Must I Leave My Company to Advance My Career?
Legacy signals
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- What’s up and why now? Take your career pulse and ascertain what is going on. Ask yourself why is now different from a year ago, a week, or even an hour ago? Are you objectively or emotionally responding to a comment, event, or person?
- What are the risks of staying and or leaving? There is the saying, “the grass is greener on the other side of the fence.” But is it? Do your homework. Talk with people who are not so happy with your suitor. Ask how the potential position became available. If the answer is they have had trouble filling it or that a series of people “haven’t worked out,” don’t be so cavalier to think it will be different with you. There is a systemic problem and you probably aren’t the solution.
- Are you bored? I don’t know about you but boredom is very dangerous for me. I find myself making low percentage moves just for the exhilaration of change. That may be okay with home decorating or new restaurants, but it can be treacherous when it comes to career or relationships.
- Whom do you trust? Don Fisher, the founder of Gap, Inc., constantly said to us (I worked for the organization as a senior executive), “the devil you know is better than the devil you don’t.” In context, he always meant why hire a stranger when you can work with a current employee. I ask a similar question—“why work with a new group, supervisor, or organization, when you know the pluses and minuses of the current?” If you can’t tell me some great reasons, maybe you need to do some more soul searching.
- Do you have to move for money and promotion? This may prove to be truer in the short term. You’re wanted, so the potential employer has to pay, but will your trajectory remain? Do not join the crowd who fled for short-term gain only to find out three years later they are actually behind on salary and/or level.
- There are many more questions. I regularly ask clients to make a deal maker and deal breaker list. These are facts, numbers, perceptions and referrals that must exist before you would take a position. On the other hand there may be things that are not negotiable—75% travel or relocating to another city are on many people‘s lists. If they are part of your “never” list, make sure you are not jilted off your position for a few bucks or a title.
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(c) Jane Cranston.
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