The Contribution Audit in Dollars

How to Value What You Actually Bring to Work: The Contribution Audit in Dollars

by | May 21, 2026 | 0 comments

Episode 246 | Watch on YouTube | Listen on Buzzsprout

The Problem: Your Value Is Invisible

Last week we walked through the Contribution Audit—writing down what you actually accomplished at work. But knowing what you did and knowing what it’s worth are two different things.

Most people go into compensation conversations with feelings. “I work hard.” “I deserve more.” That’s not a negotiation. That’s hope.

But what if you walked in with math instead?

This episode takes Marcus—a senior backend engineer making $125K a year—and puts a dollar value on every major contribution he made this year. The result? $275,000 in measurable value. After you subtract his cost to the company, he generates $118,750 in pure profit.

That’s the number that changes the conversation.

The Six Contributions (And What They’re Worth)

1. The Payment Processing Automation: $22,500/Year

What happened: Marcus noticed operations was spending 3-4 hours a day on manual payment reconciliation. He wrote a script to automate 80% of it. Now it takes 30 minutes.

The math:

  • Operations analyst cost: ~$50-60K/year = $30/hour
  • Time saved: 3 hours/day × 5 days/week × 50 weeks/year = $22,500/year in ongoing labor savings
  • Time to build: ~8 hours of Marcus’s work
  • ROI: $22,500 saved for $300 invested. The script keeps working next year and the year after.

The insight: Marcus didn’t think in dollars. He just saw a problem and fixed it. But the company absolutely thinks in dollars. Even if they didn’t tell him.

2. The Database Optimization: $48,000-60,000/Year

What happened: A core database query was running at 800ms instead of 80ms. Marcus found a missing index and fixed it in a couple hours. 10x faster.

The math:

  • In fintech, speed is conversion
  • Industry data: Every 100ms of latency costs e-commerce ~1% of sales
  • The app processes ~$500K/month in transaction volume
  • 1% improvement = ~$5,000/month in prevented churn and failed transactions
  • Annual impact: $48,000-60,000 from fixing one query in a few hours

The insight: Customers never saw a new feature. But they experienced a faster, more reliable app. That matters.

3. The Compliance Bug Catch: $125,000-200,000 Prevented

What happened: During code review, Marcus spotted a subtle compliance logging issue. It wasn’t right. If regulators found it during an audit, it could have been expensive.

He escalated it before deployment. Crisis averted. No one knows how close they came.

The math:

  • Regulatory fines for financial services: $75,000-150,000 depending on infraction
  • Plus: Legal fees and remediation work: ~$50,000
  • Total prevented loss: $125,000-200,000 from a 15-minute code review

The insight: This is the hardest number to put on a resume. But you know it. The company knows it. When you’re negotiating, that knowledge changes how you show up.

4. Junior Engineer Onboarding: $15,000

What happened: The company hired a junior backend engineer. Without Marcus’s mentoring—code reviews, pair programming, teaching—the junior would have taken 3-4 months to be productive. With Marcus’s help, it was 6-8 weeks. One month faster.

The math:

  • Junior engineer cost: ~$80K/year = $40/hour
  • One month of productivity: ~160 hours = $6,400
  • Prevented: 40-50 hours of senior engineering time to do the onboarding = $2,600 (at $65/hour)
  • Total value: $9,000 in accelerated productivity + $6,400 in prevented onboarding labor = ~$15,000

The insight: This gets skipped a lot because it doesn’t feel like a “contribution.” It does. You made someone else more valuable faster.

5. Incident Response: $63,000 Prevented

What happened: Production outage. Customers can’t process transactions. Marcus is on-call. He diagnoses the problem in 10 minutes and coordinates the fix. Service back up in 45 minutes instead of a potential 2-3 hours.

The math:

  • Platform transaction volume: ~$100K/hour = ~$1,700/minute
  • Potential downtime: 2-3 hours (120-180 minutes) = $204,000-306,000 in transaction loss
  • Actual downtime: 45 minutes = $76,500 in transaction loss
  • Loss prevented: ~$63,000 from fast diagnosis and coordination

The insight: Marcus doesn’t list this on his resume. But when he walks into a negotiation, he knows: He prevented a six-figure problem.

6. Documentation Improvement: $1,500/Year

What happened: Deployment documentation was scattered across five places and confusing. Marcus consolidated it into one source of truth, added troubleshooting steps. Reduced deployment questions by ~80%.

Saved him from roughly 10-15 “How do I deploy?” interruptions this year.

The math:

  • Cost of interruption: 30 minutes of senior engineering time per question = $32.50 per interruption
  • 15 interruptions × $32.50 = $487.50
  • But context-switching is expensive: Each interruption costs more in lost focus
  • Conservative annual value: ~$1,500 in reclaimed productivity and reduced distractions

The insight: Don’t skip the small stuff. It doesn’t sound impressive, but it compounds. And it shows you think about impact at every level.

The Formula That Changes Everything

Marcus’s contributions total: $275,000 to $362,000

Using the conservative number:

myRevenue (what he delivered)         $275,000

myCost (salary + benefits: $125K × 1.25)     $156,250

myProfit (value after cost)      $118,750

Marcus makes $125,000 a year. But he generates $118,750 in annual profit for the company—after they pay him. That’s not including his salary. That’s pure profit.

He’s not an expense. He’s a business.

What Most People Get Wrong

Most people negotiate salary based on:

  1. Feelings — “I work hard, I deserve more”
  2. Market rates — “Engineers like me make X”

Both are weak. You get a 3% raise because you’re following the script everyone else follows.

Marcus has a different conversation: “Here’s what I delivered. Here’s what it cost to replace. Here’s where I want to take my career.” That’s data, not hope.

The Action Steps: From Audit to Agreement

Step 1: Share Your Audit With Your Customer (Your Company)

You’ve got the numbers. But the company doesn’t know them yet. You can’t expect them to see it.

Show them. Not bragging. Just facts: “Here’s what I delivered. Here’s what it cost to replace. Here’s what it generated.”

Then ask: “What parts of this had the most impact?” The company will tell you. They know where it mattered.

Step 2: Look at What Had Impact—Can You Do More?

Marcus’s two biggest wins: database optimization and payment processing automation. Together: $70,000-80,000/year.

Next question: What other queries are slow? What other manual processes are eating hours? What other compliance risks are hiding?

That becomes your focus. Not random stuff. The stuff that actually generates value.

Step 3: Build a Weekly Improvement Model

Schedule 30 minutes every week. Review your contribution list. Look at what’s coming. Ask: “What simple step can I add to create value?”

One small thing per week. A script. A process. A doc. A conversation that prevents a problem.

Small things compound. One thing per week = 52 things per year. Most have a dollar value.

The Benchmark: 4x Your Salary

Here’s the real target: Get your myProfit to 4x your salary.

For Marcus:

  • Salary: $125,000
  • 4x target: $500,000 in annual profit
  • Current profit: $118,750
  • Gap to close: $380,000

That’s not impossible. That’s one or two more database optimizations. That’s catching two or three more compliance issues before they blow up. That’s doing more of what works.

Once myProfit hits 4x your salary, you have the conversation.

Because you’re not asking for a raise anymore. You’re asking the company to adjust their math. You’ve already proven the number.

The Real Conversation

You don’t negotiate salary based on feelings or market rates. You negotiate based on what you’re actually worth to the organization.

And the only way to know that is to measure it.

This week:

  1. Do your audit. Put numbers on it. Even rough numbers.
  2. Share it with your manager or company leadership
  3. See what lands
  4. Schedule weekly 30-minute blocks to build your improvement model
  5. Track your contributions going forward

Next week: How to defend that number and what actually happens when you have the conversation.



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Dale Callahan

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