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Home » Why Employees Struggle To Explain What They Do At Work

Why Employees Struggle To Explain What They Do At Work

By News RoomMay 10, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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Why Employees Struggle To Explain What They Do At Work
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When you meet someone new, one of the first questions that comes up is simple: what do you do? It sounds like small talk, yet it shares more about you than most people realize. Over the years, I have interviewed experts whose primary focus was helping people craft a clear elevator pitch so they could answer that question with confidence and in just a few seconds. In the past, you could answer quickly with a title, a company, or a role, and people immediately understood where you fit. That answer signaled your experience, value, and success. What feels different now is how many employees hesitate before answering, and why that quick, confident response has become harder to deliver across nearly every industry. You may pause, add qualifiers, or give a longer explanation than you used to, and that hesitation reflects a deeper change in how you see yourself and how you think about your work.

Why Employees Are Losing A Clear Way To Define Themselves

For a long time, you relied on work to create structure. You entered a field, built experience, and moved forward through recognizable stages that made progress easy to understand. Promotions, titles, and responsibilities gave you a clear sense of direction and helped you explain both what you did and where you stood. When you were asked what you did, the answer felt complete because it connected your daily work to a larger sense of identity.

That clarity is harder to find now. You often contribute in multiple ways at once, moving across teams, working on projects that shift quickly, and using tools that handle parts of tasks that once required deep experience. A single title does not always capture what you actually do, and when the work becomes less defined, the answer to that simple question becomes less clear. You may start to question which part of your work matters most and which description represents you best, and that uncertainty impacts your identity in a way that goes beyond your job responsibilities.

Why Employees Have Less Clarity About Their Value

Another reason you may struggle to explain what you do is that work no longer signals your value as clearly as it once did. In the past, you could rely on titles and responsibilities that showed how far you had progressed and how others should interpret your contributions. You knew where you stood, and others knew how to evaluate you.

Today, those signals are less consistent. Teams are flatter, work is shared, and tools assist with tasks that once required years of experience. You can produce similar results to others even when your background is very different, which makes it harder to distinguish your effort, ownership, and contribution. When the value you provide becomes harder to see, you may feel less certain about how you are perceived, and that uncertainty can make you feel the need to explain or justify what you do instead of simply stating it.

Why Employees Are Managing Multiple Roles Instead Of One Identity

You are likely no longer defined by one role. You may manage projects, mentor others, contribute ideas, and collaborate across functions while also learning new skills and supporting efforts outside of your formal responsibilities. This broader experience can be positive, yet it also makes it harder to describe what you do in a simple way that feels accurate.

When you are asked what you do, there is no single answer that captures everything. Choosing one part can feel incomplete, while sharing everything can feel excessive, and that tension often leads to hesitation. You may start with one answer and then add more detail, or adjust your response depending on who is asking, which turns a simple question into a more complicated explanation than it used to be.

This change can influence how you feel about your work. When your sense of identity feels unclear, you may question whether you are contributing enough or whether your role still matters in the same way. That uncertainty creates pressure that goes beyond completing tasks because you begin thinking about how your work is interpreted by others.

You may spend more time trying to demonstrate your value, refine how you present your work, or explain your role in ways that feel convincing, and that effort adds strain over time. Your confidence can also take a hit when you cannot easily describe what you do, even when you are performing well. Even high performers experience this when roles evolve faster than they can define them, which leaves them feeling less certain about how to explain their place in the organization.

How Employees Can Explain Their Work More Clearly

You do not need a perfect title to answer this question well. It helps to shift the focus from your role to your contribution and describing the problems you help solve rather than the label attached to your position. When you explain the impact of your work, people understand your value more quickly without needing a detailed breakdown of your job responsibilities.

You might have said in the past, “I’m a marketing manager at a software company.” That worked because it gave people a quick reference point. Today, that same answer may not reflect what you actually do. You might be leading campaigns, analyzing data, collaborating across teams, and using tools to create content faster than ever. A clearer way to describe it could be, “I help companies understand what their customers respond to and turn that into campaigns that perform.” That kind of answer reflects your contribution instead of your title.

I found myself changing how I answer that question as well. I used to say I was a keynote speaker who focused on curiosity. It was easy, but it never really captured what I actually do. Now I explain it more in terms of behavior and results, like helping leaders understand why people hold back and what that means for performance and results. It is not as quick, but it feels more accurate.

You can also simplify your answer by choosing one or two areas that represent what you do most often or what you care about most. That approach keeps your response clear and easier to share while still reflecting meaningful work. Paying attention to what people consistently come to you for also helps you identify where you add the most value, and that insight often leads to a stronger and more natural way to describe what you do.

Why Employees Need A Better Way To Answer What They Do

If you find yourself hesitating when someone asks what you do, you are not alone. Think about the problems you solve, the decisions you influence, and the way you help others progress. That is what people are really trying to understand anyway. When employees answer that way, it feels more natural, it sounds more like them, and it takes the pressure off trying to come up with the perfect label. It also gives you a clearer way to talk about your work without overthinking it.

career clarity elevator pitch employee value Employees job identity job roles professional identity work communication workplace roles Workplace Trends
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