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Even the most contented employee thinks about quitting from time to time, and it's often attached to news of the next record-breaking lottery jackpot. But fantasies aside, there are many factors that can signal that it's time for you to look for new opportunities. • Your work or work environment
is making you physically ill, e.g., constant stress
causing regular headaches.
• You are working in an
unsafe environment.
• You dread going to work
every day – meaning, of course, something more
serious than "I'd rather be watching my soap operas
than working a 12-hour shift."
• When your relationship
with your boss and/or coworkers has tanked and, despite
reasonable efforts, is beyond repair. In the case
of the boss, it may be something like s/he has started
freezing you out of things, or is perpetually finding
fault, so that nothing that you can do is ever satisfactory.
In the case of your coworkers, it may also be that
they're freezing you out, or that they're engaging
in activities such as bullying,
malicious gossip, sabotage, or backstabbing –
and your boss isn't doing anything about it.
• Your work conditions
change significantly for the worse, e.g., your hours
are cut drastically.
• You are being asked to
do something that is illegal, and/or compromises
your ethics and/or your license.
• You are being misled,
e.g., about promotions or salary increases that never
materialize.
• Your values clash with
your employer's values, e.g., ideas of work-life
balance, delivering quality work.
• Your employer begins
laying off staff, or is experiencing financial difficulties
that don't look like they will improve. It may be
best to get out while the getting is good, and before
the local market is flooded with people who do what
you do, and who are all looking for work.
• Your job no longer suits
you because you need benefits (e.g., flex-time, health
coverage) that it can't or won't offer.
• You want advancement,
and there is no opportunity for it.
• You're flying on autopilot
– and you don't like it. Some people
like routine, stability, and predictability, but
for those who don't, this is a sign that it's time
to look for new things. As we have mentioned before,
while sometimes the line "I'm leaving because I need
a new challenge" is little more than a cliché,
it doesn't mean it's never true.
• You're perpetually not
doing your job, e.g., your personal internet and
email use takes up most of your day, your breaks
have taken on breaks, you do superficial work, or
the minimum amount of work to avoid getting in trouble.
(After all, this is either a sign that you're –
as above – flying on autopilot, or that you
simply hate your job.) And, as mentioned in an earlier article, if you're unsure about whether you're making the right decision, seek the advice of an outsider whom you trust.
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