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    5 signs you’re doing work that doesn’t matter

    wildgreenquest@gmail.comBy wildgreenquest@gmail.comApril 26, 2026006 Mins Read
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    In recent years, nearly half of employees report increased workloads and an accelerating pace of change, so the last thing anyone can afford is doing hard work that doesn’t make an impact. Ambitious workers aren’t afraid of putting in effort, but they want it to contribute to work that matters.

    Work worthy of our effort creates value on two dimensions: it generates value for others (your organization, customers, or the people around you), and it creates value for yourself through personal meaning and growth. Research shows that connecting to both dimensions taps into our intrinsic and values-based motivation. When those connections are weak, despite being busy, the work doesn’t create real value. 

    Here are five signs your hard work may have shifted into demotivating territory, and how to redirect it to focus on the right activities and make your effort sustainable.

    VALUE FOR OTHERS

    Sign 1: You can’t link your effort to a meaningful outcome

    You’ve taken on a major initiative, but you can’t state how it benefits the organization, your team, or a customer. When the throughline between your effort and a meaningful outcome isn’t clear, it can make the difference between a project feeling like a priority or pointless. 

    How we view our contribution matters. Researchers Amy Wrzesniewski and Jane Dutton found that hospital workers doing identical jobs experienced their work as either drudgery or deeply purposeful. The difference wasn’t the work but whether they could connect their effort to a meaningful contribution, in this case the health and well-being of patients.

    Redirect: Before investing significant effort, ask: How is this connected to our organization and team goals? Who will use this, and what will it help them do? 

    Sign 2: Your work goes unacknowledged

    You pour effort into a deliverable like a last-minute analysis or report and then… nothing. No acknowledgement of receipt, no feedback, no appreciation of the effort. The work disappears into a void, as if it never existed. 

    This is a sure-fire way to kill motivation. Research by Dan Ariely showed that people’s motivation was negatively impacted when their work was visibly dismissed. In contrast, minimal acknowledgment went a long way to boost effort. Feedback is an antidote to make work meaningful.

    But just because you didn’t hear back doesn’t mean your work didn’t matter. It may have informed a decision or shifted someone’s thinking. We don’t always get the benefit of feedback loops being closed. So if you haven’t heard, ask.

    Redirect: If you consistently can’t see what happens with your work, directly ask to learn the impact both before and after starting a project. Before: “How will this be used?” After: “What was the outcome of what I created?”

    Sign 3: You can’t make meaningful progress

    You’re energized to push a high-stakes project forward and you know why it matters, but you keep hitting roadblocks and can’t make progress. Leadership can’t align to the desired outcome, priorities shift, or you get blocked by approval bottlenecks. You’re not stuck because you lack motivation. You’re stuck because the system won’t let you move forward.

    This is when motivation drops. Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer’s research found that making progress on meaningful work is the single most powerful driver of work satisfaction. Getting blocked can make effort feel futile.

    Redirect: Identify one part of the project within your control and make visible progress on it this week. If the blockers are systemic, bring recommendations to your leader for overcoming the challenges like clearer problem definition, re-evaluation of the project’s priority, or stakeholder analysis to unblock approvals. 

    VALUE FOR YOURSELF

    Sign 4: Your work conflicts with your values

    You thought the job was a fit, but you’re increasingly asked to do work that’s in conflict with what you believe in, be it your professional ethics, your values, or your sense of what’s right. This isn’t just uncomfortable, research identifies values mismatch as a known pathway to burnout. That’s because values conflict isn’t about not enjoying your work; it’s identity friction, a sense that your work is making you into someone you don’t want to be. 

    Redirect: Identify specifically where the conflict lies. Is it a single project, a manager’s approach, or the organization’s fundamental direction? If it’s the organization’s direction, that’s a signal to consider a change. 

    Sign 5: You’re not learning, growing, or being challenged

    The initiative is high-profile and important, but you can’t see how it builds your skills, stretches you, or aligns with your growth agenda. 

    Self-Determination Theory identifies competence—the feeling that you’re effective, growing, and being optimally challenged—as a core psychological need. When work meets this need, we feel capable, and our intrinsic motivation increases. This is especially important in today’s AI-environment. PwC’s 2025 Global Workforce Hopes and Fears Survey reported that workers who feel supported to upskill are 73% more motivated, and those who think their skills will stay relevant are almost twice as motivated.

    Redirect: Ask yourself: How can this serve the vision I have for my career? What can I learn or master? If you can’t find a link, work with your leader to shape the project around your development goals. 

    Before declaring work worthless, a word of caution on two fronts. First, healthy organizations and teams depend on activities like relationship-building, mentoring, and cross-functional coordination, which are rarely tied to a direct output. Organizational psychologists call such discretionary activities “citizenship behavior,” which is worth your effort. Also remember that not all routine or repetitive work is worthless. Sometimes simpler tasks offer a needed change of pace from more demanding work. The sign of worthlessness isn’t that a task is small or mindless. It’s that your broader effort isn’t generating value in either dimension, organizational or personal. 

    There’s nothing wrong with hard work, as long as it’s directed wisely. Worthy work generates both organizational value and personal value, and when both are present our motivation sustains our effort. If you’re not feeling energized by your current work, treat it as a signal to check in, diagnose if you’re focused on the right work, and redirect appropriately. The goal isn’t to work less but to make sure your hard work is worth it.



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