ONE QUESTION

Should You Say No to That Big Job Offer?

Going after what you want may not get you what you need

Nilofer Merchant
Marker
Published in
9 min readFeb 4, 2020

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A woman stands in her office alone at night with her arms crossed, thinking about her job.
Photo: Adene Sanchez/E+/Getty Images

Q: Should I leave my own consulting practice and join another firm as their CEO? I know I can bring a lot of value, as my Rolodex is strong and I have big ideas, but I’d have to convince one of the 3 co-founders of this (he’s skeptical, to say the least). I’d own 20% of the new company and I think it would be a real relief to be in partnership with other people.

A: Wow, that’s a heck of a role, and 20% sounds like a lot. I can see why you’d be excited by it.

But, let’s do the math, shall we?

You’d go from owning 100% of your own work to owning one-fifth of shared work. If their company is worth 5x what yours is worth now, then you’ve gained… absolutely nothing. As CEO, your job would be doing the revenue generation of this entity, so you’d be nearly 100% responsible for driving the growth of the shared company, but only partaking of one-fifth of the upside. That 20% seems smaller by the second because you are doing most of the work to make it something, financially.

Even if the math were better, what’s important here is the messy landmine of a social situation you’d be willingly stepping onto.

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Marker
Marker

Published in Marker

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Nilofer Merchant
Nilofer Merchant

Written by Nilofer Merchant

Centering that source of all innovation, #ONLYNESS, the distinct value of EACH of us. 3-time Author, 25 years as Tech exec, whose @tedtalks quoted 300M+ times