You Don’t Have a Discipline Problem. You Have a Placement Problem.

A few years ago I noticed a confusing pattern.
Two people with similar skills would start at roughly the same level.
Same education. Same ambition. Same number of hours worked.
Three years later, one is promoted twice, trusted with decisions, and clearly accelerating.
The other is exhausted.
No major mistake. No lack of intelligence. No obvious laziness.
Just… stuck.
For a long time I assumed the difference was discipline.
Then I read a short note in a newsletter by James Clear where he shared three simple ideas:
“Environment can multiply (or divide) your effort.
That line explained more careers than any productivity book I’ve ever read.
Because most people are trying to fix their life using effort, when the real variable is environment.
The Productivity Myth
Modern advice is built around personal optimization:
wake up earlier build habits be consistent work harder stay disciplined
None of these are wrong.
They’re just incomplete.
Effort is not a direct path to success. Effort is an amplified signal.
The environment determines whether it becomes progress or frustration.
Hard work inside a supportive system compounds.
Hard work inside a misaligned system evaporates.
This is why some jobs energize you and others drain you even when the tasks are similar.
Selection: The Decision That Shapes Everything
People believe their life is determined by daily actions.
It isn’t.
It is determined by a handful of major choices:
the industry you enter
the company you join
the people you collaborate with
the place you live
the type of problems you decide to solve
These decisions quietly decide your future workload, opportunities, and growth rate.
Consider a data analyst.
In one company:
leaders depend on data
reports influence revenue
questions are encouraged
In another:
decisions are already made
reports are for presentation slides
analysis changes nothing
The same analyst behaves differently in each environment.
In the first, curiosity grows. In the second, motivation dies.
Not because the analyst changed — because the soil changed.
Most people don’t suffer from low discipline.
They suffer from poor placement.
They chose an environment where the behaviors they want to practice are not rewarded.
And no amount of personal productivity can permanently overcome structural misalignment.
You can run fast on a treadmill. You still won’t move forward.
Why We Misdiagnose the Problem
When progress stalls, we blame ourselves.
“I need to be more focused.” “I need better habits.” “I need motivation.”
But often the system is the issue.
Humans naturally adapt to incentives.
If your workplace ignores initiative, you stop initiating. If your ideas are unused, you stop thinking deeply. If growth is invisible, effort feels pointless.
You are not always unmotivated.
Sometimes you are unreinforced.
Cultivation: The Part People Forget
The opposite mistake also happens.
Someone finally finds a good opportunity and assumes success will now be automatic.
It won’t.
Good environments create leverage, but only if maintained.
Relationships deteriorate without communication. Careers stagnate without learning. Projects decay without iteration.
This is the “tend the weeds” part.
Every system accumulates friction: misunderstandings, skill gaps, neglected feedback, outdated processes.
Left alone, even a great environment slowly becomes a bad one.
Opportunity requires maintenance.
The Real Meaning of Hard Work
Hard work is not universally valuable.
It becomes powerful only after alignment.
Effort before selection is guessing. Effort after selection is compounding.
Many people are incredibly hardworking, but they are applying energy in places that cannot return proportional results.
They are optimizing inside the wrong system.
And this creates the most dangerous career trap:
You feel busy, but not effective. You feel tired, but not progressing.
A Better Question
Instead of asking:
“How can I work harder?”
Ask:
“Does this environment reward the person I am trying to become?”
Because environments have personalities.
Some reward reliability. Some reward creativity. Some reward politics. Some reward ownership.
When your behavior matches the environment’s reward structure, growth becomes natural.
When it doesn’t, every day feels like resistance.
The Practical Framework
Whenever you evaluate a major life decision, use two steps:
1) Selection Choose environments where the behaviors you value are encouraged and visible results are possible.
2) Cultivation After choosing, invest attention. Improve skills. Communicate. Adjust. Maintain.
Selection determines direction. Cultivation determines speed.
My Final Thought
Effort is not the main driver of progress.
Placement is.
A seed cannot negotiate with concrete. It needs soil.
So before increasing discipline, changing routines, or pushing harder, pause and evaluate something more important:
Not how hard you are working.
But where your effort lives.
Because the right environment doesn’t just reward effort —
It multiplies it.

Written by
Nelson Izah
I write about geology, software engineering, and the spaces where they intersect. When I'm not writing or building, you can find me exploring the outdoors or reading a good book.
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