Be financially ready before you resign

I don’t believe salary employees are meant to stay employed all through their career.

Not because employment is bad but because life often demands more from us than a job can give.

A family that wants more of your time. A business idea that won’t leave you alone. A desire to build something of your own.

At some point, many professionals feel the pull to transition from employee to employer.

The problem is not the transition. The problem is how and when people do it.


The mistake I’ve learnt from others

Many people leave their jobs too early, and for the wrong reasons.

  • An argument with a boss
  • Frustration with office politics
  • Feeling that the job is a distraction
  • A little growth in a side business
  • Someone else quitted and is doing well

So they resign emotionally first… then financially later.

And that gap is where stress, regret, and poor decisions happen.


Employment is important

Your job does a lot to be grateful for

It is:

  • A source of stable income
  • A risk absorber
  • A funding engine for your future plans

Leaving employment should be a strategic move, not an emotional reaction.


Are you ready to transition?

Before you transition, ask yourself:

Do I have a stable source of income that can comfortably sustain my lifestyle while I build my business?

Not “My business grow” Not “am I tired of my job?” Not “do I believe in myself?”

Income first. Belief second.


My favorite transition option: Passive income checked 💰🎯

One of the safest transition signals I advise people on is this:

If your investment income can replace your salary, you may be ready.

A simple example:

  • You invest in Treasury Bills
  • The annual interest earned
  • When divided by 12
  • Matches (or comes close to) your monthly salary

That means:

  • Your bills are covered
  • Your lifestyle is protected
  • Your business can grow without desperation

This doesn’t mean you must quit immediately, it means you now have options.


Why you should care about this advise

Businesses fail faster when:

  • Rent is due
  • School fees are waiting
  • Food money depends on sales
  • Every slow month feels like an emergency

Pressure kills the patience required to build sustainable businesses.


A smarter way to transition

Here’s a smoother approach:

  1. Build while employed, use salary as seed capital, not survival money.
  2. Reduce lifestyle expenses. Lower expenses before you reduce income.
  3. Grow stable investments like treasury bills, fixed income, or other low-risk instruments.
  4. Test consistency not excitement because one good month is not a business.
  5. Exit when income replaces income not when motivation is high.

My Point is that

Leaving employment should feel calm, not chaotic.

When your income is stable:

  • You think better
  • You negotiate better
  • You build better

Don’t rush your independence!

This book is for personal development and educational purposes.

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