Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Quitting Your Job Is It Time
Quitting Your Job Is It Time A close friend recently expressed her confusion around whether or not the time has come to quit her job. She has a very steady job as a designer for a tech startup in New York. But lately, sheâs been feeling a bit stagnated, in part to her own work, but also due to the structure of the organization and the difficulty in getting management to sign off on decisions to move projects forward. The organization offers great benefits from a cultural perspective great reputation, high visibility projects, pretty good work-life balance for a startup, and excellent financial benefits and compensation. The downside? She doesnât feel like sheâs achieving much personal growth these days, and wonders if it might be time to look elsewhere. She feels stalled in her own work, not to mention held back by bottlenecks caused by other members on her team and within the organization things she doesnât necessarily have control over. There are two obvious ways we can look at this situation. The first itâs a stable, well-paying job with excellent benefits. What is the harm is staying around another year or so, and then re-entertaining the idea of a move? Thereâs simply too much going on right now for her to wrap her head around leaving. The second the longer she hangs in there, and the more she stalls her own professional development and progress, the less she may have to show for it and answer to in an interview. So whatâs the best option? At no point in your career is it premature to be thinking about the next step even if you started a new job yesterday. Similar to how one is advised to think about selling a company from day 1 you should be thinking about where youâre ultimately focused on going in your career. And when you start to see yourself stalling or veering off the path leading towards that goal, thatâs when itâs time to start really reevaluating the situation and weighing your options. Itâs not uncommon for projects to get stalled, and perhaps the situation will change in coming months. I advised my friend to work backwards and set a timeline for herself, and put a target date in place where if things have yet to progress then itâs time to start looking elsewhere. We agreed that for her, it made sense to look 6 months out, as things often change from quarter to quarter in her organization. Other organizations may move more quickly or slowly, so gauge your estimate based on the individual working culture of your company. The second part of that is understanding what kind of change she needs to see in order to feel confident that she will have the resources and the room to progress and grow in her role moving forward. Is the same situation likely to arise another 6 or 9 months from now, or is this just a particularly tricky time of year where projects are bottlenecked and/or progress is slowed? You also want to consider what is and what is not within your control. One of the challenges my friend was facing was that a good amount of her dissatisfaction was attributed to factors over which she had no control, i.e. other peopleâs work. Thatâs something that may or may not change, and would be difficult for her to forecast. On the other hand, if her lack of enthusiasm was due largely in part to not feeling challenged, that is a situation that could potentially be addressed by speaking to her manager and taking on more responsibility. Leaving a job or an organization can often be a tough call to make, and sometimes an uncomfortable. But you have to look both inward and outward to gather the necessary information to make that call. Look outward at the organization are things likely to change, and what is the potential for you to continue growing 6 to 12 months from now? And then look inward what kind of growth do you need to see in order to feel that youâre remaining on track toward reaching your goal? Finally, think about it this way: when approached in an interview, how will you be able to describe the last 6-12 months of your position in terms of what youâve contributed, what youâve learned, and how youâve grown?
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