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by pilom 5469 days ago
And joining a startup with crazy hours and low pay isn't an issue with your family?
2 comments

I did both, and in my situation it seems that travel is a bigger issue.

Even with crazy startup hours, we could usually get at least one shared meal a day and you know... see each other. We could also workout together. Maybe get a hug while I'm talking to a customer on one hand and coding in the other. It adds up.

When you are in another state - its really away.

I think the idea is that, with consulting it will always be like that (vis-a-vis the travel issue), whereas a startup - if successful - will eventually result in a scenario where you can cash out, and kick back and relax. Or, if not "cash out" at least ease off on the crazy hours and what-not, and gradually transition into a "normal" business.
The assumption that startups get to that point, when most don't even come close, is (to me) more dangerous than "consulting is like selling crack."
The assumption that startups get to that point, when most don't even come close, is (to me) more dangerous than "consulting is like selling crack."

Sure, I doubt most of us would disagree with that. Startups are risky... they're bloody f%!#kng risky... but if you succeed, you have a chance at being legitimately rich. To some people, that's a chance worth taking, to some people it isn't.

Me personally, I prefer the idea of trying to build a product company and work for the big exit, to the idea of being a consultant. But I'm not making any claim that either lifestyle is objectively better... clearly it's a personal choice.