- 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.