Drive Motivation Framework
Framework for designing motivation systems in products, teams, and organizations based on the science of what actually motivates humans. Replaces outdated carrot-and-stick thinking with intrinsic motivation.
Core Principle
The secret to high performance isn't rewards and punishment — it's the deeply human need to direct our own lives, learn and create new things, and do better for ourselves and our world.
The foundation: For any task requiring even rudimentary cognitive effort, external rewards (bonuses, prizes, punishments) either don't work or actively make performance worse. Intrinsic motivation — Autonomy, Mastery, Purpose — drives lasting engagement.
Scoring
Goal: 10/10. When evaluating motivation systems (product features, team incentives, gamification, engagement loops), rate 0-10 based on AMP principles. A 10/10 means the system supports autonomy, enables mastery, and connects to purpose; lower scores indicate reliance on extrinsic rewards or controlling behaviors. Always provide current score and improvements to reach 10/10.
Motivation 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0
| Version | Core Assumption | Approach | Era |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | Humans are biological beings | Survival drives (food, shelter, safety) | Pre-industrial |
| 2.0 | Humans respond to rewards/punishments | Carrot and stick (bonuses, penalties) | Industrial age |
| 3.0 | Humans seek autonomy, mastery, purpose | Intrinsic motivation | Knowledge economy |
The problem with Motivation 2.0 (carrot and stick):
Most organizations still run on Motivation 2.0, but it's fundamentally broken for modern work.
The Seven Deadly Flaws of Extrinsic Rewards
External rewards ("if-then" rewards: "If you do X, then you get Y"):
| Flaw | Mechanism | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Extinguish intrinsic motivation | Turns play into work | Kids who were paid to draw stopped drawing when payments stopped |
| 2. Diminish performance | Narrow focus, reduce creativity | Candle problem: reward group performed worse |
| 3. Crush creativity | Focus on reward, not exploration | Artists creating commissioned work are less creative |
| 4. Crowd out good behavior | Financial framing replaces moral framing | Day care late-pickup fee: lateness increased (became a "service") |
| 5. Encourage cheating | Goal fixation leads to shortcuts | Wells Fargo fake accounts scandal |
| 6. Become addictive | Need bigger rewards over time | Bonus escalation: last year's bonus = this year's expectation |
| 7. Foster short-term thinking | Optimize for reward period | Quarterly bonuses → quarterly thinking |
When extrinsic rewards DO work:
- Routine, algorithmic tasks (assembly line, data entry)
- Tasks requiring no creativity or judgment
- When the task is genuinely boring and no intrinsic motivation exists
When extrinsic rewards DON'T work (and hurt):
- Creative work
- Complex problem-solving
- Any task requiring cognitive effort
- Long-term engagement
See: references/extrinsic-rewards.md for the science behind reward failures.
The Three Pillars: Autonomy, Mastery, Purpose
1. Autonomy
Definition: The desire to direct our own lives — to have choice over what we do, when we do it, how we do it, and who we do it with.
Autonomy ≠ independence. Autonomy means acting with choice. You can be autonomous while being interdependent with a team.
The Four T's of Autonomy:
| Dimension | Question | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Task | What do I work on? | Google's 20% time, Atlassian ShipIt days |
| Time | When do I work? | Flexible hours, no mandatory meetings |
| Technique | How do I do it? | Choose your own tools, methods, approach |
| Team | Who do I work with? | Self-forming teams, choose collaborators |
Product applications:
| Context | Autonomy Killer | Autonomy Enabler |
|---|---|---|
| Onboarding | Forced linear tutorial | Choose your own path, skip steps |
| Customization | One-size-fits-all | Themes, layouts, preferences |
| Content | Algorithm-only feed | User-controlled feeds, filters |
| Communication | Forced notifications | Notification preferences, DND |
| Workflow | Rigid process | Flexible workflow, custom automations |
| Features | Feature bloat (all visible) | Show/hide features, progressive disclosure |
Autonomy audit questions:
- Can users choose WHAT to do in the product?
- Can users choose WHEN to engage?
- Can users choose HOW to complete tasks?
- Can users choose their own path through the experience?
Warning signs of autonomy violation:
- "You must complete X before Y"
- Forced tutorials with no skip option
- Mandatory notifications
- No customization options
- Rigid workflows with no flexibility
See: references/autonomy.md for autonomy design patterns.
2. Mastery
Definition: The desire to get better at something that matters — to continually improve and grow.
Mastery is a mindset, not a destination. It's asymptotic — you can approach it but never fully reach it. The joy is in the pursuit.
Three laws of mastery:
Law 1: Mastery is a Mindset
- Growth mindset (Carol Dweck): Ability is developed, not fixed
- People with growth mindset seek challenges and learn from failure
- Fixed mindset people avoid challenges (might reveal inadequacy)
- Design implication: Frame failures as learning, not judgment
Law 2: Mastery is a Pain
- Requires effort, deliberate practice, and grit
- Flow (Csikszentmihalyi): Optimal state between boredom and anxiety
- Challenge must match skill level — too easy = boring, too hard = anxious
- Design implication: Calibrate difficulty to user's level
Law 3: Mastery is Asymptotic
- You can approach mastery but never fully arrive
- The pursuit itself is the reward
- Design implication: Always have next level, next challenge
The Flow Channel:
ANXIETY
/
/
FLOW ←──────────── Optimal challenge zone
\
\
BOREDOM
Low Skill ──────────────── High Skill
Flow conditions:
- Clear goals
- Immediate feedback
- Challenge/skill balance
- Sense of control
- Deep concentration
Product applications:
| Context | Mastery Design | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Progress | Visible skill development | GitHub contribution graph, Duolingo levels |
| Difficulty | Adaptive challenge | Games that adjust to player skill |
| Feedback | Immediate, clear signals | Real-time writing analysis (Grammarly) |
| Goals | Clear, achievable milestones | LinkedIn profile strength meter |
| Learning | Skill trees, structured paths | Codecademy learning paths |
| Streaks | Consistency tracking | Duolingo streaks (careful: can become extrinsic) |
Mastery audit questions:
- Can users see their progress over time?
- Does the product adapt to skill level?
- Is there immediate, meaningful feedback?
- Are there clear next steps for improvement?
- Does the challenge increase as skill increases?
Warning signs of mastery violation:
- No way to see improvement
- Same difficulty regardless of skill
- Delayed or absent feedback
- No clear path forward
- Punishing failures instead of teaching
See: references/mastery.md for mastery design patterns and flow state principles.
3. Purpose
Definition: The yearning to do what we do in the service of something larger than ourselves.
Purpose is the context for autonomy and mastery. Without purpose, autonomy is directionless and mastery is hollow.
Three expressions of purpose:
| Expression | How It Manifests | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Goals | Purpose-driven objectives | TOMS: |