Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Dont Quit Your Job Until Youve Accepted a New One
Dont Quit Your Job Until Youâve Accepted a New One Dont Quit Your Job Until Youâve Accepted a New One Have you ever been tempted to quit your job even though you donât have another one lined up yet? Maybe youâre sure youâre about to get an offer, or maybe you just canât stand working for your current boss. It can be tempting to give your notice on the spot, but it can also be an enormous mistake if you donât have another job formally locked in yet. Hereâs why you should never resign from your job until you have an official job offer â" one that youâve finished negotiating and have accepted. 1. It might take you a lot longer than you think to find a new job. If you expect to find another job within a couple of months, think again. Finding another job can take a long time â" often much longer than job seekers expect. In fact, in this market, itâs not uncommon for a job search to take a year or more. That means if you quit your job without first securing another, you might end up with a large gap on your resume, which can make it harder to get hired. It can also drain your savings and leave you in a precarious financial position â" one where the pressure to find another job will quickly become greater than ever. 2. It's much easier to get another job when you're still employed. Rightly or wrongly, most employers prefer to hire people who are already employed. Many assume that people who quit their jobs without another lined up did so because they were either fired or about to be fired. Or they may think the candidate walked away when things got tough, which worries managers, because every job has challenges. That doesnât mean itâs an instant deal-breaker, but itâs highly likely to raise questions from employers and potentially make your job search harder. 3. The job offer youâre counting on might fall through. Sometimes job seekers are so sure that an offer is forthcoming that they go ahead and give notice to their current employers. Sometimes this works out just fine, but other times it ends badly when the offer falls through. And if youâve already given notice, your current employer may have already made plans to replace you, or they might not be willing to let you rescind your notice â" which can leave you without the old or new job. Because of that risk, you should never resign until you have an official offer in hand from your new employer â" not a promise that an offer is coming, not very good signs that seem like theyâre leading somewhere â" but an actual, formal offer. Better yet, wait until youâve accepted that formal offer, because otherwise itâs possible that your negotiations could fall apart. 4. You might not pass the background check. Sometimes an employer might tell you that a new job is a done deal, but youâll notice fine print in the offer letter that says itâs contingent on you passing a background check or reference check. Even if youâre confident both of those will go fine, thatâs never guaranteed. Sometimes mistakes are made in background checks, or a reference call doesnât go quite the way you assumed it would. Until any contingencies like these are cleared, your offer could still hit a snag, which means you might not want to risk resigning your job at this stage. Perhaps a new employer pressures you to give notice while the offer still has contingencies attached to it. In that case, explain that while you donât expect any problems with references or in the background check, youâre not comfortable giving notice until the offer is finalized. You can say something like, âAs soon as the offer is firm and without contingencies, Iâll be able to give my employer two weeks notice. But I canât resign my job until the new one is certain.â Are there any times when itâs OK to resign without a new job? There are a few limited circumstances when it might make sense to quit your job before youâve secured a new one: if youâre being subjected to egregiously abusive or harassing treatment, if your safety is being compromised or if youâre being pressured to do anything illegal, unethical or unsafe. But aside from those limited cases, youâre far better off job searching while youâre still employed. Alison Green writes the popular Ask a Manager blog, where she dispenses advice on career, job search and management issues. She's the author of âHow to Get a Job: Secrets of a Hiring Manager,â co-author of âManaging to Change the World: The Nonprofit Manager's Guide to Getting Resultsâ and the former chief of staff of a successful nonprofit organization, where she oversaw day-to-day staff management.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.