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I have a job offer for a Software Engineer position for a tech company. The thing is, is that I plan to go to grad school next fall, so I would only be able to work with them for 8 months. Will that look bad on my resume if I only work there for 8 months and quit, and do you think the company will be upset if I left them so early...without warning?

Thanks.

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What are you studying at grad school? – cletus Oct 23 at 3:10
@cletus, does that matter? – Robert Harvey Oct 23 at 3:13
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Of course it matters. – cletus Oct 23 at 3:20
Only if he's studying underwater basket weaving. Then he can decide not to go. Otherwise the correct decision does not change. He comes clean with the company and goes to grad school with or without the 8 month job. – Robert Harvey Oct 23 at 3:23
If he's good and company is smart they will offer to pay for the grad school and keep him. Go for it, man! – DroidIn.net Oct 23 at 3:57
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closed as not programming related by Thilo, Michael Petrotta, OMG Ponies, Robert Harvey, Greg Hewgill Oct 23 at 4:00

4 Answers

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No worries - I had 15 jobs in past 10 years, some as short as 3 months. It looks fine on my resume. My excuse? I'm a consultant. But this is one of my selling points - diversity of projects I've been involved with. You have a perfect explanation for duration of your engagement, I don't see how anyone can hold it against you. As for the company "being upset" - oh, well - tell them that you will come back after school if they would give you 20K raise

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I hate to agree with this, but there are A LOT of companies that aren't "playing nice" these day...you need to look out for YOUR best interests. The 8-months pay of a "real job" will help out in school...not to mention, you can't really predict the future, can you? – Dan Oct 23 at 3:24
How do you explain to the next company why you only worked there for 8 months? Do you lie to them too? – Robert Harvey Oct 23 at 3:25
"... I plan ..." I bet there are a lot of people who planned on retiring in 2008 or 2009 and are still working. Plans change. Circumstances change. After 6 months of working, Joel may like the real $$$ and decide to skip grad school. Or he might not get accepted where he REALLY wants to go. Or he may decide to go to grad-school part time in the evening. – Dan Oct 23 at 3:30
If there's no commitment by either party (especially if he has to sign an "at will" employment agreement), then I will concede the point. – Robert Harvey Oct 23 at 3:33
I never lied to any company I work for dear Robert. I'm very loyal to mu customers too. Plus I don't tell guy to lie, please don't put your words in my mouth. What I'm saying - companies are worry about their profits and their business way more that they worry about you, so I wouldn't loose sleep over his dilemma – DroidIn.net Oct 23 at 3:34
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Along with the previous responses: Working will give you experience that people will look at later. It will also give you a sampling of what working for that company is like.

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Be honest with them. It takes a few months to ramp a developer up to speed, so if you don't tell them that you're planning on leaving after 8 months, the company definitely wouldn't be happy about. Maybe they have an "intern" type position, or maybe you could do part time work during school. It's definitely better to be up front about it. You don't want to burn any bridges this early in your career.

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Yes, it certainly would be nice to "be honest"; but keep in mind that doing so may cost you the job. Unless you have to sign a contract, I'd keep your future plans to yourself. No, this isn't very "nice", but that's life in the business world. – Dan Oct 23 at 3:38
True, but I find that it really is a small world and you never know which of these people you might work for in the future. Is 8 months of pay really worth ruining some connections? – Jeff Storey Oct 23 at 3:42
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Here's a good litmus test: if you would feel funny about what you are doing if you're mother read about it in the newspaper, then it's probably not a good idea. – Robert Harvey Oct 23 at 3:47
Robert, I think that's great advice. If only more people lived by that. – Jeff Storey Oct 23 at 3:52
@Robert: that seems like a good way to cut right to the chase. – Dan Oct 23 at 3:54
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Tell the company you can only work for them for 8 months. That way, they won't be upset, and you can note to future employers that this is what you and the company agreed to.

It seems a little underhanded to take the job, work for them for 8 months under a false pretense, and then leave without warning.

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And twice this year I saw a bunch of co-workers get shown the door "without warning" that it was going to happen specifically to them. – Dan Oct 23 at 4:00

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