TL;DR
Most people treat generosity like luck. In reality, it behaves like a compounding system, similar to a generosity algorithm. In this week’s Monday Liberation, I share a systems-thinking framework for making goodwill scale in your career or business.
The Hidden Algorithm
We optimize code, performance, and profits. We rarely optimize goodwill.
After tracking this pattern across more than 200 professionals, one thing is clear: people who consistently share knowledge, make useful introductions, and contribute beyond their job rarely struggle for opportunities.
Systems Thinking Applied To People
Small, consistent deposits of goodwill create exponential returns.
When you share a solution or connect two people, you expand a network that eventually routes value back to you. It looks random from the outside. It is compounding from the inside.
The Three Systematic Bets
- The Knowledge Bet: share what you learn right away. Write the post, document the steps, answer the question.
- The Connection Bet: make one thoughtful introduction each week. Become a router of value.
- The Contribution Bet: add value outside your immediate scope. Open source, internal guilds, community mentorship.
Try The One-Month Measurement
For 30 days, log each time you help without expecting return. Track time spent and who benefited.
In a second column, log the “out of nowhere” replies, referrals, and invitations.
The correlation will surprise you.
Read The Full Issue
Get the complete framework with examples in this week’s Monday Liberation:
👉 Read “The Generosity Algorithm” on Substack: https://theworkplacegenie.substack.com/
🎁 Free Tool: The Generosity Audit
Want to see whether your career or business runs on extraction or expansion?
Grab the Generosity Audit Worksheet. It is a 3-minute reflection to help you:
- Track where you invest in others
- Identify underused relationship equity
- Design habits that make generosity systematic
Related: The Liberation Paradox: Why Success Is Making Entrepreneurs Miserable
FAQ
Q: What is the Generosity Algorithm?
A: A systems-thinking approach to career growth that treats goodwill like a compounding asset through knowledge sharing, connections, and contribution.
Q: How do I measure if generosity works?
A: Track unscored help you provide for 30 days and compare it to “unexpected” opportunities that arrive. The pattern becomes obvious.

Written by Your Genie – career freedom coach, cubicle escape artist, and chronic coffee re-heater.
