In Tim Gallwey’s The Inner Game of Work, he challenges us to rethink the traditional view of work. Instead of seeing work as a transactional exchange of time for money, Gallwey positions it as a dynamic interplay of learning, enjoyment, and performance. This approach shifts the locus of engagement from external motivators to internal awareness, placing significant responsibility for engagement directly into the hands of the employee.
Gallwey's framework is built on three interconnected dimensions:
Learning
Work should be an ongoing opportunity to grow and develop skills. Employees thrive when they feel they’re progressing—not just climbing the ladder, but becoming more capable and self-aware. This mindset reframes challenges as opportunities and mistakes as lessons, fostering a growth-oriented perspective.
Enjoyment
Enjoyment isn’t about constant fun or ease; it’s about finding satisfaction and flow in tasks. Gallwey argues that work, when approached with curiosity and presence, can offer deep personal fulfillment. This is a choice, not a mandate. Employees can learn to identify and embrace the elements of their work that bring intrinsic rewards.
Performance
While results matter, Gallwey encourages employees to focus less on outcomes and more on the process. When employees engage fully with the task at hand, high performance becomes a natural byproduct of attention, effort, and skill.
A central tenet of Gallwey’s philosophy is that employees must take responsibility for their own engagement by cultivating self-awareness. By reflecting on their behaviors, thoughts, and emotions at work, individuals can identify where they are thriving and where they feel stuck. This level of awareness helps employees reconnect with their work on a deeper level, even in less-than-ideal circumstances.
The Inner Game reframes work as a space of personal agency. Employees have the power to choose how they approach their tasks:
While Gallwey emphasizes the individual’s role in engagement, managers also play a part in creating an environment that supports learning, enjoyment, and performance. This includes:
Ultimately, engagement is not something a manager can impose or “gift” to employees. It is a collaborative process where employees and organizations align around a shared commitment to making work meaningful. Gallwey’s framework serves as a reminder that when employees actively invest in learning, enjoyment, and performance, they are better equipped to create their own engagement—and a richer experience of work.
What’s Your Inner Game?
If you’re a leader, ask yourself: How are you creating space for employees to take ownership of their engagement? If you’re an employee, reflect on how you can shift your mindset to embrace Gallwey’s principles of learning, enjoyment, and performance.
By redefining work in this way, we can transform engagement from a goal to be achieved into a natural outcome of how we approach our work every day.