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Would you leave a 6 figure job to start a company?
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12 points
by mindsetlabs
5736 days ago
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I've seen some very good articles and interviews on this topic, one recently by a Y Combinator alumni Jessica Mah http://jessicamah.com/blog/?p=1181&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+jessicamah/nksB+(Jessica+Mah+Meets+World) would you? |
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If you are in a dilema, go ahead ad do it. The real question if, if you are in your 20s or 30s, and don't have a mortgage/kids or a green card application going on, why are you working on a big corp?
1. Save money, have at least one year to two years of savings.
2. Leave your job in good terms. Tell your manager and co-workers "I taking a break from corporate world this year, doing some traveling, and some little project. I hope I will see you guys again in the future, and would love to work again."
3. Start your startup.
4. In one year, here are your options:
In one year, you will learn a lot more, and be a lot more marketable to other companies, (if you have something decent to show). The only risk your are taking is 30-40k (depending on how low your living expenses are), + whatever your are missing as a salary. Keep in mind, that if you can sawllow a lot of risk, you should totally do it. Once you get married with kids, it will be really really hard to do it (almost impossible).My point is: if you are 1) really good at building products from scratch. 2) You can take risks/have a low risk profile 3) Have at least 40-60k saved. Why in the heck are you NOT trying to start something, or join something. Big corp job will always be there (if you are good, off course).
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Ps1. Do quit a job, and build another stupid niche thing (you see many 'startups' that are just building a feature, and not a bussines). You can use the time at your company to test the market, verify your product-idea (or even build a prototype), before quitting.
PS2. If you don't have at least 50-70k savings after 5 years of working as an engineer, you really should look at your spending habits. Start saving now.