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Progress Principle

Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer's research-based theory showing that making consistent progress in meaningful work—even small wins—is the single biggest factor in creating positive inner work life, leading to greater creativity, productivity, and engagement.

Last updated: 2026-03-15 12:55

Overview

The Progress Principle, developed by Harvard Business School professor Teresa Amabile and psychologist Steven Kramer, describes findings from a multi-year research project analyzing nearly 12,000 diary entries from 238 employees across 7 companies to discover what makes people happy, motivated, creative, and productive at work.

The Core Finding

The research revealed that nothing contributed more to a positive inner work life than making progress in meaningful work. Even small steps forward evoked powerful positive reactions and performance improvements.

What is Inner Work Life?

Inner work life is the mix of emotions, motivations, and perceptions that is critical to performance. When people have positive inner work lives, they are:

The Power of Small Wins

Research Findings

Why Small Wins Matter

Connection to Time Management

Task Planning Implications

Time Tracking Applications

How to Apply the Progress Principle

For Individuals

  1. Set Clear Daily Goals: Define what progress looks like each day
  2. Track Small Wins: Keep a progress journal or log
  3. Break Down Big Projects: Create tasks that can be completed in hours, not days
  4. Celebrate Completion: Acknowledge each finished task
  5. Maintain Momentum: End each day knowing your next step

For Managers

  1. Enable Progress: Remove obstacles blocking team members
  2. Recognize Wins: Acknowledge small achievements publicly
  3. Provide Meaningful Work: Connect tasks to larger purpose
  4. Offer Support: Help team members move forward daily
  5. Track Progress: Make progress visible to the team

The Opposite: The Setback Effect

The research also identified that setbacks had a stronger negative impact than progress had positive impact. Blocked or reversed progress significantly damaged inner work life and performance.

Relationship to Other Productivity Concepts

Key Takeaways

  1. Progress in meaningful work is the #1 motivator
  2. Small wins have disproportionate positive impact
  3. Daily forward momentum matters more than big breakthroughs
  4. Tracking and celebrating progress amplifies its benefits
  5. Removing progress blockers is critical for performance

Further Reading

The Progress Principle: Using Small Wins to Ignite Joy, Engagement, and Creativity at Work by Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer (2011)

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