HACKER Q&A
📣 Nair0

When should you quit your job for a side project?


I'm curious what people here think about this question.

If you plan on working on a side-project that might make you money, or build a startup, when do you think is the best time to quit your job?

Is it when you make enough to live by yourself? When you validate that the idea works? When you realize you don't have enough time for both? Or simply at the very beginning?

What do you think are the reasons for which you should stay longer or less?


  👤 JohnFen Accepted Answer ✓
My opinion on this is just that -- mine. This is what I've found works for me, and I in no way assert that it works for anybody else.

If I intend on embarking on a side-project with an eye toward commercializing it, I quit my day job immediately. I cannot divide my attention between two serious endeavors like that, and as long as I'm thinking of, and treating, it as a "side project", I won't give it the time and attention it needs in order to have a chance of success.

I do want some money stored up for the purpose first (forever separate from my regular life savings), and if I don't have that then I'll delay starting work on the project until I do. That said, it shouldn't be a huge amount of money. Too much money gums up the works and reduces the odds of success. I want enough of a war chest to make the venture possible, but not much more. I need to be broke enough that I'm carefully considering expenditures and revenue, and to have enough risk and fear to keep driving me through the inevitable hard times. It also forces me to seek some kind of revenue stream as soon as possible, which I've found is good for the project in many, many ways.

I need to go into a venture hungry and scared.