My manager offered me a director title, a $22,000 raise, and a bigger team to run. I said no, and six weeks later I quit entirely to start my own thing. Most people in my life thought I’d lost my mind. I understand why. On paper, turning down more money and more authority to go build something from nothing looks like the worse decision every single time.
It wasn’t, and I want to walk through the actual math I ran before deciding, because “follow your gut” isn’t advice, it’s a way of avoiding the numbers that actually matter.
The Comparison Nobody Runs Correctly
Most people comparing a promotion to starting a business compare the wrong two numbers. They look at the new salary against zero income in year one, see a massive gap, and stop there. That comparison is technically true and almost useless, because it ignores the thing that actually determines whether either path is worth it: the ceiling.
The director role had a real ceiling. I could see it clearly, because I’d watched three people ahead of me hit it. Another promotion or two over the next decade, capped out around a number I could calculate almost exactly. The business had no visible ceiling at all, just a much higher floor of risk in the first two years.
That’s the actual comparison. Not “safe salary versus zero income.” It’s “predictable ceiling versus uncertain ceiling with a rough floor.”
The Math I Actually Ran
I gave myself eighteen months of runway, calculated down to the dollar from savings, a spouse’s stable income, and a firm cutoff date if the business wasn’t covering basic expenses by then. That number mattered more than any revenue projection, because it turned an abstract leap into a bounded bet with a defined downside.
Eighteen months, a hard stop, and a specific number I needed to hit by month twelve to justify continuing past the cutoff. If I didn’t hit roughly 60% of my old salary in monthly revenue by month twelve, I’d already decided in advance to go back to a job, no negotiating with myself in the moment when emotions would make that decision worse.
That last part mattered more than anything else in the whole plan. Deciding the exit criteria before I needed them meant I wasn’t making a scared, in-the-moment call six months in when things felt hard. The decision was already made. I just had to check the number against it.
What the Promotion Actually Would Have Cost
Here’s the part that gets left out of most versions of this story. The promotion wasn’t free. It came with a genuine estimate of 15 more hours a week, a role I’d watched burn out two people before me, and a title that, if I’m honest, mattered more to other people’s perception of me than to anything I actually wanted for myself.
I priced that cost at roughly $30 an hour in exchange for the raise, once I did the actual math on the extra hours against the extra pay. That’s not a bad hourly rate. It’s also not the number the recruiter pitch made it sound like when they said “$22,000 raise” without mentioning the hours attached to it.
The Uncomfortable Honesty Part
I won’t pretend this worked because I was smarter than the people who took similar promotions. Some of that eighteen months was luck. A first client came through faster than projected. A recession that could have killed an early-stage business in my industry didn’t hit until after I’d built enough of a base to survive it.
If you’re running this same math, build in more pessimism than I did. I hit my month-twelve number by a narrow margin, not a comfortable one, and a worse first quarter could have easily pushed me past my own cutoff date.
The Framework, If You’re Facing This Decision
Calculate the real ceiling of the job path, not just the next raise. Ask what the role three promotions from now actually pays and whether that number excites you or just sounds fine.
Set a hard runway number and a hard cutoff date before you start, not after emotions are already involved in the outcome.
Price the hidden cost of the promotion itself, the extra hours, the burnout rate you’ve personally observed in that role, against the raise being offered.
Decide your exit criteria in advance, in writing, while you’re still thinking clearly and not six months into a hard stretch.
What to Do Now
If you’re sitting on a similar decision right now, don’t start with your gut feeling about which path feels exciting. Start with the ceiling calculation. Write down what the job path actually tops out at in ten years, then write down your runway number and your cutoff date for the alternative.
Only compare gut feelings after the numbers are already on paper. The numbers won’t make the decision for you, but they’ll stop you from making it based on fear or excitement alone, which is how most people get this decision wrong in either direction.