When To Quit
I’ll never forget meeting with an entrepreneur who was looking for investment in his startup company. His idea wasn’t all that unique . . . in fact it wasn’t unique at all. I asked how long he’d been at it. He said “A little over a year.” I asked how he’d funded things so far. He said “Credit cards.” I asked, “How much do you owe?” He said “$54,000.” He should have quit . . . long ago.
It’s hard to quit stuff because we don’t want to be wrong. It’s embarrassing, especially when we look around for who got us into this mess and find the answer looking back at us in the bathroom mirror.
I was once in a business that wasn’t working. Rather than quit, we looked for a company we could merge with. Problem is the only company interested in merging with a failing business is another failing business. One of my board members said, “There’s an old Jewish saying, ‘Two stones, tied together, sink faster together than alone.’” Facts are friendly, but sometimes we need friends like that who will tell us what others won’t.
So how do we know what we need to quit? And when? A few questions to ponder . . .
- Is what I’m involved in wrong? Are people being hurt? Quit.
- Is the thing I’m doing harmful to me? My reputation? My health? My family? My church? Quit
- Assuming they’re starting where I am right now, has anyone ever been successful? Stop lying to yourself. Quit.
- Have I passed the point of reasonable risk? Is pride and fear of failure driving me to stupid tenacity and foolishness? Quit.
- Does putting off the ‘funeral’ postpone the ‘birth’? Quit (so you can start!).
So many times, I’ve watched poorly performing employees be ‘developed,’ ‘counseled,’ and ‘performance-coached’ . . . all good things for some people and some situations. But I’ve also seen a number of people who struggled in one job go on to a different one (often in another organization) and thrive. The employee and the boss have the same regret . . . they didn’t ‘quit’ each other sooner.
I love Bob Goff’s idea of quitting stuff to create ‘bandwidth’ to do new things and engage with new people. It’s one of the beauties of Radical Mentoring . . . of graduating 8 guys each year to make room for 8 new ones.
Jesus quit on the cross. It was time. He had finished what He came to do. He had asked John to take care of His mom. The next chapters of God’s story . . . the resurrection, the ascension, the coming of the Holy Spirit . . . all awaited the end of this one. Jesus didn’t fight it. When it was time, He quit. He “commended His spirit” to His Father and breathed His last. No one took His life. He gave it. It’s a little like the old saying “You can’t fire me . . . I quit!”
So what do you need to quit? Is a secret porn habit sucking the life out of your marriage? Is alcohol quietly killing your liver and your relationships? Has a poor investment become an ‘alligator,’ eating your assets and draining your energy?
Quit.
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Responses (4)
The real trouble lies in quitting something that we are (by worldly standards) successful with but is not kingdom honoring or focused.
How (when) to quit once we are ahead?
“Kingdom-honoring” or “kingdom-focused” are traps. God is first and foremost about people and especially their motives. If you go to work each day focused on loving and serving and ministering to the people you work with, then you’re business is “kingdom focused” regardless what it makes, sells or does. Kingdom honoring is in the heart of the Jesus-follower. I just met a devoted Jesus-follower who owns a liquor store. Thats’a new one for me, an old Baptist guy!
I need a new job where I don’t have to work 60-65 hours a week. But I’m having trouble mapping that out (finding one that pays close to the same). Do I just quit?
That’s a tough one. I’ve heard it said “God doesn’t call us away from something; he calls us to things”. On the other hand, He repeatedly called His Israelite children to pick up and go, only telling them later where He was leading them. Four things I can say . . . 1. Take a hard look at how you’re spending your time. It may be you can find ways to cut your hours back. In “Choosing to Cheat”, Andy Stanley describes a decision to only work until a certain time each day and then let the chips fall where they may. 2. pray about talking to your superiors about the hours you’re spending to see if there’s something wrong with the job they can fix. 3. consistently spend time looking for another job.4. pull together 2-3 trusted Christian friends and seek their counsel about your current situation and job related decisions.