Good Work vs. Great Work: The Power of Working Hard and Working Smart

Written by Orvin Kimbrough | May 28, 2026

As a leader in both banking and human services, I’ve gained valuable insights into the difference between doing good work and striving for greatness. While good work keeps businesses running smoothly and efficiently, great work is what takes us to the next level.

The Difference Between Good and Great Work

Good work is about execution, completing tasks, meeting expectations, and keeping things operational. But great work? Great work is about vision and transformation.

Great work involves:

  • Seeing beyond today, envisioning a future state and making small adjustments that save time and money.
  • Investing in new technology and people, not just to sustain, but to conquer new markets and innovate.
  • Solving problems before they happen, anticipating challenges, staying ahead of industry trends, and positioning for long-term success.

In today’s ever-changing business landscape, discipline in the present isn’t enough, we must intentionally carve out time to focus on the future. A great leader is both grounded in today’s reality and attuned to tomorrow’s possibilities. I heard someone recently say that leaders are really paid to deal with ambiguity, and there is often nothing more ambiguous than the future.

Working Hard vs. Working Smart: Why Both Matter

I believe that working hard is about character, showing up, being disciplined, and putting in the necessary effort. It is a necessary but insufficient condition for success. Hard work alone doesn’t guarantee greatness; it is the foundation on which greatness is built.

But working smart? That’s about strategy. It’s about knowing where to focus your energy for maximum impact.

Smart work is about:

  • Knowing who to pull into your network, because relationships create opportunities.
  • Harvesting time for yourself and your business, because positioning for the future isn’t a one-time event, it’s ongoing.
  • Thinking beyond the moment, every present decision should be made with an eye on the future.

This is true in leadership. This is true in business. This is especially true in banking.

Working Smart Starts with You. Growth Starts with You.

Great work and working smart don’t just happen on their own. Driving the business forward, investing in our teams, and positioning for the future only happen when we take ownership of our own growth. Before you can invest in a team, in a business, or in the future, you must first invest in yourself.

If we don’t take an interest in our own development, if we don’t intentionally refresh our skills, refine our brand, and reassess our positioning—then how can we expect to lead others to do the same?

Growth isn’t something that just happens. It’s a choice. It’s an investment we make in ourselves first, so we can pour into others. Too often, we focus on the external, what our teams need, what our business needs, what the market demands, without first asking, Am I evolving? Am I sharpening my edge? Because if we are stagnant, everything we touch will eventually become stagnant, too.

A business doesn’t move forward just because we want it to. It moves forward because we, as leaders, push it forward. We challenge ourselves. We level up our thinking. We stretch beyond the comfort of what we already know. That means setting aside time, not just for the work of the business, but for the work on ourselves.

And here’s the thing, this isn’t a one-time event. It’s not a workshop we attend or a course we take and then check off the list. It’s ongoing. It’s a continuous process of refinement, learning, and positioning. If we’re serious about working smart, then we have to be serious about keeping ourselves sharp.

Think about it like this, most people don’t realize that you don’t wait until you need a bank to build a relationship with a bank. Because by the time you need the bank, you’re likely already in a difficult spot.

Wait…Did you catch that? Stop…

The same applies to our growth. You don’t wait until a crisis to start working on yourself. By then, it’s a lot more complicated.

Building Banking Relationships Before You Need Them

Banking relationships are about access, leverage, and trust. The best-positioned individuals and businesses aren’t scrambling for financial support in a crisis—they’ve already established credibility, built connections, and cultivated financial foresight. They’ve worked smart by securing options before they’re in a position where options are limited.

That’s why working hard and working smart must go hand in hand, because effort alone won’t unlock doors. Strategy, foresight, and relationships will.

The People Factor: Investing in Growth

Great work doesn’t happen in isolation. It requires investing in people.

Our success as leaders is not solely based on our individual achievements, but on the strength and growth of our teams. By hiring and developing talented individuals, we build a workforce that can drive the organization toward greatness.

This means:

  • Recognizing potential in employees, and giving them room to grow.
  • Empowering people to lead, so the organization isn’t dependent on a few, but strengthened by many.
  • Passing down knowledge, assets, and networks, because leadership isn’t just about excelling; it’s about elevating others.

Final Thoughts: Striving for Greatness

Until next time, please remember this:

Good work keeps you in the game, but great work and smart work change the game.

Great work means:

  • Striving for improvement and self-development, because if you aren’t growing, neither is your business.
  • Anticipating future challenges and opportunities, thinking ahead, not just reacting.
  • Investing in technology, people, and networks, because growth isn’t accidental.

As a leader, it is not enough to focus solely on the present, you must have a clear vision for the future and take proactive steps toward achieving it. That is the difference between good work and great work, between working hard and working smart.

So let’s all strive for greatness, not just good work. Because our businesses, our people, and our future depend on it.