Employee Engagement Isn’t Enough. Here’s Why Joy Is the Real Growth Driver
You can hit your numbers and still miss what matters.
Beyond the Bottom Line: Why Joy Is a Performance Strategy, Not a Perk
Most organizations operate on a linear growth model: Employees work, the company achieves results, and revenue increases. It is logical, measurable, and comforting to leaders who rely on dashboards. The flaw in this logic is the assumption that financial results automatically sustain motivation and maximize performance.
Sometimes they do. Often, they don't. When motivation stalls, the typical response is to double down on the linear model, hoping engagement will eventually catch up.
The Circular Alternative.
There is a more human approach that often yields superior real-world results. Instead of chasing performance directly, this model prioritizes building a culture of joy.
The cycle works like this: Joy creates positive energy. Energy improves performance. Performance produces success. Success fosters pride. Pride strengthens the culture of joy, and the cycle feeds itself. It isn't linear; it is circular.
The Metric Most Leaders Ignore
Richard Sheridan, founder of Menlo Innovations and author of Joy, Inc., built his company around a question rarely found on an executive dashboard: Are people excited to come to work?
For Sheridan, excitement is the visible signal of joy, and joy is the signal that the culture is functioning. He treats joy as a core measure of success. If the culture lacks it, he assumes the system is broken.
Proof of Concept
- Menlo Innovations: Programmers work in pairs, talk constantly, and laugh often. Despite looking nothing like a typical software firm, they remain consistently profitable in a volatile industry.
- Southwest Airlines: Under Herb Kelleher, humor and informality were expected, not just allowed. While competitors faced bankruptcies, Southwest maintained decades of profitability and top-tier employee loyalty.
- Trader Joe's: From the moment you enter, employees are relaxed, joking, and engaged. By investing in autonomy and culture, they achieve some of the highest sales per square foot in the grocery sector.
The Science of Joy.
This isn't just anecdotal. Research by Barbara Fredrickson shows that positive emotions expand thinking, creativity, and resilience. Employees who feel good while working demonstrate higher creativity, better decision-making, and stronger overall performance. How people feel at work is not separate from results; it drives them.
5 Steps to Infuse Joy Into Your System
- Make Progress Visible: Create environments where people naturally show their work and collaborate in real-time.
- Remove One Irritation: Identify one process or rule everyone complains about and fix it.
- Allow Personality: Encourage humor and human interaction rather than equating professionalism with emotional restraint.
- Track Joy: Regularly ask teams how excited they feel about their work and share the data.
- Own It: Treat employee excitement as a leadership responsibility, not a byproduct.
The Leadership Challenge.
Most leaders believe that if the numbers are good, the system is working. But you can hit your targets and still feel something is missing. When people are genuinely excited to come to work, the culture is healthy. When they aren't, the system needs attention.
Every day this month, ask yourself: Am I excited to go to work? If the answer is no, it may be time to stop chasing the line and start building the circle.
