Unexpected Startup Lesson #1: Quitting the day job

10 May
2010

This post is the first of a series on  “unexpected lessons” learned through my experience as co-founder and CEO of Snapvine, a venture-backed mobile social networking service founded in 2005 and acquired by WhitePages in June of 2008.

In the years just prior to starting Snapvine, I racked up 2 years of debt attending the MIT Sloan School of Management.  School was great, but the costs were hefty:  tuition, travel, the expense of selling a house and moving, the opportunity cost of going without salary for 2 years, the high cost of living in Boston and stress associated with my wife changing jobs twice to follow along.

Thus, 6 months after graduation when I was contemplating leaving my job, the risks felt enormous.  My inner voice was asking:

  • What if we go 12 months without pay only to fail to prove out the concept?
  • What if we DO prove out the concept but fail to raise money?
  • What if we DO raise money, but fail to deliver on the vision?
  • What if we DO raise money AND deliver on the vision, but the business model doesn’t pan out?*
  • What if we fail and my wife doesn’t let me do startups anymore?**
  • What if my MBA classmates get 3 years into a great career while I spend 3 years for ZERO and then I have to crawl back to the corporate world begging for a job, while they are laughing at me?***

Chewing on these types of questions was totally unproductive and made me feel shitty.   I’ve come to realize that doing startups is mostly an irrational choice. Just effing do it.

Skydiving May 09, Chris is Superman!
Creative Commons License photo credit: divemasterking2000

After I quit my job, incredible people jumped into my world to help.  Before the company even had a name, people like Hadi Partovi, Thomas Reardon, Kirsten Morbeck, Rob Williams, Rich Miner, Jeremiah Robison, Curtis Vredenburg and many others helped shape the product roadmap, recruit early employees, craft a pitch deck and introduce key investors.

The unexpected lesson:  about 4 to 5 months after quitting my job I was already ROI positive in terms of networking, learning and satisfaction.

In just a few months I felt completely confident that if the startup went splat on someone’s windshield, I’d be able to find a more interesting and higher paying job that I had before.  Also, compared to an MBA, doing a startup felt like an amazing deal:  On one hand, an MBA (tuition alone) might run about $85,000 whereas the startup has cost me only $5,000.  The salary was the same ($0) but the learning and networking with the startup was much, much greater than with the MBA.

In retrospect, jumping into the startup led to some immediate and unexpected benefits that, at least for me, far outweighed the forgone salary of my previous job and positioned me better for my future.  Quitting turned out to be a zero risk move.

* Interestingly, this is probably the closest to what actually happened, and things turned out fine
** Even though we’d already had the discussion “if I do 55 startups in a row and they all fail, is that okay?”  Answer: “yes”
*** I’m pretty sure they wouldn’t laugh at me if I ever failed, but I’m hopeful they’d hire me

Like this post? Please click retweet »

Related posts:

  1. Unexpected Startup Lesson #2: Channel your Inner VC to Understand Startup Valuations
  2. Unexpected Startup Lesson #3: Why You Can’t Read a VC
  3. Add logs, pour fuel (VC money), light match (beta release day)
  4. Crucial first hire: the "do-it-all office admin"
  5. Competition. Am I screwed?
  • "In retrospect, jumping into the startup led to some immediate and unexpected benefits that, at least for me, far outweighed the forgone salary of my previous job and positioned me better for my future. Quitting turned out to be a zero risk move."

    Definitely true. It would have been riskier if we shelved our dreams and kept treading through the "what if" questions all these years. That itself, is very costly.
  • Ben
    Great post Joe, couldn't agree more. I've been giving some similar advice to a couple friends who are hesitant about jumping from a certain big tech company. Found the exact same thing out in the last few months...the decision keeps feeling less and less risky as time goes on.
  • Yeah, I think this is why the advice of "wait until you have experience and are totally prepared" is not wise. That's such a risk-averse strategy. The longer one waits, the harder it gets to actually make the leap. I have a lot of friends by now that would make great entrepreneurs but over time have grown accustomed to a certain lifestyle and have very real payments, mortgages and mouths to feed that they can't afford the financial cost of striking out. The very real non-financial experiential upside comes at a short-term financial cost and that is easier to do when people are not as far into their careers...and have less experience.
  • > On one hand, an MBA (tuition alone) might run about $85,000 whereas the startup has cost me only $5,000. The salary was the same ($0) but the learning and networking with the startup was much, much greater than with the MBA.

    Isn't there a causal relationship between these things? For example, your networking success could be due to your Sloan MBA, and your startup might have only cost you $5,000 because you had already invested $85,000+ into yourself. Successful startup founders benefit enormously from their brand name MBA (or prior work experience at a brand name company) in terms of being able to attract investors, hire talent, network, and get attention from the press.

    I think that what I'm really trying to say is this: How many successful startups have you come across that were founded by ex-Nobodies? I think the MBA vs. startup debate is pretty dumb. If you get an MBA at any top school, it's a great stepping stone/advantage because people take you more seriously (just like landing a job at Google or Facebook).
  • I think there is a lot of truth to what you say. Also, a correlation effect: to succeed in either of these, one needs a high degree of tenacity, talent and intelligence...and then there are those like me who rely on just plain working hard
  • That is very true, and I didn't mean to take anything away from you. I just think we're sold a lot of BS that discounts the importance of optimizing those things (tenacity, talent, intelligence, and hard work) toward getting that job at Google or getting into that top MBA program. :)
  • Great post. I especially like the MBA vs. startup viewpoint. It's so true. However, in practice people self-select by risk-tolerance. If you jump into startup-land like you describe, you just self-selected and now are part of a small group of risk-takers. If you keep obsessing about what-ifs, just go get your MBA, it's the safe way to go.
  • Indeed. This seems to be a classic trade-off. Another related one is one's age and earning potential. On one hand, when you're young you can afford to take more risk, however you're less experienced and thus less equipped to succeed vs. when you're older and you have all kinds of financial obligations and expectations. I guess I have a topic for a future blog post :)
  • Yeah, I would love to do it again. I just closed down my first startup, so I'm going to stay in corporate world for a while now. It's not too bad when you're are sick and tired of the stress and work in a startup.

    You're lucky to have wife who supports both your move to study and your start ups.
  • Yeah, having a supportive spouse is a major advantage
  • I really, really enjoyed your comment, "I’ve come to realize that doing startups is mostly an irrational choice. Just effing do it."

    That is precisely my experience when it came to quitting the day job. I definitely struggled mightily with that decision but looking back I was a fool to wait as long as I did.
  • Thanks, Eric. Clearly if you're moving to Rwanda to start a company you've got the irrational gene covered in spades!
  • Tom
    ** Even though we’d already had the discussion “if I do 55 startups in a row and they all fail, is that okay?” Answer: “yes”

    You must have a very understanding wife - you're a lucky man! :)
  • Yeah, I'm very fortunate :)
blog comments powered by Disqus
top