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Why You Can’t Make Money—Because You’re Selling Time, Not Value

A Discovery That Changed My Wealth Perspective

At the end of last year, I did some calculations and scared myself. I worked about 2,500 hours that year, and my average hourly rate was only $11. That number made me deeply反思.

$11 hourly—at a coffee shop in a first-tier city, I’d earn more than that. And I’m supposedly a “knowledge worker”—how did I end up like this?

Later I understood—I was selling time, not value. These two concepts seem similar, but they’re completely different.

The Dilemma of Time-Sellers

Time-sellers have typical characteristics:

  • Paid by the hour: You work one hour, you get paid for one hour; don’t work, don’t get paid
  • Time sold once: The same time can’t be reused
  • Income has a ceiling: Only 24 hours in a day—however hard you try, you can only earn so much
  • Can’t scale: Want to earn more? Only by working more hours

Looking back at my career, I was always selling time. Getting paid per project for coding, per hour for consulting—fundamentally selling time.

The Mindset of Value-Sellers

Value-sellers are completely different. Their logic:

  • Sell time multiple times: Write a book, create a course, build software
  • Marginal cost approaches zero: High upfront investment, but almost no additional cost later
  • Income has no ceiling: One product can be sold to countless people
  • Time is free: No longer enslaved by time

Examples:

  • Writing a book: Takes a year to write, but earns you money every year after
  • Creating a course: Spends 3 months building a course, then can sell it infinitely
  • Developing software: Build an app—while people use it, it earns you money
  • Content creation: Start a YouTube channel—hard at first, then earns while you sleep

How to Transition from “Selling Time” to “Selling Value”?

Step 1: Identify Your Time-Selling Model

Ask yourself:

  • Is my income calculated by time?
  • Do I have income when I’m not working?
  • Do clients buy my time or my results?

If all are “yes,” then you’re a time-seller right now.

Step 2: Find Skills You Can “Productize”

What are you good at? Can you turn what you’re good at into a product?

For example:

  • You know coding → Can build software or templates
  • You know writing → Can write books or writing courses
  • You know marketing → Can create marketing courses or consulting
  • You know design → Can make design templates or asset packs

Step 3: Gradual Transition from Service to Product

Don’t try to transform overnight. My suggestion:

  1. Phase 1 (0-6 months): Use services for cash flow while observing what clients ask most
  2. Phase 2 (6-12 months): Turn common client needs into small products (templates, checklists, ebooks)
  3. Phase 3 (12+ months): Develop complete courses or software, gradually reduce service proportion

My Personal Transformation Story

How did I transform?

First, I started recording what clients asked most. I discovered 80% of questions were similar. So I compiled answers into a detailed guide document and sold it to new clients. That was my first “product.”

Then I expanded that guide into an online course. Although the production was hard, after completion, I could sell the same time to countless people.

Now my income is roughly: 30% from services, 70% from products. Although I still do services, it’s no longer my only income source.

Common Misconceptions About “Productizing”

Myth 1: Need Many Followers to Sell Products

Wrong. My first product had only 50 clients, but I still made money. Products don’t need to be sold to everyone—only to people who need them.

Myth 2: Making Products Is Hard

Products can start small. A PDF guide, a template—these are products. You don’t need to make a complete course from the start.

Myth 3: Only Experts Can Make Products

What’s an expert? If you’re better than most people at something, you can teach others. Many successful course creators aren’t the “most skilled” people—they’re the “best teachers.”

Action Checklist

If you want to transform, start doing these from today:

  1. Record client questions: Next time you serve a client, record every question they ask
  2. Calculate your hourly rate: Figure out your current hourly rate and how to increase it
  3. List your skills: Which skills can be packaged into products?
  4. Start with a small product: Make a simple template or guide to test the market

Final Thoughts

Selling time isn’t bad—it’s a good starting point for making money. But if you truly want financial freedom, you need to learn to sell value, not time.

This is a harder path, but it’s also a path to freedom.

I’m Hardy, an entrepreneur in transition. Follow me to explore freer ways of making money.