While you’re still contemplating about quitting your day job, let’s continue our conversation about taking a leap of faith (Not caught up? Read my last two blog posts here and here). If you recall, the three barriers that I (and many others) face when taking a leap of faith are 1) doubting my abilities and/or experience, 2) fear of running out of money and 3) fear of failure. In my last post, we addressed self-doubt. Now, let’s talk about the fear of running out of money.
When talking about taking a leap of faith and the fear of running out of money, you will often hear the word “runway” thrown around. What is your runway? Simply, it’s the amount of time (usually measured in months) before you run out of money after quitting your day job.
Before I go on, let me make two points: 1) there is no right amount of runway that you should have before you take a leap of faith and 2) everyone’s financial situation is different so it’s ultimately up to you to determine your available resources and comfortable risk level.
As you prepare to take a leap of faith, I highly recommend you take some time to figure out the following amounts:
Once you have these amounts figured out, add #2 and #3 together and divide by #1. This will give you your runway.
OK, so figuring out your runway is the easy part. The next part is where it gets difficult. Before you take your leap of faith, I recommend you ask yourself the following questions:
Some of the best advice I received when I first took my leap of faith contradicts the concept of the runway, as defined above. After whining on about my panic that my runway was running out, a mentor of mine told me I needed to rethink how I defined “runway.” “Your runway is as long as you make it,” she told me. Uh, what? After a bit of badgering, I got to her meaning.
What she was telling me is that if you want it bad enough, and you work hard enough, and you think and act smart, you can keep extending that runway out as far as you need to. And she also encouraged me to realize that the way I was defining runway was simple and conservative – how much money I need vs. how much I have in the bank.
My mentor also encouraged me to think outside the box and push the boundaries of my risk tolerance a little (without making bad decisions). For example:
Look, I’m going to level with you. I still have moments when I’m terrified of running out of money. But since I took my leap of faith, I’ve already had opportunities to implement most of the above suggestions – I participated in a think tank with a local marketing company which earned me an unexpected paycheck, I created an online course which will bring in passive income and I took advantage of a zero-interest debt opportunity to finance some of the start-up costs of my business (thereby freeing up more cash to extend my runway) with a solid plan to pay that debt back whether or not my business takes off.
As you consider taking your leap of faith (or if you already have, as you are sobering up from the reality of what you did!) I’ll leave you with this thought: understand your runway, but realize that you have it in your power to keep extending it.
Author’s Note: This picture is not of me. I may fly planes, but I’m not brave enough to stand in the middle of the runway!