How To Know When Your Hard Work Is Paying Off?

Knowing when hard work is paying off can be an arduous process.

It is going to require you to ask some hard questions and do a little introspection.

First, what is your definition of hard work? 

Is it setting a goal to complete a project by X date and then working extra hard to get it done sooner?

Or is it committing to doing something every single day and watching, over time, as your work gets better and better?

Second, are you being driven by external factors? 

How many followers do you receive each day vs.

how many people un-follow you?

Or is it internal?

Looking back at where you were yesterday, and where you are today, do you think your knowledge has grown?

What if you fall short of getting so many followers by such a date?

Has all your work still been for naught and should be thrown away?

Setting goals is a great tool.

Creating routines and committing to take action to meet those goals is even better.

Achieving those goals is masterful.

What if when you achieve that goal? 

Did the hard work pay off? 

Did it make a difference?

Was the goal too easy?

There is only ONE way any of us can tell if our hard work is paying off – taking a snapshot.

Snapshots: How To Know When Your Hard Work Has Paid Off

Take a snapshot of where you are today on your goal.

If you’re learning a new language, how many words do you know today?

Do you want to lose weight?

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How much do you weigh now?

If you want to get promoted at work, what position are you currently in?

Take that snapshot by writing it down, taking a photo, or doing both.

You can even record a video of yourself to know where you are starting from.

Now don’t take it and post it in front of your computer or exercise bike.

Instead, put it away.

Perhaps on the back of it, write where you want to be when you look at this again.

Depending on how long you want to work at it, set a target, a month, maybe two, and go work on it.

Set a calendar alarm to alert you when it’s time to check your snapshot. 

Set a schedule, do something, make something, create something.

When that time is up, pull out the photo and look back at where you were – has the hard work paid off?

Are you where you want to be?

Still not there? 

Then get back to work.

But what about gains?

Because this is key; life is not all or nothing, it is about gains, progress, and growth.

For instance, I’ve been trying to improve my sketching skills for the past few years.

But despite trying to do 30 minutes a day (sometimes I do, sometimes I don’t), there are days when I think my work will get nowhere.

That it’s never going to make sense, never going to look how I want it to. 

I’m in that erstwhile role of craptivity where nothing is working or makes sense.

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But I keep pushing on.

On each day that I sketch, I write the date at the bottom of the page, so when I look back, I can see the improvements – bodies are more proportioned, legs look like legs, etc…

The work is paying off, but it’s taking longer than I thought, and longer than I ever wished.

And that’s our biggest crisis of conscience with goals:

It takes longer than you think – at work, in life, everything – it always takes longer than you think.

But it doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t give it our all, or that we shouldn’t keep going.

Did you think your hard work has already paid off?

Why or why not?

Once you get past that notion of self-implemented time constraints and put in some legitimate snapshot reminders to show you far you’ve come, you’ll realize that your hard work is really paying off.

Yes, YOU are getting there.

Greg Thomas has been doing Software Development for over 15+ years on a variety of small to large scale projects. He continues to lead teams and writes about his adventures in developing and leading teams at rambli.com.
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  1. Tyler Cranston

    November 24, 2018 at 10:18 PM

    Awesome Greg,
    Very informative!

    I would like to add that, there is a significant difference between working hard and working smart. As well as talent vs. skill.

    Nowadays working hard means nothing. Talent is overrated. Smart work and skills. These are the only two things that matter. Why?
    Because skills is developed through years of hard work and practice.
    Smart work, well, the name implies itself.

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