What if the smartest move on the table… is the one that looks like surrender?
Sit with that. Uncomfortably. Good.
There’s a Japanese soldier named Hiroo Onoda who kept fighting in the Philippine jungle until 1974. World War II had ended in 1945. Twenty-nine years of ambushes, survival, and fierce loyalty — to a war that nobody else remembered fighting. When his former commanding officer flew in personally to relieve him of duty, Onoda wept.
He wasn’t crazy. He was committed. And that’s the terrifying part. Because commitment, without the courage to audit reality, is just a more dignified word for stubbornness wearing a uniform.
The Sunk Cost Fallacy
Yes, economists have a name for this affliction. Sunk Cost Fallacy. The deeply irrational, deeply human tendency to keep pouring resources — time, money, emotion, identity — into something because of what you’ve already invested, not because of what it can actually deliver.
The money is gone. The time is gone. The decision that seemed logical then is costing you now. And yet. And yet. You stay. Because leaving feels like losing. Because someone might call it quitting.
The Most Expensive Line Item in Your Life Is Not on Your Balance Sheet
There is a ghost that attends every board meeting.
It does not speak.
It does not vote.
But it whispers.
“We’ve already invested so much.”
That whisper has bankrupted empires, prolonged wars, sunk companies and, more quietly, imprisoned brilliant people in unlived lives.
As stated earlier, it’s called the Sunk Cost Fallacy. And it is the most polite saboteur in business. And so too in life.
We stay in projects because we’ve spent too much to stop.
We stay in careers because we’ve studied too long to pivot.
We stay in partnerships because we’ve endured too much to walk away.
Money gone. Time gone. Energy gone.
And yet we insist on throwing tomorrow into yesterday’s furnace.
Let me take you somewhere uncomfortable.
Here’s some air-tight lessons from Concorde, Kingfisher and Swiss Air
Pie in the sky? We have heard that. We have a few here.
Concorde undoubtedly was an engineering marvel. Britain and France knew by the mid-1970s that Concorde was commercially unviable. Knew it. Had the numbers. Had the reports. They flew it until 2003. Why? Because they’d already spent the equivalent of billions. Because stopping felt like admitting the whole glorious, expensive dream was a mistake. Prestige was expensive. Pride was more expensive. The aircraft was a marvel. The economics were not.
And the admission — delayed by decades — cost them far more than the original error ever would have.
Closer home, Vijay Mallya didn’t sink because he dreamed big with Kingfisher Airlines. He sank because he kept funding yesterday’s dream with tomorrow’s money — long after every signal said this story ends badly. The sunk cost of a lifestyle, a legacy, an identity he couldn’t separate from the airline. The plane went down. He kept boarding.
Quitting is under-rated. Here comes one more.
Globally, we marvel at the “Icarus Syndrome” in tech. In 2001, Swissair was the pride of Europe. When they realized their “Hunter Strategy” of buying up smaller airlines was hemorrhaging cash, did they pivot? No. They poured billions into “Project Hunter” to save face. They flew straight into the ground, taking 26,000 jobs with them. That wasn’t a business failure; that was a refusal to admit that the fuel for the journey was already burned.
Not a rosy picture alas
Global giants are not immune. When Kodak invented the digital camera in 1975, it shelved its own invention. Why? Because film was too profitable to disrupt. Billions in infrastructure became invisible handcuffs. The future was postponed to protect the past.
History does not punish failure. It punishes attachment.
But this is not only about corporations with glossy annual reports.
It is about you.
The MBA who secretly wants to write.
The founder who knows the product has no pulse but keeps it on life support because investors are watching.
The executive who dreads Monday but clings to the designation because ten years is “too much to waste.”
You don’t get tomorrow over again. Our tomorrows are finite inventory.
Time is not refundable.
Only re-allocatable.
One of the most under-celebrated strategic skills is quitting. Not impulsive quitting. Not petulant quitting.
Strategic quitting.
The Japanese have a word, “kaizen,” for continuous improvement. We need one for continuous subtraction. For the discipline of walking away from what no longer deserves your future.
Consider this
In the early 2000s, IBM exited the personal computer business, selling it to Lenovo. For decades, PCs defined IBM’s identity. Yet it chose relevance over nostalgia. It chose the future over familiarity. Today IBM is a different beast altogether.
That is not abandonment.
That is evolution.
The sunk cost fallacy thrives on three seductions
- Ego – “If I quit, I admit I was wrong.”
- Fear – “What if walking away proves I failed?”
- Optics – “What will people say?”
But here is the deeper truth.
Quitting is not about escaping effort.
It is about protecting potential.
The chance to build something you are proud of, with a team you are eager to work with, is not guaranteed. It is a privilege. And ignoring that privilege because you are loyal to yesterday’s decisions is an act of self-sabotage.
We romanticise grit. We worship perseverance. We lionise staying power.
Yet sometimes the bravest sentence in business is:
“This no longer deserves my life.”
Imagine if we evaluated projects not by what we have invested, but by what they still promise.
If this opportunity came to you today, fresh and unburdened, would you choose it again?
If the answer is no, your strategy is nostalgia.
In closing, let me offer three provocations
Audit your attachments. List the top five commitments in your professional life. Ask: If I were starting today, would I sign up for this again?
Reward intelligent exits. In your organisation, publicly recognise smart shutdowns, not just heroic endurance.
Reclaim your calendar. Your schedule is the clearest evidence of what you refuse to quit.
Tomorrow is not an extension of yesterday. It is a negotiation.
And sunk costs do not deserve voting rights in that negotiation.
You cannot retrieve the money spent.
You cannot reclaim the years invested.
But you can decide what gets your next decade.
The world does not run out of opportunity.
It runs out of courage.
And sometimes courage looks like this:
Closing the door gently.
Thanking the lesson.
Walking forward lighter.
Quitting is underrated. You bet! . Don’t let nostalgia run your P&L.
PS: On a completely different note, I am delighted to share that my other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as well. You can access it on these links below:
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Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/
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