Sometimes you don’t deserve to get paid
This will hurt some of you. But it’s true. There was a time when I worked for clients, and they didn’t like my work. I spent hours.I tried hard.I thought I did my best. Still, they weren’t happy. And you know what I said? “Give me feedback.”Or“It’s fine, you don’t have to pay.” Why? Because effort is not the same as value. Just because you worked hard doesn’t mean you delivered what was needed. That mindset changed me. It made me: - improve faster - take responsibility - stop blaming clients And something interesting happened. Clients trusted me more. Because they didn’t feel fear working with me. They knew: If something goes wrong, I won’t fight. I’ll fix it. Now let me tell you the other side. Recently, I had to pay someone who sent work 2 days late. I had to redo it myself. Still, he kept pushing for payment. His logic was: “I worked hard.” Yes, ethically, you worked. But professionally, you failed. Hard work = effort. Payment = delivered result. If you don’t learn to step back and say, “Maybe I didn’t deserve this one,” You will never build long-term success. Short-term ego feels good. Long-term responsibility builds reputation. The best professionals ask: “Did I actually deliver what was promised?” If the answer is no, fix it first. Money comes after value. Always.