Impact investing
  • People
    • 4. QUALITY EDUCATION
    • 5. GENDER EQUALITY
    • 10. REDUCED INEQUALITIES
    • 11. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
    • 16. PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
    • 17. PARTNERSHIPS
  • Planet
    • 6. CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION
    • 7. AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
    • 12. RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
    • 13. CLIMATE ACTION
    • 14. LIFE BELOW WATER
    • 15. LIFE ON LAND
  • Prosperity
    • 1. NO POVERTY
    • 2. ZERO HUNGER
    • 3. GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
    • 8. DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
    • 9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE
  • About us
    • Meet Amanda
    • Promoted Investors
    • Contact us
    • Featured ventures
      • sdgtalks.ai
      • mindtalks.ai
      • Social Impact Movement
Impact investing
  • People
    • 4. QUALITY EDUCATION
    • 5. GENDER EQUALITY
    • 10. REDUCED INEQUALITIES
    • 11. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
    • 16. PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
    • 17. PARTNERSHIPS
  • Planet
    • 6. CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION
    • 7. AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
    • 12. RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
    • 13. CLIMATE ACTION
    • 14. LIFE BELOW WATER
    • 15. LIFE ON LAND
  • Prosperity
    • 1. NO POVERTY
    • 2. ZERO HUNGER
    • 3. GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
    • 8. DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
    • 9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE
  • About us
    • Meet Amanda
    • Promoted Investors
    • Contact us
    • Featured ventures
      • sdgtalks.ai
      • mindtalks.ai
      • Social Impact Movement

Bank Investors

Bank of America Citigroup Goldman Sachs JPMorgan Chase Morgan Stanley PNC Financial Services TD Bank Truist Financial US Bancorp Wells Fargo

Impacting …

  • 1. NO POVERTY
  • 2. ZERO HUNGER
  • 3. GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
  • 4. QUALITY EDUCATION
  • 5. GENDER EQUALITY
  • 6. CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION
  • 7. AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
  • 8. DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
  • 9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE
  • 10. REDUCED INEQUALITIES
  • 11. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
  • 12. RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
  • 13. CLIMATE ACTION
  • 14. LIFE BELOW WATER
  • 15. LIFE ON LAND
  • 16. PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
  • 17. PARTNERSHIPS

Narrow down



Ready to explore the power of AI in sustainability? Click here to learn more!

Stock Market Monthly Trends

Compare the impact of news on the stock market

9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE

I quit my $400,000 Morgan Stanley job to become a startup founder. Loneliness was the biggest challenge, but I don’t regret it.

2 years ago
by Amanda
11 Views
6 min read
Written by Amanda
Careers

I quit my $400,000 Morgan Stanley job to become a startup founder. Loneliness was the biggest challenge, but I don’t regret it.

As told to Ellen Nguyen
2024-02-13T10:05:01Z

Facebook Icon The letter F. Facebook Email icon An envelope. It indicates the ability to send an email. Email Twitter icon A stylized bird with an open mouth, tweeting. Twitter LinkedIn icon The word “in”. LinkedIn Link icon An image of a chain link. It symobilizes a website link url. Copy Link

Read in app

Valeri Gervaziev left his role as an executive director at Morgan Stanley in 2022.
Courtesy of Valeri Gervaziev

  • Valeri Gervaziev left a lucrative investment banking career at Morgan Stanley to start a company.
  • Gervaziev’s dissatisfaction with banking led to the launch of Deepwrk, a platform for body doubling.
  • Despite having to adjust his lifestyle, Gervaziev is more fulfilled and doesn’t regret his choice.

NEW LOOK

Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read preview

Thanks for signing up!
Access your favorite topics in a personalized feed while you’re on the go.

By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. You can opt-out at any time.

Advertisement

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Valeri Gervaziev, a 37-year-old startup founder in London. It has been edited for length and clarity.

I moved from Bulgaria to the UK for university when I was 19. After completing my master’s in finance, I joined Barclays‘ banking analyst program, where I spent about six years and was promoted to senior associate.

After Barclays, I joined Morgan Stanley in 2018. A few months after being promoted to executive director in 2022, while earning a total compensation of over $400,000, I quit to start my own company.

I decided to leave investment banking because I’d lost the meaning and purpose of my work, and I wanted to find it.

Advertisement

I’d always been interested in finance and investment banking

My family ran a small business in Bulgaria, which sparked my interest in business and finance.

Becoming a managing director wasn’t a specific goal when I started in investment banking. I focused more on gaining responsibility, learning, and enjoying the work, which led to promotions.

Despite the excitement and learning opportunities in mergers and acquisitions and getting to work with some of the brightest people, when you lose the ‘why,’ it becomes challenging to continue.

The year before I quit, I had many internal tribulations

My dissatisfaction had built up throughout the years but was particularly clear to me the year before I left. I wasn’t motivated by a higher salary or bonuses. I knew I had to make a change as I wanted to create something impactful — to be more than just an advisor on the sidelines.

Advertisement

I felt a mix of fear and excitement when I decided to leave. I was excited about life after banking being full of opportunities, which outweighed my fear. My managers initially tried to talk me out of it, but they supported my decision once they realized nothing could be done to retain me.

When I quit, my current venture wasn’t fully planned yet. There were many unknowns, but I had already decided to leave before my promotion because, to me, it was either that or stay in banking forever.

I had to adjust my lifestyle significantly

I adjusted my holiday and social spending immediately. I don’t own a home, so I don’t have a mortgage, but my partner and I rent in an expensive part of London, and our rent increased significantly after the pandemic.

In my early days in banking, I wasn’t very good at saving money. I focused more on lifestyle experiences, which I later realized could’ve been better managed. I also sent money home to my family in Bulgaria more regularly, bought my parents a car, and helped them finish their house, so I had less to save.

Advertisement

When I became a senior associate and my salary increased, I started to save more. My expenses plateaued around the time I became a VP.

In my early career, I felt like a HENRY. By the time I quit my job, I had enough financial security, but it came at the expense of everything else. I realized money is just part of the puzzle.

The idea for my startup came when I was working from home and felt isolated

During the pandemic, a friend in the US and I started working together virtually. I realized having a friend or partner who works simultaneously with you, also known as ‘body doubling,’ could be helpful for many others.

This led me to the idea for Deepwrk, which launched in September. Initially, we tested the concept with solo entrepreneurs and remote workers, but I quickly realized that people with ADHD benefited the most.

Advertisement

Looking ahead, our strategy is to develop a complete platform for adults with ADHD, start group coaching within the platform, enhance gamification, and integrate AI for better community connections.

The biggest challenge at the beginning was the loneliness

I’ve found it crucial to have a community, which, luckily, is a pain point Deepwrk can solve. I’ve become close with some people who regularly attend my body-doubling sessions. I’ve also kept in touch with a few people from banking.

I run my business largely independently, but I have a team of about 10 people on a contract basis. We’re bootstrapped through my savings, but we have paying customers through a subscription model.

I’m now considering external funding. The biggest expense isn’t the business investment but the opportunity cost and covering my living expenses while extending my financial runway.

Advertisement

I haven’t drawn a salary for myself in a year and a half, and I plan to pay myself when the business generates enough cash, or after closing an external round of financing.

I don’t regret leaving banking for a second

It’s almost inevitable to experience lifestyle creep in an industry like banking or consulting. When you quit, it can be hard to adjust. I see it more as an opportunity to live a happy, healthy, and fulfilled life with less.

I feel more fulfilled now, doing what I love and helping people, which is more important to me than money. I was in a privileged position to make such a decision, though. I don’t have fixed commitments, like a mortgage or children, which gave me the flexibility to leave my banking career.

I have certain worries about the future, but the satisfaction I get from impacting members’ lives is incredibly rewarding and makes it worth it.

Advertisement

Have you quit a high-paying job to make a career pivot? Email Lauryn Haas at lhaas@businessinsider.com

Sign up for notifications from Insider! Stay up to date with what you want to know.
Subscribe to push notifications

Advertisement

Close icon Two crossed lines that form an ‘X’. It indicates a way to close an interaction, or dismiss a notification.

Source: businessinsider.com

Morgan Stanley
    FacebookXPinterestLinkedInEmailWhatsApp
Brexit move has shrunk U.K. economy by 5%, Goldman Sachs economists say
Puraffinity wins Morgan Stanley Sustainable Solutions Award – Water Magazine

You may also like

9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE

Bank of America may introduce credit card with 10% APR –...

by Amanda
9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE

$25 minimum wage and beyond: Bank of America’s benefits...

by Amanda
9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE

Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, continue to add assets and...

by Amanda
9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE

U.S. Bancorp to pay up to $1B for the investment bank BTIG...

by Amanda
9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE

The S&P 500 Is Expected to Rally 12% This Year –...

by Amanda
9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE

The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc (PNC) Hit a 52 Week High...

by Amanda

About the author

Amanda

Hi there, I am Amanda and I work as an editor at impactinvesting.ai;  if you are interested in my services, please reach me at amanda.impactinvesting.ai

View all posts

Investors

Bank of America Citigroup Goldman Sachs JPMorgan Chase Morgan Stanley PNC Financial Services TD Bank Truist Financial US Bancorp Wells Fargo



Ready to explore the power of AI in sustainability? Click here to learn more!

Sustainable Development Goals

1. NO POVERTY 2. ZERO HUNGER 3. GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING 4. QUALITY EDUCATION 5. GENDER EQUALITY 6. CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION 7. AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY 8. DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH 9. INDUSTRY, INNOVATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE 10. REDUCED INEQUALITIES 11. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES 12. RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION 13. CLIMATE ACTION 14. LIFE BELOW WATER 15. LIFE ON LAND 16. PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS 17. PARTNERSHIPS

Join Us

  • instagram
  • twitter
  • facebook
  • youtube
  • pinterest
  • rss

This digital newspaper is written by artificial intelligence and powered by mindtalks  , if you are looking for a digital newspaper written by changemakers please visit sdgtalks.ai Copyright © 2026. SDG Investors All rights reserved.