innovation is stuck in a bureaucracy where every new idea gets killed by process.

The misalignment causes three specific problems:

First, you feel as if you're squandering your potential, as if your talents and energy are being directed towards something that doesn't align with what you genuinely value.

Secondly, you suffer from constant cognitive dissonance. You're trying to make yourself care about things that truly don't matter to you.

Third, you lose the motivational boost that arises from a shared purpose. Work then becomes solely transactional—you exchange time for money, and nothing else.

I've observed this pattern repeatedly in my consulting work. Bright, capable individuals stuck in organisations that technically have a purpose but not their purpose. And they are unhappy. Not because they're in the wrong career, but because they're in the wrong organisation.

SO WHAT DO YOU ACTUALLY DO WITH THIS?

First, audit your organisation honestly against those five characteristics. Not what the website says. Not what leadership claims. What actually happens.

Does your organisation have a reason to exist beyond profit? Does purpose actually guide decisions or decorate mission statements? Is it collectively held or top-down? Does it inspire you? Does it pursue genuine betterment?

Be brutally honest with yourself. Don't confuse aspirations with reality.

Second, assess your own alignment. Even if the organisation has genuine purpose, does it resonate with what matters to you? Do you sense that connection in your daily work? Or does it feel abstract and distant?

If you find genuine misalignment, you have options:

If the organisation has genuine purpose but you're disconnected from it, it's about discovering better ways to link your role to that purpose. Sometimes, it involves reframing your work or exploring different projects.

If the purpose is performative—if it fails most of those five characteristics—then you need to decide: Can you advocate for change? Do you have the energy and political will to fight that battle? Is it worth it? Or is it time to look elsewhere?

And sometimes, after honest reflection, the answer is: This isn't my organisation. And that's okay. It's better to acknowledge this and make a conscious choice rather than stay and gradually lose yourself.

THE PURPOSE PARADOX

There's one more thing from the research worth mentioning—what they call "the purpose paradox."
When work is significant, you're more likely to give too much. Healthcare workers, teachers, social workers—their work genuinely matters, but it often comes with burnout because they care so deeply.

The research reveals a consistent pattern: high purpose, high meaning, and high exhaustion. Because when something matters that much, you sacrifice more. You push harder. You ignore boundaries.

So, even when you find that perfect alignment—when organisational purpose and personal purpose connect—be mindful of this trap. Real purpose shouldn't exhaust you. Remember that third dimension of contributing to society from earlier: balancing contributions with costs—sustainable impact matters. You can't pour from an empty cup, as the saying goes.

CLOSING

Look, here's what I want you to remember from this episode:
Your frustration with meaningless work isn't a personal failing. It's not that you're entitled, ungrateful, or lack a good work ethic. It's actually a sign of something healthy—you're wired to want work that matters.
The framework we discussed today provides you with language for what you've been feeling. The five characteristics of real purpose are: a reason to exist, a guiding force, collective endeavour, inspiration, and the pursuit of a better world. Use them as a diagnostic tool.

Once you understand this framework, you can't unsee it. You'll notice when organisations are performing purpose rather than genuinely embodying it. When they're talking about meaning while creating meaninglessness. And you'll be better equipped to find or craft work that truly aligns with who you are.
The question isn't whether purpose matters—research makes it clear that it does. The real question is whether your organisation's purpose is genuine and if it aligns with yours. And now you know how to distinguish between them.

Remember to subscribe so you don't miss out our next week's episode. And leave a review if this was valuable — it genuinely helps others discover the show.

Until next time: stay curious, stay sceptical, and remember—your work matters. The question is whether your organisation is helping you see that.

This has been PsychChat. I'm Dr. Austin Tay. Thanks for listening.