A global study from Gallup suggests that simply enjoying daily work may have a bigger impact on overall wellbeing than purpose, flexibility, or even some major life hardships.
Gallup found that workers who enjoy what they do each day rate their lives more than a full point higher on a zero-to-10 wellbeing scale compared to those who do not enjoy their work. That gap was larger than the differences associated with job choice or whether workers felt their jobs improved other peopleโs lives.
The findings highlight a growing future-of-work challenge for employers: workplace wellbeing may depend less on mission statements and more on how employees actually experience work day to day.
Flexibility and Autonomy Still Matter
While enjoyment ranked highest globally, autonomy played a larger role for certain groups, particularly full-time workers and employees in peak career-building years.
In several countries, including Nigeria and Mexico, the ability to choose oneโs work had a stronger connection to wellbeing than enjoyment itself, suggesting flexibility becomes especially important where economic opportunities are more limited.
Among full-time employees, job choice slightly outweighed enjoyment as a predictor of higher life satisfaction, pointing to the growing importance of autonomy in structured workplace environments.
Purpose Plays a Different Role
The study found that meaning and purpose still matter, particularly among self-employed workers and in countries such as India, where workers reported a stronger connection between meaningful work and overall wellbeing.
But globally, purpose showed a weaker relationship to life evaluations than either enjoyment or choice.
That distinction may redefine how organizations think about employee engagement strategies as companies continue redesigning work around hybrid models, AI tools, and evolving employee expectations.
What It Means for the Future of Work
The report argues that workplace wellbeing is influenced by a combination of daily experience, flexibility, and meaning rather than a single factor alone.
Job design, autonomy, and everyday work experience increasingly appear tied to how workers evaluate their lives overall.















