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Finding Your Work · The finance of a transition

The Money Bridge

A career change usually has a cost. Here's how to fund the gap — runway, side income, and the discipline that makes a pivot survivable.

Part of the free guide Finding Your Work · ~5 min read

Here is the part most career-change advice skips — and the part a finance institute won't let you skip: a pivot usually has a cost, and you have to fund the gap. Plan the bridge, so the dream survives contact with the mortgage.

Three numbers make the move real

If the gap is too wide to clear in one jump, that's exactly when the one-variable-at-a-time pivot earns its keep: each smaller step usually costs less and pays sooner.

The risk ladder

Most people who successfully build a life inside a new field climb three rungs in order, rather than leaping:

The discipline that makes it survivable: a passion doesn't have to become your whole income overnight — and it usually shouldn't. Get inside the field at low risk, then let evidence decide how far in to go.

Worksheet: your money bridge

Three honest numbers, before you move: your runway in months, your cost to get in, and the bridge income you can count on each month. If you can't fund the gap, that's not a “no” — it's a sign to take a smaller first step. The full version, with worksheets, is in the workbook.

Get the full method — free

Download Finding Your Work, a free 46-page workbook that walks you from “I'm stuck” to a specific, searchable direction — the seven-petal self-inventory, the hidden job market, and worksheets you actually fill in.

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