Everybody Has to Know the Value They Bring

Written by Orvin Kimbrough | May 18, 2026

I’ll never forget the time a board member leaned back in his chair and said, “This is a lot.”

He was right. My agenda was overflowing with detail, every task, every line of the plan. I thought I was proving my worth. Instead, I was burying my value under noise.

Everybody Has to Know the Value They Bring

That’s when I realized: everybody has to know the value they bring, and how they bring it. Here’s the catch, your value doesn’t look the same at every level.

Think of it this way:

  • Detail belongs with your team. At the department level, your value is clarity, helping people understand the moving parts and how their work connects to the goal. When I first started at the bank, I wanted to see every workplan in detail. The problem? Those workplans often looked like entire job descriptions instead of the 1–3 strategic priorities I should be focused on. At one point, that level of detail served me. But now, I coach leaders: Have it available in case I ask, but only put in front of me the strategic.”
  • Strategy belongs with your peers. At the executive level, your value is connection, linking your work to the broader momentum of the organization. This is especially important when teams are just forming. The natural pull is to focus inward, on your own function. But real leadership is outward, it’s about seeing across the business and unlocking value that only comes through collaboration.
  • Alignment belongs with your board, or whoever you report to. At the highest level, your value is altitude, distilling the big picture and showing how everything ties back to mission and results. Not everyone reports to a board, but everyone answers to someone: a boss, a senior team, or a client. Whoever it is, they don’t need every detail, they need confidence that the work is aligned and on track.

When you miss this, it shows. Overload decision-makers with detail, and you look unprepared. Bring only strategy to your team, and you leave them lost. Bury people in the wrong kind of information, and they don’t just tune out, they question whether you really understand the moment.

But when you show up at the right altitude, everything changes. You create clarity. You build trust. You move people forward.

And this isn’t just for CEOs. Whether you’re leading a project, managing a team, or running an entire company, the principle is the same—your voice only carries weight if it matches the room you’re speaking to.

If you’re new, this skill will get you noticed. If you’re mid-level, it will set you apart. If you’re senior, it will determine how much influence you really have.

So here’s my challenge: before your next meeting, ask yourself, what level am I speaking to? Then strip away anything that doesn’t serve that level. Watch how much sharper and more influential your voice becomes.

Because leadership isn’t just about execution, it’s about translation. And leaders who master this don’t just run meetings, they shape momentum, build trust, and leave a lasting mark.