Raad Ahmed
July 8, 2022

We Live In The Information Age. Why Are We Still Working Like It’s The Industrial Revolution?

The more money people make, the fewer kids they have.

Shocking statistics released earlier this year showed that the U.S. birth rate was

highest in families with household incomes under $10,000 per year.

That segment showed 66.44 births per 1,000 women. Households making

$200,000 per year or more? 43.92 births per 1,000 women.

Why? In part, because the traditional work model asks people to make an ugly

tradeoff: Give us all your freedom, and we’ll give you tons of money.

We’re in the Information Age, but we’re still living and working like

we’re in the Industrial Revolution.

It makes no sense that today’s employees are lonelier than ever. It makes no

sense that knowledge workers—specifically Biglaw, Big Accounting, Big

Consulting—continue to surrender all their free time for the sole reward of

a salary. The old model is broken…which means it’s ripe for disruption.

Here’s what’s wrong with the traditional work model:

  • Insane billable hours targets. In a Biglaw model, you’re expected to hit about

2,200 billable hours per year. According to a Yale Law chart, that means working

12-hour weekdays and 7-hour Saturdays every single week (accounting for time

spent at work on non-billable activities).



Translation: Surrender your freedom to the partners above you.

  • Men advancing when women have children. The median age of U.S. women

who give birth has jumped to 30. At the age of 30, people are making significant

career moves: advancing from the entry level to the management level, taking

bigger clients, turning potential into reputation .



Almost half of all women who have kids leave their jobs. Women disproportionately

face another tradeoff: Starting a family vs. keeping their careers intact.

  • Compensation below true value. NYC law firms recently increased starting

salaries to $215,000. Sounds like a lot—but assuming 2,200 billable hours per year

(which really means about 3,000 hours in the office), it works out to $97.72/hr at

best, $71.67/hr at worst.



A lot of people would be delighted to have those hourly rates. But for reference,

the average rate of a NYC plumber is $195/hr (with a lot more control over their time).

Knowledge workers should expect better—whether that means higher pay, more

freedom, or both.

The knowledge worker revolution should invert this model

It started with Lyft, Uber, and TaskRabbit.

Early labor marketplaces shifted some autonomy to the workers themselves.

You could hop in your car for an hour or a day depending on what you

were up for/how much money you needed. On sites like TaskRabbit and

Upwork, you could adjust your own rate according to current supply and

demand data.

Biglaw raises your salary once a year. If you’re humming along in a labor

marketplace, there’s no limit to the number of tweaks you can make.

The future can (and should) extend the same principles to knowledge jobs.

Knowledge workers possess elite education, training, and experience.

Logically, they should be the ones with the most control over their time

and income.

We’ve already seen startups (like mine) begin to facilitate this transition.

And the numbers bear it out: Of the 164.38 million workers in the U.S., at

least 41 million(about a quarter) are solopreneurs.

Whether 50 years or 100 years from now, we’re going to see radical shifts

in the way people work.

Knowledge workers will seize control of their time and income, get paid what

they’re worth, and live how they want. Free time will become an

assumed part of modern happiness—not a luxury after 10-12 years of

self-sacrifice. People—especially women—won’t have to choose between

starting a family and keeping a career, because they’ll be able to scale up

and back much more flexibly.

To quote Naval Ravikant: “I don’t care how rich you are…if somebody has to

tell you when to be at work, what to wear, and how to behave, you’re not

a free person.” Knowledge workers have never had more pathways to

professional freedom.