When I was in my first few years of college, I started seeing the world differently. I was learning about systems, incentives, statistics, all at increasingly advanced levels.
I remember sitting in a classroom, listening to a lecture on economic structures, when something clicked. If the system worked for everyone, why did it feel like it was working against me? That thought lingered. And the more I learned, the more I kept coming back to the same question:
Who benefits from my condition?
At that time, my condition was poverty. Not just a temporary struggle, not just being “broke for a season.” It was my generational reality, until it wasn’t. And when I looked at it through a systems-thinking lens, I started asking something deeper:
Who is incentivized for me to stay poor?
Because make no mistake, there are always incentives.
And when I started looking at life this way, I saw the bigger picture. The statistical probability of staying poor? It wasn’t in my favor. But beyond the statistics, I needed to know: Who profits from me staying right where I am?
Who Benefits? Who Pays?
That same thinking still guides me today.
- Who benefits when I’m sick? Who benefits when I’m healthy?
- I do. But beyond me, who else?
- Who benefits when I’m broke? Who benefits when I build wealth?
Here’s the hard truth: Wherever you are in life, someone benefits from it. And someone doesn’t.
So the real question is: Are you aligned with those who benefit from where you are? And if they’re benefiting, are you? Is there reciprocity, or are you just part of someone else’s system?
Because if someone else is profiting off of you, then you should be, too.
Did you catch that?
The Power of Asking: Who’s Getting Paid?
One of the best ways to understand your reality is to follow the money.
When I look at a system, I ask: Who is getting paid? And how?
Take healthcare, for example.
- Do doctors get paid more when they keep you healthy or when you keep coming back?
- Do hospitals profit from wellness, or from sickness?
Most health financing rewards providers based on the volume of sick people and the conditions they treat. The system is set up to pay for sickness, not health.
And the same dynamic exists in financial services.
- Banks don’t chase after the “financially sick” because there’s no profit in it. Regulations cap what banks can charge, so struggling families often end up in the ER of payday lenders, institutions that don’t just charge interest; they extract organs for payback.
That’s how the system works. And if you don’t see it, you’re just a part of it.
Who’s Winning?
Here’s my point: Business is business, even healthcare, as it stands today, is just that, a business. Where the incentives go, the service and results follow.
So ask yourself: Are the incentives working for you or against you?
And if they’re working against you, what are you going to do about it?
Don’t just accept the system as it is, learn how to play the game.
Start by:
- Questioning the incentives in your own life. Who benefits from your financial habits, healthcare choices, or career moves?
- Aligning yourself with those who benefit from your success. Are you connected to people and institutions that actually want you to thrive?
- Building wealth, health, and power on your own terms. Because if you don’t, someone else will do it at your expense.
The system isn’t changing anytime soon. But you can change how you move within it.
#FollowTheMoney #FinancialTruths #SystemsThinking #WealthPerspective #Incentives
In banking, proximity matters, but accessibility is about more than location.
— Orv Kimbrough
Hi, I’m Orvin Kimbrough, volunteer, board director, chairman, and CEO. I help professionals move from feeling stuck to being strengthened by reshaping how they think, lead, and live. My work focuses on confidence, leadership, and influence through mindset shifts, expanded networks, and bold, values-aligned action. My perspective is rooted in lived experience, from growing up in foster care to leading complex institutions as a CEO and shaped by faith, resilience, and a deep belief in human potential.
Books for Every Stage
A memoir often described as a leadership guide wrapped in an honest, relatable story of perseverance, healing, and growth. It explores how pain can be reframed into purpose and how ordinary people build meaningful lives through courage and clarity.
Written for teens and young adults, this book encourages confidence, resilience, and identity formation during the years when self-belief is being shaped.
A children’s book that gently introduces big ideas like belonging, courage, and hope, helping young readers see themselves as more than their circumstances
INTRODUCING: The Thriver’s Path™
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