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The Proper Way to Resign
Don't Let
the Demons Get You Down
Considering the Counteroffer
The Three Stages
How to Tactfully Resign
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 that 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 a little time, the changes you've been
contemplating are actually going to happen.
This
jolting realization 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!
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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.
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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?
I guess it depends.
My experience has been mixed.
That is, some of the candidates I've known who've
accepted counteroffers have remained at their old jobs
for years, and have smoothed over whatever difficulties
caused their split in the first place.
It's
precisely for this reason that I'm so cautious when I
work with currently employed job seekers.
I want to feel confident that their motives are
pure before we both invest a lot of time and energy in
testing the market. 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.
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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:
1.
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."
2.
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."
3.
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 believe me, sooner or later, you'll find
yourself engaged in conversations similar to these.
More than once, candidates have called me after
they've resigned, to tell me that their old company
followed the three-stage pattern exactly as I described
it. Not
only were they prepared to diffuse the counteroffer
attempt, they found the whole sequence to be almost
comical in its predictability.
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How to Tactfully Resign
The
first thing you need to consider is the timing of your
resignation.
Since two weeks' notice is considered the norm,
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.
This way, you'll protect yourself from disaster,
in the unlikely event your new company announces a
hiring freeze a month before you come onboard.
And by staying at your old job for only two 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.
Some
companies will make your exit plans for you.
I placed a candidate once whose employer had the
security guard escort him out of the building the moment
he announced his intention to go to work for a direct
competitor.
Fortunately, he was still given two weeks' pay.
Your
resignation should be handled in person, preferably on a
Friday afternoon.
Ask your direct supervisor if you can speak with
him privately in his office.
When you announce your intention to resign, you
should also hand your supervisor a letter which states
your last date of employment with the company.
Let him know that you've enjoyed working with
him, but that an opportunity came along that you
couldn't pass up, and 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 you can do
during the transition period over the next two weeks,
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.
Make sure to provide a carbon copy or photocopy of your
resignation letter for your company's personnel file.
This way, the circumstances surrounding your
resignation will be well documented for fixture
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 concerning the transfer of
your medical insurance or retirement benefits.
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