Of all the stratagems, to know when to quit is the best. – Chinese Proverb
I am not proud of it, but I am a quitter.
I have always put my all into everything I do, and it’s a characteristic that I am really proud of.
If I have committed to something, I do everything in my power to stick it out until the end.
This is the message that I share with people as encouragement when they’re struggling with an issue. I encourage them to stop thinking about how to quit and focus on how NOT to quit – to push through it and finish whatever it is.
The only thing that haunts me when I’m telling people not to be a quitter is that it’s not entirely true!
I know that there are things in life that I have quit; while most of them were minor, the one that lingers with me is my attempt at getting an MBA.
I enrolled in the MBA program at my university and after taking only one class I dropped out. It’s almost embarrassing to admit that, being that I consider myself to be successful!
Most my collegiate career, I was a B to B+ student, but at the time of dropping the class, I had a D. In fact, it was probably closer to a D-.
So what the heck happened?
I had just graduated college and began working as a junior broker at A.G. Edwards and Sons. Having enlisted in the National Guard for six years, I had up to four years worth of tuition paid for, compliments of the military. As it turns out, after getting my bachelor’s degree, I still had a year left remaining, and my university, SIU Carbondale, had an MBA program that I could complete in a one-year time frame. It was too perfect to pass up!
Being overly ambitious, as I always am, I thought, what the heck? I can get my MBA and also start my job as a financial advisor. It’s a win-win!
Here’s the thing about my job – I had a very small salary. So small, in fact, that I was only making about $18,000 a year base. I think that’s first time I’ve ever shared that publicly. It was peanuts. I could have made more working full-time working at my mall job, GNC (General Nutrition Center), hocking protein powders and vitamins. It was almost embarrassing. Then again, it was a job.
In addition to my measly base salary, I would also split commissions and fees 50/50 on new clients I brought in. Although that sounds attractive, you have to realize that I was in the wirehouse model (Wirehouses are the big investment firms like Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, etc). For every dollar I made the firm, they took $.60.
As an example, for every $1000 of commissions or fees I made, the remaining money after the firm took their share was only $400. Then from that $400 I would split 50/50 with the advisor that hired me. So now I’m down to a whopping $200. Then you figure medical insurance, taxes, 401(k)……yeah, I was left with next to nothing.
Since I was only making a small base salary, it was on me to find new clients if I wanted to succeed financially. I had just graduated, was in my early 20’s, and had a very small network of people. My family didn’t have money and my friends didn’t have money, so I had to look to strangers to do business with me.
I did cold calling all day, and two to three nights per week. I held seminars. I set up booths at trade shows. I taught investment classes. I did anything and everything! While most people only work 40 hours a week, I was easily spending 70 hours or more trying to build up my client base.
In addition to working more than 70 hours a week, I was taking my first MBA class, which was some sort of marketing class. It was one day a week on Thursday night and lasted for three hours. In between each class, I had more homework and more reading assignments then any of my undergrad college classes. It was really quite horrible. I pretty much bombed the first test in my MBA class. This was the first time I realized that I had taken on too much.
Never Say Die?
Even knowing I had bit off more than I could chew. I was arrogant, I was confident, and I reassured myself that I could pull it off. I kept going, working 70 hours a week, studying ten to fifteen hours a week, and just doing everything I could to make it work.
After the second test for my MBA class, the situation did not improve. In fact, it was horrible. I remember taking that test and having no clue how to answer half the questions. On essay style tests, I’m usually a good B.S.er – but my professor saw right through it. I don’t remember my exact grade, but I’m pretty sure it wasn’t a C or a B, and definitely not an A!
At that point in time, I needed to make a decision. I started asking myself,
“How was I going to survive if I couldn’t put time into building my business? Did potential new clients really care if I had an MBA or not? What was I really hoping to benefit from by getting my MBA? Was it just a bragging right, or would it propel me in my career?“
It didn’t take that long to figure out that an MBA didn’t really do much for me as a financial advisor. After answering those hard questions and realizing that I needed to take care of myself at the moment, I made the tough decision to quit.
Even after I made the decision, I didn’t want to do it. I’d never quit anything that I started, especially in my adult life. I wasn’t proud to be a quitter, but my hunch was that if I stuck to it, not only would I fail at getting my MBA, but I could possibly fail at starting my business as a financial advisor.
So, as tough as it was, I pulled the plug. I quit.
It took less than 30 days to figure out that I made the right decision. In fact, I should have made the decision much earlier. As a way of solidifying me from dropping the MBA program, I sought out to attain the certified financial planner designation. I’ve viewed that, in my mind, as the MBA of my profession.
Know When to Quit
If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. Then quit. There’s no point in being a damn fool about it. – W.C. Fields Quote
If you’re ever in a situation where you feel like you’re a failure, and you just want to throw your hands up in frustration and walk away, you have to ask yourself those hard questions.
There are situations where you need to stick it out. But if you are in a situation where you feel stuck, start asking yourself the tough questions. You might discover the current situation you’re in is actually preventing you from exploring other opportunities where you could have much more rapid growth and see much higher potential revenue.
It’s a tough situation to be in. What helped me was talking to my peers, not only the advisor that had hired me, but to other people – some of my former college professors, my guidance counselor, and friends. It was helpful to get different perspectives of what they felt the best decision would be.
As you talk to people, listen to everything they share, take the information and digest it, but then always make a decision to do what’s best for you. Just because you are a quitter today doesn’t mean you can’t be a winner tomorrow.
Have you ever quit something that was hard to do but later you were thankful you did?
Source: goodfinancialcents.com