If you're brewing smaller batch sizes or lower gravity brews and planning on doing them all within a few months of saving the yeast so that no starter is needed, then that sounds like a sound plan. Use the quart jars and don't decant until ready to use.
I brew 6 gal batches which typically require 200+B cells plus an additional amount to save off for later. I also have about 5 strains that I use fairly regularly, as well as another 4-5 strains I use less often. As a result, some of the starters I make are from yeast that was saved 6-12 months previously. After that much time, viability is often (according to the calculators, at least) around 10-20%. Assuming 20%, that means if I were to save off 100B cells, I'd only have 20B viable, whereas if I saved of 50B, I'd have 10B viable. Not much difference there, really. Either way, I still have to make a starter to get my pitch qty, so why save off a large qty of yeast if ~80% or more are going to die off before I will use again? 30B ± ~5B is usually what I end up saving off for later.