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Every job has its ups and downs, but sometimes it just isn't worth it to stick around. I'm currently in one of the "down" points with my current job and debating whether or not to start testing the waters for something else.

What are your experiences? How did you know it was time to leave? Do you ultimately feel like it was the right decision?

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This is a good question, +1 – Jonas Gulle Sep 26 '08 at 17:20

72 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

Simple rule: Love it, change it or leave it. If I find, that despite my very best efforts I cannot (re-)shape my job into one I enjoy, I consider changing jobs.

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vote up 2 vote down

Your boss insists on not only telling you what to do, but how to do it. When your job needs two descriptions. When it's obvious that your company doesn't care about its employees.

Examples:

  1. I had a boss one time who told me to write a script to test our new web app. When I suggested I write it in Python, a language with which I possess skill and experience, he told me that if I write it in a language only I understand, then if I leave no one can maintain it. Therefore, I should write it in C# - a language I had no experience in whatsoever - which would have increased the time to write the app by an order of magnitude (since I already had half of it written from another project).

  2. I worked for a record company as a system administrator - but I was also tasked with converting audio and video to put online, send to producers, send out to media, etc. There is no way to describe both of these with a single title or description, and the mission-critical work I was doing in the former position was constantly being interrupted by people in the latter.

  3. Management had asked the secretary in October to schedule a Christmas party, and so she booked us (~8 people and 'plus ones') into a bar/grill. Then management decided no 'plus ones' - just employees. Then they decided no going out, but the secretary should plan something for the office, and suggested 'beer and pizza'. Then when they asked her where she was getting the pizza and she told them Panago ($17 for a large), they said it was 'too expensive' and suggested a pizza place that was well known for making people sick as a 'better deal'. When the company isn't willing to spend as much per-person on your Christmas party as people usually spent on themselves for lunch every day, it's time to book.

Generally, if you feel bored, ignored, disrespected, unchallenged, misused, or unwelcome, it's time to leave. I'd go so far as to say if you don't love your job and get along well with your coworkers, it's not the right place. You're not in the right place unless there's no question you're in the right place.

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vote up 0 vote down

When I realized there was no way to change the politics and that management would never let me do the job they hired me for: develop reliable, well thought out systems.

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vote up -3 vote down

When my boss stopped paying me and started to pack heat.

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vote up 0 vote down

When you just dont enjoy it anymore and it seems to have become a chore. A job is one thing, but a chore isnt enjoyable. A job can be enjoyable. When its a chore, a real effort, then its time to consider the options.

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vote up 60 vote down

I leave a job when Dilbert starts to seem more like a documentary than a cartoon.

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vote up 0 vote down

It may be time to leave when over 50% of the workforce has been laid off in the past year and a half and everytime you hear something from your boss he only mentions more budget cuts. When other workers who are already probably looking for other jobs are getting annual pay raises and you don't. When you find yourself stuck with monotonous boring projects that rot your brain. When you have to work with a codebase/application that isn't fit to be used by a dead man and aren't rewarded or appreciated for it.When you are micromanaged instead of trusted to do your job then yeah it may be time.

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vote up 9 vote down

A few reasons:

  • I had to drink a beer at lunch each day just to make it through the day.
  • I had a headache each day when coming into and leaving work.
  • I started going gray at 25... seriously.
  • I had an electrical engineer that was my manager that didn't understand why coding took such a long time.
  • Had daily 8 hour meetings to discuss processes that were then ignored by the other developers the next day.
  • Had 6 developers in my group that each had their own way of doing things, and would not explain or entertain that things could be done better differently.
  • My pre-ee boss got fired for telling us all to F* off in a meeting with other managers.
  • I was hired in February and didn't start coding on a project until the end of May(all the days in between were full of me doing documentation on a project I didn't understand and 8 hour meetings during the day about processes, which I addressed above)

Man what a nightmare.

It was the best idea for me to leave as now I'm in a wonderful company that takes time to explain what they're doing and why, they take new ideas under consideration and encourage us to all learn new technologies and try to apply them to our current jobs. I've stopped going gray and now I don't need to drink during lunch to make it through the day. I also work with some truly amazing people and I wouldn't leave it for the world.

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vote up 5 vote down

It's time to leave when the job no longer offers the following attributes:

  • variety
  • appropriate and flexible challenges
  • clear goals
  • immediate feedback
  • a sense that one's skills are appropriate to cope with the challenges at hand
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vote up 2 vote down

I knew it was time to leave when I asked to write code in a proprietary scripting language my company had developed. There was no market for this skill so staying in that position would only limit my career. (You should always be trying to expand your career via either breadth or depth, whichever works best for you.)

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vote up 0 vote down

When the experience you're gaining at the current job isn't helping you to get the next job or helping you to start your own business.

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vote up 18 vote down

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/26763/when-do-you-decide-to-walk

If you wake up every morning and want to kill yourself rather than go to work, then you've waited too long. Seriously. I was in this position, and I was so happy after I bailed, and regretted that I hadn't done it much earlier. I think for many people, the inertia of having "security" is so high that they will stay in a bad place for much too long.

Other factors

  • a better opportunity comes along
  • your skillset is stagnating at the current job

Be cautious about taking an opportunity just because it's more money. In some cases it may be a good idea, but you may also find out that you're highly paid to do something that is soul crushing.

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vote up 7 vote down

I once read that overtime was defined as "time over 40 hours when one is working and does not want to do so".

Similarly, I think it is time to seriously consider leaving if one does not want to work the first, base 40 hours over a period of 3-4 months. Anyone can have a bad week, and our enthusiasm often has an ebb and flow, but if the malaise sets in for an extended period, then it is time to ponder and prioritize. Life is short.

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vote up 0 vote down

When I realized it wasn't going to get any better (crazy hours, lack of people, low pay) despite trying to work within the system, and that even the small steps taken to placate me somehow were supposed to make me phenomenally grateful.

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vote up 1 vote down

When the boss is emptying all of the wastebaskets out instead of the cleaning people.

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vote up 18 vote down

When I watched "Office Space," I laughed hard, then realized I was laughing at my own predicament.

When your job is parodied in a movie, it's time to move on.

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vote up 11 vote down

The first thing to remember is that the grass is not always greener. A lot of times, you'll find the same issues/people can exist in other companies as well.

That said, you should know the reasons why you want to leave so you won't have to face those in your next position. Ask yourself: What do you want from your job? Can you current employer provide that for you? If not, what do you want from your next job?

This will help you figure out if you should stay or not. Good luck and most importantly, keep your confidence up.

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vote up 4 vote down

When you see the boat is headed for the iceberg, warn them about this and they are too busy fiddling with their MS Project file...

When they give you a cheap pleather portfolio for Christmas and the boss who did nothing gets a cash bonus and a pat on the back....

When they stick matrix managers (who have no domain knowledge) in your requirements review so that there are enough reviewers to meet the required minimum number of people...

When you argue with a dimwit 'Software Manager' for 30 minutes because they've got a "3 space indent" rule that is their pet issue but they don't care that stuff doesn't compile on any box but the original developer's...

it's time.

(All these things happened to me.)

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vote up 1 vote down

I left because I felt unappreciated and underpaid. I was also getting really crappy projects to work on, and the whole bureaucratic system was pretty much broken, as the programmers were the only people who were expected to follow the SDLC. Most of my co-workers from that time have since left the company.

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vote up 1 vote down

Well, when I left my first job is was when I woke up and realized I was making minimum wage writing legacy applications when I could learn more, put my skills to better use outside the company and make more money doing it. We didn't have source control, and our development systems were consistently down or our favourite editor wasn't able to run on them.

When I left my first, real, salaried position it was more of a location question. Where I was, there were no other technology companies. Zilch, nada, none. I knew that to stay competitive I had to move, and it helped that my wife wanted to move. ;) To add to that though, I was out growing the team. I needed to learn more, and that just wasn't in the companies' budget or on its radar. With production servers grinding to a halt and version control getting messy it was time to move on.

Both of those companies I highly respect, and strongly believe they will do very well in the years to come. Growing pains come with the small company lifestyle, but so do good relationships.

Disclaimer: I no longer work for a small company, and the last time I wrote my own freelance work was at least a year ago. I'm quite content at the moment learning everything I can from .NET to Oracle and it looks like I'll be sticking around for quite awhile, despite that urge to create my own start up and live like Kevin Rose.


As far as making the right decision goes, I would have to say that I definitely missed the fast paced 'do or die' environment for awhile. I also quit just before the first company I mentioned sold their start up to Yahoo which hurt a little. Still, in the end it was the best thing I could do for my schooling and career at the time.

The second time around, well, I wouldn't be where I am without that company but I also wouldn't be here if I hadn't left. I learned a ton working with them, and that really helped when I moved to where I am now. Was it the best decision? When I find out, I'll let you know. :)

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vote up 0 vote down

When you have been administrating computers for more than three months instead of coding software, it's definitely time for leaving the job!!!

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vote up 1 vote down

When you find your job too easy to be done, challenges too trivial and your boss irritates you cause you make your job so well you can browse stackoverflow :)

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vote up 2 vote down

A couple jobs ago: When they ran out of money to pay my salary.

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vote up 2 vote down

In almost all cases, I left jobs because I was bored. Hi-tech stress I can handle, boredom I cannot.

Oh, and working with jerks. That's another good reason to quit.

Or working for jerks.

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vote up 0 vote down

I think it is a combination of where the the company is going, where you are going within the company, what learning and otherwise getting from being employed. The last company I worked for I was at for 8 years, and when I left it was because I did not see the company going anywhere (revenue was down 25% on the last quarter I was there), others were leaving so I did not see any management opportunity and helping lay-off people is not a lot of a fun, and while I was still early on the learning curve in the group that I had joined it did not feel like enough of a draw for me.

I hope that helps.

/Allan

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vote up 1 vote down

When after a year of 16+ hour days, 7 days a week working my ass off to try and make the project that was my baby a success despite crap pay and terrible commitment from the company, the boss bumped into me in the hall and said something like:

"Yeah, I understand you've been doing a few extra hours."

From that moment on, I decided to work for myself and have never looked back!

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vote up 97 vote down

In no particular order:

  1. If you are not being challenged anymore, or feel you have nothing more to contribute to the company.
  2. If there is an unresolvable personnel conflict that is affecting your day to day happiness and/or productivity at work
  3. If you don't really care about the success/failure of the company you are working for.
  4. If you really dread going to work in the morning more often than not.
  5. If work is taking over your personal life and is the only thing on your mind most of the time.
  6. If you're asking yourself if it is time to leave!
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vote up 0 vote down

I have never willfully left a job. Strange, I know - but my first employer went bankrupt, and my second employer didn't receive enough funding from the gov't to keep me on as a contractor. Now I am with quite a large organization so hopefully things will stay solid.

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vote up 1 vote down

I used to have a telecommuting job. I had been working for almost a year, when thoughts about leaving began growing on me. The work was to maintain a badly-written MFC application. Eventually I left, and what’s interesting, on the employer’s initiative. They said the project was no longer as profitable as it used to. I still wonder whether that was the true reason, but I switched to freelancing and it has been quite interesting and challenging ever since. The former employers afterwards invited me to rejoin them but I declined.

Get yourself an account on a freelance site and try it out.

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vote up 3 vote down

How did I know it was time to leave? When I discussed it with my boss, and he replied "what's taking you so long?".

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