✦ Studio Notes

We turned down a $300k retainer. Here's the math.

A six-figure retainer walked in the door. We said no. Here's the arithmetic — and why saying no is the most underrated growth strategy we have.

A calm, considered studio workspace
Photograph · Unsplash

Last spring a company offered us a retainer worth three hundred thousand dollars a year. Good budget, real brand, a logo you’d recognize. We turned it down. Our accountant did not love that week.

I want to walk through the actual math, because “we only take work we believe in” is the kind of thing every studio says and almost none of them cost out. We did. And the number that mattered wasn’t the one on the contract.

The offer, on paper

Three hundred thousand a year, eighteen months committed. On a spreadsheet it’s the best line item we’d have all year. It would have covered two salaries and a lot of anxiety. Every reason to sign was financial, and all of them were real.

The math nobody puts in the spreadsheet

Here’s what the contract didn’t show. The work was the kind we’re slow at and bored by — endless variations on a brief that had already been decided by a committee we’d never meet. It would have eaten the senior time we use to win the projects we’re actually great at.

The real cost of the yes

  • Opportunity cost: the two founder-led brands we’d then have no room to take.
  • Craft cost: our best people doing their least-best work for a year and a half.
  • Reputation cost: a portfolio filling up with work we’d never show.
  • Morale cost: the quiet drain of dreading the calendar every Monday.

The contract showed the revenue. It hid the cost. The cost was everything we’re actually good at.

Add those up and the retainer wasn’t a three-hundred-thousand-dollar gain. It was that gain minus the year of better work we couldn’t do because we were busy. Priced that way, it was a loss with a nice cover.

What “no” protects

Saying no is the only way to protect the yes. Every studio is really just a pile of choices about what not to do. The agencies we admire aren’t the ones with the most clients — they’re the ones with the most coherent body of work, and coherence is just a long series of declined opportunities.

A quiet desk with a notebook and considered notes
Every no is a yes to something else — usually the work you actually want to be known for.

How we actually decide

We run every big opportunity through three questions. Not a scorecard — a gut check we say out loud, together, before anyone gets attached to the money.

Our three questions

  • Will this be work we’d put at the front of the portfolio?
  • Will the people doing it be more alive at the end, or less?
  • Is the client buying our judgment, or just our hours?

If the answer to the third one is “just our hours,” it doesn’t matter how big the number is. We’re a judgment business wearing a design studio’s clothes. Sell the hours and you’ve sold the only thing that was ever worth buying.

The part that’s hard to say out loud

Six months after we passed, we landed two smaller projects with founders who wanted exactly what we’re best at. Together they were worth less than the retainer. They were worth far more to the studio — better work, a happier team, and the kind of portfolio that brings the next three clients through the door without a single ad.

I’m not going to pretend turning down money is always smart, or that we’d do it with a thin runway. But if you can afford to choose, choose. The no you can afford today is the reputation you can’t buy later.

Mara Okafor

Founder & Brand Director

Founded Leaping in 2014. Spends most of her time arguing teams toward a single sentence they can stand behind.

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