Why is it Important to Leave Your Employers on Good Terms?
Elizabeth Houghton
Career Transition Coach | Job Search Mentor | Follow Your Path | Success on Your Terms | Stopping that Sunday dread | Finding Fulfilment | No Fluff Approach | Love a chocolate hobnob with a cuppa ????
So, you’ve got an amazing job offer. It’s at your dream company and it has the biggest paycheck attached to it. You want to take it. But there’s a catch. You need to join tomorrow, or the job will be given to another candidate.
You haven’t told your current employer about applying for the new job. You haven’t even given your notice and put in your notice period yet. To get this amazing new job, you have to pick up the phone and tell your manager that you’re not coming to work from tomorrow. No sorry, no goodbye.
What do you do?
How employees burn their bridges
Nothing is worse for an employer than to find out that they’ve been unceremoniously dumped by an employee, without even a “Thank you for helping me in my career” or an “I’m so sorry to do this to you”. You’ll find that you’re burning more bridges than you’re constructing if you take any hasty decision to exit your firm.
It isn’t just quitting without giving any notice that’ll burn your bridges. You can end up destroying the relationships you’ve spent years building at your current company by:
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Drop that match – don’t burn your bridges after you cross them?
Being disrespectful or callous towards your ex-manager or ex-colleagues may not seem much at first because you’re leaving the firm. But this can affect you terribly on your new job as well. Here are a few reasons why:
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All companies seek references to verify a job applicant’s temperament, work ethics, and technical qualifications from their previous employer. Just imagine writing to your ex-manager, asking them to give you a reference after you’ve destroyed your relationship with them.
“Dear Previous Employer, I know I was the worst, but now I need a reference from you for my new job. Pretty please, yours regretfully.”
Sounds absolutely ridiculous, doesn’t it? No employer would indulge you in this, and it could lead to a lot of problems. For one, your employer may have forgotten all the good memories they had with you because the painful experience you left behind is still fresh in their mind. They may misrepresent you based on that. Second, they may actively discourage the new firm from hiring you because of your misbehavior.?
You will be at risk of losing the job opportunity because of such bad reports.
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Employees who have left their current employer on good terms find it infinitely easier to seek professional help from them when they need it. For one, you can request that the old company hire you back. Or, you can ask your ex-employer to put in a good word about you with a different company.
None of this will be possible if you leave behind a nasty aftertaste by being unprofessional and insensitive towards your old company.
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Finally, your entire professional (and sometimes personal) reputation will be in jeopardy when you burn your bridges after you cross them. Many industries are small, and usually, employees move companies within the same industry. Word can spread quickly and information about your actions can reach your current employer, your clients, and any other partner with who you may have to work with. Their perception of you will be tainted right from the start, and you may find that you’re not getting any opportunities in the industry anymore because of this.
Instead, being kind even when you’ve not had a great experience in your old company will only serve to make you look better. It’s important to remember that everyone keeps a close eye on how an employee leaves the firm since it indicates how you may behave with them once you come aboard. So, be careful and be kind to your old employers and always leave them on good terms.
Host of House of Impact Podcast??I A safe space for you to Heal-Grow-Expand NEW FULL EPISODES HERE ????
3 年So true! and something that I’ve learned on my years in HR and talent management!
Helping To Change The World One Lip At A Time ?? GMB/Labour Party/Retail Manager/Make Up Artist/Blogger/Trainer/Luxury Retail Store Manager
3 年I often send flowers to my old bosses if I have moved on due to moving away or been asked to help a different store. We should try to leave with the door open it doesn't need to be nasty ??
Great advice, Elizabeth Houghton.
High Performance Coach ?? Author 30 Days To Happiness?? Founder The Happiness Formula??Plan The Best Year Of Your Life on the Sunshine Coast ?? DM me’WORKSHOP’ for details.
3 年Interesting share Elizabeth Houghton
?????? I Love Travel & Hospitality ?? Ignite your BRAND ?? Supercharge your Influence ?? International Business Network & BOSS Ladies Community Leader ?? Former Interior Architect ?? Based Mum ???????? lassiezia.com
3 年So many great and relevant takeaways you have here, Awesome Elizabeth Houghton