The Proper Way to Resign
by Bill Radin
Congratulations. You’ve accepted a new job.
Now take a deep
breath and prepare yourself for the challenge ahead. Even though
you may be floating on cloud nine now, there are a lot of emotional
and logistical hurdles yet to clear.
As you’ve already learned, the job-changing process arouses
all sorts of feelings. During the transitional phase, which begins
with your acceptance of an offer and ends a month or two after you’ve
started your new position, the emotional limbo you’ll experience
will be especially acute. Why? Because suddenly, the reality kicks
in. After all this time, the changes you’ve been contemplating
are actually going to happen.
This jolting realisation will be followed
by a sense of guilt. Oh, my God, you tell yourself. I’ve been
cheating on my present employer. Having an affair is one thing --
but divorce? I never knew it would come to this! Then the fear of
reprisal begins. My boss is gonna kill me, I just know it. He’s
really gonna make me suffer.
And if the fear of guilt and reprisal
don’t give you enough to worry about, consider the buyer’s
remorse you’ll probably feel. What if I made a mistake? you
ask yourself. I’m gonna ruin my life. Aaauuuggghhh!
Don’t
Let the Demons Get You Down
Relax. Everyone who changes jobs is plagued
by these demons, to a greater or lesser degree. It’s only natural.
But rather than dwell on the past, imagine for a moment that you’re
in your new job.
Isn’t this great? Think of all the changes
you’re making and how your new life is a huge improvement compared
to what you had before. Think of the new people you’re meeting,
the new skills you’re acquiring and the new opportunities you
have to advance your career.
Now, are you going to let your fears
unravel everything you’ve accomplished in the way of self-evaluation,
planning, resume writing, interviewing, and putting a deal together?
No way. You’re not the type of person who’s going to
allow cold feet to put the chill on changing jobs. You’re a
person of action and you seize the moment. You know that those who
back away from golden opportunities may never get another chance.
Self-affirmations
like these can do wonders for maintaining your positive energy
and high self-esteem. And by projecting all the beneficial aspects
of
your new job into the present tense, you’ll ward off the demons
that can distort your judgment, and make you vulnerable to a counteroffer
attempt.
Considering the Counteroffer
Of course, if your motivation for getting a job offer was to position
yourself for a counteroffer, then you’re in the catbird’s
seat -- you can’t lose either way.
Or can you? Some employment
experts point out that accepting a counteroffer is the equivalent
of career suicide. According to Paul Hawkinson, publisher of
The Fordyce Letter, your acceptance of a counteroffer could very
well
blow up in your face.
Here’s how. Let’s say you announce your plans to leave
your current job. This, in effect, blackmails your boss, who makes
you a counteroffer only to keep you until he can find your replacement,
at which point you’re dropped like a hot potato. In the meantime,
the trusting relationship you’ve enjoyed with your current
supervisors and peers abruptly ends and your loyalty becomes forever
suspect.
Is this sort of scenario accurate? Well, that depends. Actual
experience has been mixed. That is, some candidates who have accepted
counteroffers have remained at their old jobs for years and have
smoothed over whatever difficulties caused their split in the first
place. However, there’s a lot of evidence to support the theory
that candidates who accept counteroffers become damaged goods once
they’ve been herded back into the fold.
Here Come the Three
Stages
If your intention to make a change is sincere and a counteroffer
by your current company won’t change your decision to leave,
you should still keep up your guard. A counteroffer attempt can be
potentially devastating, both on a personal and professional level.
Unless you know how to diffuse your current employer’s retaliation
against your resignation, you may end up psychologically wounded,
or right back at the job you wanted to leave.
The best way to shield
yourself from the inevitable mixture of emotions surrounding
the act of submitting your resignation is to remember that employers
follow a predictable, three-stage pattern when faced with a resignation:
- They’ll be in shock. "You sure picked a fine time to leave!
Who’s going to finish the project we started?"
The implication
is that you’re irreplaceable. They might as well ask, "How
will we ever get the work done without you?"
To answer this assertion,
you can reply, "If I were run over by a truck on my
way to work tomorrow, I feel that somehow, this company would
survive."
- They’ll start to probe. "Who’s the new company?
What sort of position did you accept? What are they paying
you?"
Here
you must be careful not to disclose too much information,
or appear too enthusiastic. Otherwise, you run the risk of feeding
your current
employer with ammunition he can use against you later,
such as, "I’ve
heard some pretty terrible things about your new company" or, "They’ll
make everything look great until you actually get there. Then you’ll
see what a sweat shop that place really is."
- They’ll make
you an offer to try and keep you from leaving. "You
know that raise you and I were talking about a few months
back?
I forgot to
tell you: We were just getting it processed yesterday."
To this
you can respond, "Gee, today you seem pretty concerned
about my happiness and well-being. Where were you yesterday,
before
I announced my intention to resign?"
It may take several days for the three stages to run their course,
but, sooner or later, you’ll find yourself engaged in conversations
similar to these. Armed with this foreknowledge, you will not only
be prepared for the counteroffer attempt, you may find the whole
sequence comical in its predictability.
How to Tactfully Resign
The first thing you need to consider is the timing of your resignation.
Make sure your resignation properly coincides with your start date
at the new company.
You should always try to avoid an extended start date. Even if
your new job begins in 10 weeks, don’t give 10 weeks’ notice;
wait eight weeks and then give two weeks’ notice (if you two
weeks is the required notice time you have to give). This way, you’ll
protect yourself from disaster, in the unlikely event your new company
announces a hiring freeze a month before you come on board.
And by
staying at your old job for only a couple of weeks after you’ve
announced your resignation, you won’t be subjected to the envy,
scorn, or feelings of professional impotence that may result from
your new role as a lame-duck employee.
Your resignation should be
handled in person, preferably on a Friday afternoon. Ask your
direct supervisor if you can speak with him or her privately in their
office.
- When you announce your intention to resign, you should also hand
your supervisor a letter that states your last date of employment
with the company.
- Let them know that you’ve enjoyed working with them, but that
an opportunity came along that you couldn’t pass up.
- Also tell
that your decision to leave was made carefully and doesn’t
reflect any negative feelings you have toward the company or
the staff.
- You should also add that your decision is final and that you
would prefer not to be made a counteroffer, since you wouldn’t
want your refusal to accept more money to appear as a personal
affront.
- Let
your supervisor know that you appreciate all the company’s
done for you and that you’ll do everything in your power
to make your departure as smooth and painless as possible.
- Finally, ask
if there’s anything that you can do during the transition
period (until you leave), such as help train your successor,
tie up loose
ends, or delegate tasks.
Keep your resignation letter short, simple
and to the point. There’s no need to go into detail about your
new job, or what led to your decision to leave. If these issues are
important to your old employer, he’ll schedule an exit interview
for you, at which time you can hash out your differences ad infinitum.
Make
sure to provide a copy of your resignation letter for your company’s
personnel file. This way, the circumstances surrounding your resignation
will be well documented for future reference.
In all likelihood, the
human resource staff will want to meet with you to process your
departure papers, or cover any questions you may have, like the transfer
of
your superannuation.
Culture Shock and Task Clarity
At last, you’ve arrived! Welcome aboard.
In the beginning, your
new job may seem overwhelming. After all, there are new people
to meet, new systems to learn, new schedules to keep and new personalities
to adjust to. In many ways, culture shock might be the best way
to
describe your first week.
The real key to early success with your new company boils down
to the issue of task clarity. Task clarity refers not to your ability
to do a certain job, but to your understanding of how the job’s
defined. Task clarity is dependent upon the quality of communication
between you and the person assigning the task. Any breakdown of task
clarity will result in frustration or poor performance, or worse.
To
illustrate, here is the story of John, a technical writer, who
was placed with a high tech company. Three weeks after John started
in
his new position, the recruiter called John to ask him how everything
was going.
"
Fine," John answered. "They love me here. I’ve completed
the documentation on everything they’ve assigned me."
Later
that day, the recruiter placed a call to John’s boss, expecting
him to heap praise on him for his recruiting genius. Boy, was he
in for a surprise!"
Bill, I’m afraid I have some bad news
for you," said the manager. "I’m going to fire John
this afternoon. It looks like we’ll have to start the search
all over again."
"Really? What seems to be the problem?"
"
John hasn’t produced any of the documentation we need for our
customers and we have to get the work done to meet our deadline.
If John can’t do the work, I’ll have to find someone
who can."
"That’s odd," said the recruiter. "I
talked to John this morning and he’s under the impression that
the documentation he’s producing is exactly what you asked
for. When was the last time the two of you sat down to discuss his
assignment?"
"Oh gosh," replied the manager, "it
must have been about three weeks ago, right after he started
to work here."
"
Well then, let me make a suggestion. The two of you should talk this
through, because there’s obviously been a communication breakdown.
As far as John’s concerned, he’s doing a terrific job
based on his perception of the assignment."
Changing Jobs:
A New Beginning
A simple failure to communicate the task clearly in the beginning
had almost resulted in John’s termination three weeks after
he started his new job.
Fortunately, after the recruiter’s call
to the employer, John and his boss sat down to discuss the project.
The assignment was quickly clarified, and John went on to complete
the documentation that was needed to meet the deadline.
If you’re
working with a recruiter, make sure he or she keeps in touch with
the company, to monitor your progress.
You owe it to your career to
sharpen your task clarity. Ask for a weekly review for the first
month or so of your employment and try not to let things get
set on automatic pilot, especially in the beginning.
With a little bit of planning, you can make a smooth transition
from one job to the next.
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