In many workplaces, people obsess over job titles as if those few words on a business card sum up their worth. But a title is just a label, it's not the full measure of your skill, contribution, or potential. Here's why:
Titles Are Organizational, Value Is Personal
A job title is simply a way for a company to organize roles. It helps HR classify salaries and reporting lines. But your value comes from the problems you solve, the results you deliver, and the energy you bring. Two people with the same title can create completely different levels of impact.
Titles Can Lag Behind Reality
Often, you're already doing work that outgrows your current title. Companies don't always update titles as fast as your skills evolve. If you wait for your title to "catch up," you might underestimate how valuable you already are.
Titles Are Relative, Impact Is Universal
A "manager" in a startup may have more responsibility than a "director" in a large corporation. Titles change across industries and organizations, but your ability to lead, innovate, and add value translates anywhere.
Titles Don't Show Invisible Contributions
Your leadership in team morale, your ability to handle crises calmly, your mentorship of new colleagues — none of these appear on a job title, yet they're often the traits that make people indispensable.
Focusing on Titles Can Distract You
When people chase titles instead of growth, they can miss opportunities to learn and stretch in ways that ultimately build real influence. Your focus should be on becoming excellent at what you do — titles will eventually follow, but your skill and reputation are yours forever.
The Real Measure of Value
Your value is defined by your impact, adaptability, and the trust you earn, not the words under your name in an email signature. Instead of asking, "What's my title?" ask:
- What problems do I solve consistently?
- How do I make my team or company better?
- Would people fight to have me on their team if I left tomorrow?
BY OLAMIDE ADEDARA
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