What makes a good day at work?

  • 1:12 min

We all know the feeling when a day flows well — you get things done, people respond positively, and you leave without feeling drained. But what actually makes a day good?

I often come back to three simple ingredients:

  1. Progress – You’ve moved the right things forward. It doesn’t need to be a huge breakthrough, just a decision made or a problem solved.
  2. Connection – You’ve strengthened trust with someone. Maybe you cleared up a misunderstanding, gave thanks, or had a constructive conversation.
  3. Energy – You end the day with fuel left in the tank. That might mean setting boundaries, taking a break, or avoiding unnecessary drama.

Think of it as a tripod: if one leg is missing, the day wobbles. Sometimes we chase output and sacrifice our health or spend time connecting but don’t move anything forward. A good day balances all three.

How to build this in

  • Start with a Daily 3: one progress task, one person to connect with, one energy habit (like a short walk).
  • Keep meetings simple: begin with a purpose, end with clear actions.
  • Notice early when tension arises. Addressing it early can stop the tension escalating.

And if a day doesn’t feel good? Take a quick look back: Which leg was missing? Adjust one small thing tomorrow. It’s often the little tweaks that compound into better weeks.

What defines ‘a good day at work’ for you? Let me know.

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