Work Is Worthless Unless It Creates Value
Why Work Alone Doesn’t Lead to Success
One of the biggest economic misunderstandings is about work. Most people think they work for a living. They don’t. They create value for a living. Work doesn't necessarily get you anything. You can spend all day digging holes and filling them up again and you will have done a great deal of work but accomplished nothing. Why not? Because you created no value. We say we work for a living but that's wrong.
We create value for a living
As I write this I don't think of myself as working, I think of myself as creating value. If you've read this far, you believe what I've written has the potential to be of value to you, maybe valuable enough to spend more time reading it. This change in viewpoint will change your life, dramatically. It’s the value created that matters, not the effort expended.
The Mindset Shift: From Working to Creating Value
When you stop thinking of yourself as a worker and start thinking of yourself as a value‑creator, everything changes. You stop focusing on how hard you’re working and start focusing on what outcomes you’re producing. That shift alone makes you more effective.
Creating Value Instead of Working has Two Important Effects
Value Creation Drives Career Growth
You will almost certainly be more successful in your job or career. Employers don’t reward effort. They reward value. You are being paid to create value for someone else. If you stop working and start creating value you will certainly create value more effectively. Greater value creation leads to pay raises, promotions, and appreciation. If you can't see your job as value creation, CHANGE JOBS! Find a job where you can see value creation. However, if you look you can find value creation in every job. If you are flipping burgers at a fast food place, where is the value? Someone who just pulled up to the drive through doesn't have time to cook dinner for the family today, so they are paying you to do it for them.
Value Creation Drives Career Satisfaction
As you flip those burgers, think of those customers: think of how they are going to get home and enjoy the value you created for them. It will make your day a lot better. You'll begin to see the value you are creating, and see yourself as a more valuable person.
Who Sets the Value of Your Work?
Consumers, Not Employers
What if your employer isn't paying you enough? Here comes the economics lesson. Most employers do not set value. Most employers are middlemen. They don’t decide what your work is worth — the customer does. If customers won’t pay for what you produce, your employer can’t pay you either. Value flows from the consumer backward through the system.
The Middleman’s Role in the Economy
The job of a middleman is to bring consumers and producers together. In our fast food example, you are the producer and the hungry customer is the consumer, the fast food joint is the middleman. They built the building where the exchange takes place, they bought the equipment, they paid for employee training and they pay for the raw materials, the burgers and buns. For spending that money to arrange the exchange between producer and consumer, they take part of the profits. Without this middleman there would be no exchange and you'd be out of a job and your customer would stay hungry. When they set prices correctly, everyone benefits — the customer, the worker, and the business.
The Consumer Is the Real Boss
So who decides the value of what you create? The consumer, or more correctly, the collection of all possible consumers. They decide what is worth to them to not have to cook today. If the price goes above the value they have set, they won't buy the burger you cooked; they'll go home and cook their own. If many consumers decide that way, your employer will have to start laying off producers because if he has more producers than consumers the business of bringing producer and consumers together fails. Part of the middleman's job is to monitor prices and set the prices at the point where the most producers and consumers are brought together. He makes more profit this way, but more producers and consumers benefit as well. Everyone wins!
Conclusion: Focus on Value, Not Effort
Success comes from value creation, not just hard work. Hard work is great, but only when more work creates more value. When you understand that, you stop measuring your life by how busy you are and start measuring it by the value you bring to others.


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Responses
“ We create value for a living.” I believe this has been the inspiring quote for me this year. Made me ponder deeply about the work I do; PR. Am i doing enough to continue providing value for my clients?
Thank you for informative and thought-provoking articles.
I found you on podcast guest and believe I can be valuable to you.
How does podcast, thoughtleadership interviews, expert commentary sound to you?
I could make them happen💪💪