Player Value is the expected value in salary the player will contribute but is largely a function of VORP and minutes, so I'll be explaining VORP.
Overview of VORP
VORP is the sum of OVORP and DVORP. I only looked at players who played this past season (so no Derrick Rose), and I prior-informed one-year back. The idea is to combined actual production with sabermetrics to produce an all-encompasing assessment of a player. Here's a small sample:
Top 5 SGs by VORP O/D/T
1 James Harden 950% 1% 951%
2 Kobe Bryant 951% -31% 920%
3 Dwyane Wade 787% 56% 843%
4 Manu Ginobili 676% 95% 771%
5 Monta Ellis 522% 15% 537%
How is VORP different from existing stats like WARP or RAPM?
While similar to WARP, VORP is broken down into offense and defense, which I believe adds value, particularly for situational players like Steve Novak or Andris Biedrins. Unlike RAPM which has a similar goal, VORP utilizes actual production, rather than being driven purely by on/off. I believe this produces more accurate and intuitive results, and I've done some (cursory) analysis comparing the two. I'll link the comparison at the end of the post.
Explaining OVORP and DVORP
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offensive VORP (OVORP) is broken down into three sections - Scoring Ability, Shot Creation, and Team/Positional Adjustment.
Both volume and efficiency should come into play when talking about scoring, and so Scoring Ability is a function of per-minute scoring and TS% to get an overall sense of how good a scorer someone is. To simplify our team adjustment for spacing later, we then cheat a little and bake in a bonus for 3PT shooting, again volume and efficiency.
Scoring obviously isn't the only part of offense though - the ability to create for yourself and others without turning it over is a pretty vital piece. Shot Creation attempts to recreate this, by looking at a player's AST% in relation to his TOV% and USG.
Finally, Team Adjustment attempts to incorporate the remaining pieces of offense by looking at how a player's personal ORTG relates to both his team's overall ORTG as well as league average. This greatly rewards guys like Tyson Chandler, who are neither prolific scorers or good passers but who greatly enhances his team's offense simply by being on the floor, extending offensive possessions, and taking the right shots, while penalizing guys like Josh Smith who are better scorers and passers but whose offenses crater due to bad offensive tendencies.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Defensive VORP (DVORP) centers primarily around the relationship between a player's DRTG and his team's/the league average. Normalizing for team is important, because a guy like Jamal Crawford shouldn't get a free pass because his team is defensively good, nor should a guy like Andre Drummond get slammed because he plays on the Pistons. While many are not a fan of individual DRTG due to its derivation from boxscore stats, I believe when used in conjunction with team DRTG it's pretty valuable.
We then take this figure and adjust for STL%/BLK%, which DRTG captures, but is IMO insufficient when it comes to overall impact. Finally, we apply a positional weighting, under the premise that big man defense is more pivotal to team performance than wing defense.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Top 10 by VORP O/D/T
1 LeBron James 1510% 215% 1725%
2 Kevin Durant 1363% 142% 1505%
3 Tim Duncan 635% 679% 1314%
4 Chris Paul 1219% 78% 1297%
5 A. Drummond 463% 715% 1178%
6 Dwight Howard 530% 455% 984%
7 Stephen Curry 1016% -54% 962%
8 James Harden 950% 1% 951%
9 R.Westbrook 902% 31% 933%
10 Kobe Bryant 951% -31% 920%
Thoughts, comments, and pageviews obviously appreciated

Comparison between VORP and RAPM results
Full list of VORP/Player Value with actual calculations