Should YOU Quit Your Job?
Prashant Srivastava
CEO at WE-Matter| Top 10 Global Employee Engagement Consultants| CEO on a Mission| Ex CEO Gallup India| Ex Partner Aon Hewitt Engagement and Culture| Ex Group CHRO Reliance Group|
Building a career with one company is ideal. Though, it is rare in today’s context. ?
I was reflecting on my experience. I always wanted to remain with one company but there was a catch. I graduated during the recession. If your first job is not?the right one, it takes a few job switches and a few years before your career is back on track. Once on track, I thought this was my last destination. But as luck would have it, I switched jobs thrice again and finally?decided to create jobs rather than seek jobs.?
In every job, there were bottlenecks that were difficult to address and prompted switch to further my career. In one of the companies I worked for, I had a brilliant leader from whom I learnt a lot. However, he didn’t demonstrate the intent to grow the business. As a result, confidence in the company’s growth amongst the team?was low. The attrition rate was high as people did not see career growth. It became a training ground.?
While I tried to provide feedback to the leader, it was to no avail. ?
I stayed with the company for 5 years and managed 6-fold growth with all the limitations. Further growth was almost impossible. Finally, I left. ?
In this battle of build vs switch, what remained my top priority was building a worthwhile career with ample growth opportunities.?
Certainly, in a perfect world, you might end up working for one company throughout your life. But sometimes certain situations force us to switch. In my case, it was either limited/ negative growth going forward or a strategy that did not fit?with the needs of the client. ?
Broadly there can be 4 major reasons why one must switch jobs:?
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In case the reason is the last one, you can try to switch teams within the organization. You will save on the equity that you have built in the organization. But if it is one or a combination of the other three reasons, then you must?switch.
People usually do not switch for money. But they get paid more when they switch. If you want to?switch for money only, please think it through. It will average out over time.?
?If you are planning to switch, please answer the following:?
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A. Growth?
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B. Learning?
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C. Day to day survival?
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If most of these answers are negative, it is time to hit the highway. If it is a balance between the positive and negative it requires careful evaluation vis-a-vis what you want. ?
Else, think through why you are switching jobs. Is it just because some of your friends have left? Decisions taken under peer pressure may not work out well for you over time.?
It is always ideal to stick with a company to harness the equity that you have built. However, when there are valid reasons, as mentioned above, switch sooner than later. Knowing when to leave a job is an act of self-improvement and courage, embrace it. Cheers!?
NB: If you find it useful, please repost it to help your friends. Thanks.?
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CEO at WE-Matter| Top 10 Global Employee Engagement Consultants| CEO on a Mission| Ex CEO Gallup India| Ex Partner Aon Hewitt Engagement and Culture| Ex Group CHRO Reliance Group|
7 个月Thanks Ajith Nair for sharing it.
Executive Director at Refyne Finance Private Limited | Deputy General Manager (Retd.) Special Audits and Investigation at State Bank of India
7 个月Worthy guiding learning message, thx for sharing.
President-India Business at W.E.-Matter | ex-Director at ZingHR | ex-Sales Leader at IBM Kenexa | ex-Senior Consultant at Aon Hewitt | ex-Associate Partner at Gallup
7 个月Very helpful!
Entrepreneur | Executive Director | Managing Partner | Strategic Decision Management Professional | Expert Coach | Process Excellence Guide | Sustainability and Safety Champion | Six Sigma Black Belt | IGBC AP
7 个月The Article is a piece of real life experience and I understand, many of us will relate to it. Instead of getting into too many questions and answers mode, my simple say is, it's always better to create a job rather than seeking a job. And while we plan to do so, it's not that we get approval from our bosses within any organisations and follow the hiring numbers to be filled from the market. Rather, we have to be our own boss, evaluate the market demand and then arrange for the right resources for the market. There are plenty of training and skill development institutions who all are doing a great job nowadays to upskill resources before they jump into the job market. We can do many things to collaborate and have more and more jobs in the market. To be very honest, India has all the potential to reduce its unemployment to zero. It's possible and a proper planning with right thinking can lead us to this goal. we have this capabilities, however, we need to check whether all benefitting groups of unemployment will let us do this and they will be open for countries development first, rather than their hidden interests.