Why Waiting for Certainty Is the Riskiest Career Move You Can Make
Why Waiting for Certainty Is the Riskiest Career Move You Can Make
And you’re frozen.
Not because you’re weak or indecisive. Because you’re trying to make a 10-year decision with 10-day information.
They’re waiting for certainty that will never come.
Meanwhile, the people advancing around them aren’t smarter. They’re not luckier. They’re not more connected.
The Certainty Trap
You can’t know if a career change will work out before you make it.
You can’t know if a company culture fits before you’re inside it.
The data you need to make a “perfect” decision only becomes available after you’ve already decided.
You’re trying to eliminate risk by gathering more information. But past a certain point, more research doesn’t reduce risk—it just delays the inevitable uncertainty you’ll face anyway.
The people who got out, who built something, who changed their circumstances—they moved on incomplete information.
They made decisions knowing they’d have to adjust along the way.
What You’re Actually Deciding
You’re not.
You’re deciding between two different versions of risk.
Option 2: The risk of inaction. You stay where you are, and three years from now you’re still stuck, still wondering, still waiting for certainty that never arrived.
They see the visible risk of making the wrong choice. They don’t see the invisible risk of making no choice at all.
Every month you wait is a month of skill development you’re not getting. A month of network building in the new space you’re not doing. A month of learning whether this path actually fits you.
And unlike a bad career move—which you can recover from—time you don’t spend building toward something is gone forever.
How Successful People Actually Decide
They’re using better decision-making frameworks in the present.
They don’t research until they feel certain. They research until they hit their predetermined information threshold, then they decide.
Can you pay your bills for 6-12 months if this doesn’t work out? Do you have a basic understanding of what the role/industry actually involves? Can you articulate why this move aligns with your broader career direction?
Everything else is just anxiety dressed up as due diligence.
They’re not asking “Is this the perfect choice?” They’re asking “Is this worth testing?”
An experiment can fail and still be valuable. A test can produce useful data even if you don’t stay in that role forever.
The Reversibility Test
Before you spiral into analysis paralysis, ask one question: Is this decision reversible?
If you switch industries and it’s not what you expected, can you switch back or pivot again? Yes. Reversible.
If you wait another year to make a move, can you get that year back? No. Irreversible.
You can change jobs. You can change industries. You can even change careers entirely—people do it all the time, especially after 30.
The years you spend waiting for certainty don’t come back. The skills you didn’t build, the network you didn’t develop, the experience you didn’t gain—that’s the real risk.
You’re not trying to make the perfect choice. You’re making the best move with the information you have, knowing you can adjust later.
The Real Cost of Waiting
They’re waiting for the economy to stabilize. For the perfect role to open up. For their skills to be “ready.” For the fear to go away.
The economy is always uncertain. The perfect role doesn’t exist. Your skills get ready by doing the work, not preparing for it. And the fear never fully disappears.
They’ve made mistakes. They’ve adjusted. They’ve learned what works and what doesn’t.
And starting beats planning every single time.
Every decision you delay is momentum you’re not generating. Every move you postpone is experience you’re not gaining.
But exponential growth requires a starting point. And you can’t start from where you wish you were. You can only start from where you are.
The Decision-Making Doctrine
-
1.
Set your information threshold before you start researching. Decide upfront what data points you need to make a decision. Three conversations with people in the role? Two weeks of research? One informational interview? Define it, hit it, then decide. Don’t move the goalposts. -
2.
Apply the reversibility test. If the decision is reversible, bias toward action. If it’s truly irreversible, take more time. But be honest—most career moves are more reversible than your anxiety wants you to believe. -
3.
Calculate the cost of inaction. What does staying in your current situation cost you over the next 12 months? Not just money—skills, network, momentum, time. Compare that to the worst-case scenario of making the move. Usually, staying is riskier. -
4.
Treat it as an experiment, not a life sentence. You’re testing a hypothesis, not making an irreversible commitment. This mental shift removes 80% of the pressure and makes it easier to move forward. -
5.
Set a decision deadline. Give yourself a specific date by which you’ll decide. Not “when I feel ready”—an actual date. When that date hits, you decide with whatever information you have. Deadlines force clarity.
Start From Where You Are
You’re not going to have perfect information.
You’re not going to eliminate all the risk.
Not because you’re reckless, but because you understand that waiting for certainty is itself a high-risk strategy.
They’ve accepted that career growth happens through iteration, not perfect planning.
Then make the call.
It’s not choosing at all.
READ NEXT:
- If You Can’t Leave For 5 Days, You Don’t Own A Business – You Own A Job
- You’re not lazy. You’re not weak. But by 5 PM, you’re useless. Here’s the truth nobody wants to hear: your body wasn’t built to sit still for 8 hours, and your mind pays the price. Time to fix it.
- Work Isn’t Your Life—So Why Does Success Require You to Pretend It Is?
THE PERRYMAN DOCTRINE
Operator-Level Frameworks. Weekly.
Business execution, operator mindset, and frameworks for building ventures that last. No fluff. Unsubscribe anytime.
Ready to Build Something Real?
Book a strategy call. We identify the gaps, build the infrastructure, and create a real execution plan.
Book a Strategy Call →