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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

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Once I left a job without having another job offer. That was a bad idea.

Look around, apply for jobs that sound interesting, if nothing comes up, you might realize your current situation isn't that bad. What's more likely is that you'll be able, eventually, to find something that suits you better, and possibly even get paid more. If you do get another job offer, might as well ask your current employer for whatever you need to stay ( a big raise, better benefits, better tools, a better chair, etc.) If they give it to you, great, if not, then maybe they'll think about treating the next developer at least a little better.

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When the users keep a 'secret' list of what developer goes with what app, so they can skip the helpdesk and call you direct.

When the majority of your daily job is maintaining a 'mission critical' VBA Access '97 app, while the rest of office suite is 2000/2003.

When you get into the office in the morning, look at your inbox, and want to bang your head against the wall. Bonus point: Series of emails from user after regular working hours wondering why you're not responding to the help request they put in.

When given an existing application to maintain, and nobody is sure how it works, the original designer no longer works with the company, there is no documentation, no code comments, and you've got a two week deadline to make some upgrades.

Eventually, these factors drove me to find greener pastures. And I found one!

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When they called from the parent company in California one Friday and said, "Tell everybody they don't need to come to work on Monday. We're closing the doors."

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It is time to leave if you feel like you've peaked where you are. That instead of growing and improving yourself, you are just going through the motions. Then it is time to seriously start looking for another job. If your co-workers are looking for a job and the people you liked at the company initially have left, it can be time to move on.

I do think there is something to be said for knowing what you want in the new workplace, what warning signs do you have that a position at company ABC wouldn't work for you. For example, do you like having lots of autonomy and the ability to be off in your little world? If so, then an agile place doing SCRUM is likely not a good fit. What kinds of technology would you like to use? What kinds of work with that technology do you like? For example, C# can be used for back-end, middleware or front-end pieces and what strengths you bring is something to note as well as what interest you'd have to help the company do better.

If the company is losing money so badly that it has sold off all its assets and the company buying them, doesn't offer you employment, this is a sign to move on. Some of us in the dot-com days may remember when companies were losing hundreds of thousands of dollars each quarter.

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You know it's time to leave your job when you're beginning to ask questions like that ... ;)

Seriously, if you wonder about whether or not you're "done" with your current job then you're probably just making excuses for sticking out due to fear of change...!

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

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I left all my previous jobs when the rate at which I was learning stuff slowed down. Apart from my first job where I got out as soon as possible, because it was terrible.

I spent 1 year at my first job, 2 years at the second, and 5 years at the third. I'm not running my own company, and learning a LOT.

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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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When the company sends an email with a subject 'Transformation Plans'... That's when you start positioning yourself for a new job :) If you feel you are not learning anything new in your current position then I think it is time to jump to a new position. Because in IT industry you have to learn something new every day otherwise you are behind the game.

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  • What are your experiences?

I left my first job out of college in 1995. I left because "I wanted to work at an Internet company." True story. I also left because my project at that job was transitioning, and it felt like the right time.

I left my second job in 2001 (yes, at an Internet company) because the company was contracting (i.e. massive layoffs). I was promoted into management, then had to let go people. I then volunteered to be laid off (i.e. I took the "package"). It took me a month to find another position in that job climate. When I got back into the job scene, I was no longer a manager, but an "individual contributor."

I left my third job in 2004 because the position was one that I had already done before (technical support). Also, the company's products were a mixture of hardware and software, but the software was very low-level (C, low-level math libraries, etc.). I wasn't very happy with these technologies (even though my first job was largely C programming, and I loved it then). I frankly wanted to be doing "more modern" technology (i.e. Java. .NET, XML).

I haven't left my fourth job yet.

  • How did you know it was time to leave?

The common thread to a lot of the above is "desiring to learn more." I think as long as I'm learning and feeling challenged by the problems, and as long as I'm enjoying the challenge, then it's not time to leave yet.

  • Do you ultimately feel like it was the right decision?

After each departure, it totally felt like the right decision. I'm grateful for this question giving me the opportunity to think back on those past choices. They were good decisions.

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I knew it was time to leave my last full-time job when, after several discussions about telecommuting, my boss told me "I'm fine with you working from home, but upper management says that, if you're their employee, they want you working in their building. So what do you think about becoming an outside vendor instead of an employee? Would $X/hour be OK?" where $X was roughly five times my then-current hourly wage.

I knew it was time to leave the one before that when they had a meeting on the 9th of the month to tell everyone that they wouldn't be able to pay us on time on the 15th, then called everyone at home a week later to say that they'd decided to reduce the company's size from 20-some employees to 7 and they were looking for volunteers to be laid off.

Three jobs ago, we finally get to one that I basically decided to leave on my own. They were bought out by a multinational holding company and the corporate culture shifted considerably over the 2-3 months following the acquisition. I stayed long enough to be sure that I truly didn't like what the company was turning into (as opposed to simply being prejudiced against larger organizations) and then I turned in my notice.

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When I added up how my time was spent during a usual week, divided into two columns; time spent doing my job, and time spent calling, emailing, visiting, and yelling at other people to do their jobs. It came out 20% - 80%. I quit the next month.

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you added the entire IT department to your spam filter along with the word URGENT 6 months ago and have not regretted it.

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When you know longer want to go into work then it is time to look. Why stay somewhere you do not enjoy?

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My first job was at a consulting company as a hired-out worker. The contract for hiring me has been renewed from time to time. But then the end of the project was in sight. From that time on, I asked my boss, what will come up next for me. Because he wasn't able to give me an answer within three months, I decided to leave this job and look for something else.

My opinion is, that it's always better to quit a job by yourself than to wait for being fired.

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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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If you're doing it for the money, you'll always be underpaid. In other words, if the only reason you are doing if is for the paycheck, it's time to polish the resume.

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When the CEO lies to your face, constantly misunderstands your motivations, and then proceeds to act incredibly unethically.

I'm a graduate student, and my employment was contingent on being able to publish the academically interesting aspects of my work. The CEO had agreed to that (in writing!), but when it came time to sign the copyright release notice, he balked, and stated that it was his company's IP and he wouldn't release it or patent it or basically allow it to be seen by the world.

So, I quit. He didn't understand my motivations for working there-- it certainly wasn't the money, it was the desire to graduate, and he set me back by about a year. I think he did it just for the sake of doing it.

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