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Prompted by the responses to How important is the environment at a job? I thought it worthwhile to pose this question:

Is it ever OK to just walk out the door and never come back? If so, under what circumstances? If not, why not?

I've never done that but I think in the first 2-3 days this isn't that unacceptable. There's no drama, no exit interviews, no meetings, no having someone supervise you while you clear out your desk, all that crap. Obviously send an email at least so they don't think you've been kidnapped.

Thoughts?

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Not programming related – Peter Morris Feb 8 at 11:18
It's as programming related as anything in stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/…. – cletus Feb 8 at 11:22
Yup, I agree. totally programming employment related, and we all like to get paid for what we do (well, most of us) – Nic Wise Feb 8 at 15:39
We had a new hire come in, spend half a day looking at the code and do exactly that. – Hates_ Feb 9 at 16:19
Totally a Real Question. I disagree with those who closed it. – abelenky Feb 9 at 17:12
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19 Answers

vote up 35 vote down

No, leaving without saying bye to at least your boss is cowardice.

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vote up 6 vote down

Most employer's ask for your last employer's details.
No doubt such a poor display would bite you in the end

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Most people would probably gloss over that. – cletus Feb 8 at 11:06
+1 also it's not ethic. – Canavar Feb 8 at 12:07
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If you were only there for 3 days, there's no way to find that it had been omitted from your resume. – recursive Feb 9 at 16:31
vote up 0 vote down

Then no lunch breaks for you at the next job :)

But seriously , when is just quitting ever a solution?

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Like I said I've never done it but I can see how people might realize very quickly they've made a huge mistake (which is also at least partly their fault for not screening the employer properly) and you just want out. – cletus Feb 8 at 11:11
ok ... then serve the notice period and get another job. How would I feel if my employer thought the same and I found that I do not have a job after I come back from lunch? – Learning Feb 8 at 11:13
Just quitting is sometimes a solution; so far, it's been a solution once in my life, and could have been two. BTW, it's perfectly legal for my employer to notify me I don't have a job when I get back from lunch, and I've been laid off before lunch. You can get used to it. – David Thornley Feb 11 at 15:44
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I've known people do that in the first few days in my (non-programming related) job. On one occasion someone went to lunch on their first day and never came back because the person who was showing him the ropes had bullied him at school. I'd agree that in the first few days that's probably acceptable but it's just basic politeness that you let them know otherwise they might think you'd gone missing or something. Even if you just ring them the next day and say "sorry I really didn't like it there and I won't be back", that's OK. If you've been there years it's a lot less acceptable.

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vote up 12 vote down

If you have signed a contract you will have some obligations. There may be a question over whether they will enforce it or you will be bound by it, but you almost certainly are not terminating your employment by walking out and not coming back. You will probably find yourself in breach of some portion of the contract and in a bit of trouble. If they have incurred costs in your recruitment they may be well within their rights to claim them back from you if you breach the contract by not showing up.

Best way is to go and see your boss and the person who hired you and arrange your exit peacefully.

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I disagree, i only once singed anything before i started work. – 01 Feb 8 at 11:32
You obviously don't live in Europe .. – lexu Feb 8 at 12:31
@mark, not signing something before you start work is called slavery. The contract is between two parties - you benefit too. Without a contract they have no legal obligation to pay you. Perhaps that doesn't bother you, but I'd like to know what the agreement is before I start work. – Simon Feb 8 at 13:26
@lexu, not sure who that is directed at, but I live and work in the UK and have lived and worked in Canada too. Employment law is very similar across all of the EU and North America. – Simon Feb 8 at 13:28
Many states in the USA have at-will employment that will allow you to quit your job at any time without requiring notice. This also works in the reverse and the company can fire you for whatever reason without notice. – TheTXI Feb 9 at 17:05
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Leaving without saying anything is bad. I did it once a long time ago and I still feel terrible about just walking out. For me it had nothing to do with the company. The company I worked for was one of the best employers I've had but I was about to be burned out and did not want to go all the way.

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vote up 1 vote down

Someone did that at a place I worked at on their first shift. But we packed shelves in a supermarket.

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vote up 2 vote down

Even if there are no contracts, the other company might get into trouble by employing you when you are still in the rolls of another. So for your own sake, make sure you have a formal exit.

Walk away if you want to, but make sure to send a formal communication that you have resigned.

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+1 for spotting something other people apparently missed. Until you've resigned, or they've noticed and fired you, you're still an employee. – David Thornley Feb 11 at 15:45
vote up 22 vote down

No it isn't.

I once worked somewhere and knew within 3 days I didn't like it. I spoke to the manager and explained I was taking another job, and why.

He didn't like it, he was quite annoyed. I felt awkward and guilty, but at least I knew I had shown him some respect and at least had the manners to stay and explain my feelings rather than just disappearing like a little boy running away and hiding from my problems.

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vote up 1 vote down

I would say no.

This is allegedly job related, but I can't think of any meaningful substitute situation that would make it acceptable, either. Walking away without saying anything is for anonymous, low impact situations like deciding that a queue is too long to wait out.

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vote up 0 vote down

If you leave within the first week, either:

it's not the job they advertised

You are an it10t for taking the job without doing enough due diligence to work out what you were getting into.

I've seen people last 2-3 weeks before leaving. In those cases, I dont think they gave the job enough time before working out it wasn't for them. Obviously, they didn't ask the right questions in the interview (and I was one of the people interviewing them)

All up, I think anything less than 3 months (ideally 6) is a cop-out. But if you are really really unhappy, talk to the manager etc, and work out why the reality is SO different from the advertised job.

I only know of one person who literally walked out of their job. He was a network admin, and installed a product which messed with their Exchange server in a bad way (he altered the default setup against advice). A VERY bad way, like they had to buy the product, or lose all email except the previous 3 months. He literally packed his desk up and walked out, tho I think he left a note for the managers.

We (I was working for the vendor) sorted out the exchange server (and I think they ended up becoming a customer), but I dont know what happened to the admin.....

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I left a job within days. 1: It was as advertised. 2: I checked it out thoroughly. My problem was that of the 5 staff there only 1 person had a personality. For the entire day the other 4 people would sit without saying even 1 word. Not even 1! It was far too depressing so I had to leave. – Peter Morris Feb 8 at 13:16
How do you know they were like that all the time? after 2-3 days, there is no way you'd know someone well enough to know whats going on. hell, if people judged me after 2-3 days, and I was in a shitty mood, they'd get the totally wrong opinion. – Nic Wise Feb 8 at 13:39
I can't think of a day in my life when I failed to say a word. And to not even acknowledge a new person introduced into the situation? Unthinkable. Even the worst managers will bring a new person 'round to the team for some meaningless craic at the start. – duffymo Feb 8 at 20:57
spelling idiot wrong is not so clever :) – leppie Feb 11 at 15:16
I've been lied to at interviews, and details about what the job actually entails aren't usually findable from public sources. It happens. – David Thornley Feb 11 at 15:47
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vote up 5 vote down

It's fine, do what you like. They don't own you.

(you may live to regret it though)

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vote up 2 vote down

Does this question really have to be asked? That's normally a problem with employee retention at McDonald's, not for a well paid IT gig. Have some courtesy and show professionalism no matter how poorly the job fitment is!

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vote up 1 vote down

Given that I opened this can of worms, I want to state for the record that I did notify my supervisor (as soon as I got home, actually) that I wasn't going to be back; it's not like I up and disappeared and never let them know "Hey, I'm not going to be in to work tomorrow, or ever again".

And for the record, I do think there are situations when the best course of advice is simply to run away screaming - typically involving bait and switch schemes. I admit that in my exact situation I was probably wrong to do it, but I have been in situations where I should have done it and didn't, and ended up suffering more because the job in question was soul-draining.

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vote up 1 vote down

I think employee response should be proportional to job suckiness. I think in most cases, the job simply cannot suck so much that one would leave without a chat with the boss - mainly because the IT industry is a bit more intellectual than, say, fast food. But, on the other hand, I imagine there are cases where the job is totally not what you expected. Here's an example: you got hired to program in a language like C# but got told that you have to code in [insert obscure language here] for a few months. In other words, when you find out that the employer lied to you or blatantly manipulated you to accept the job, then walking out is perhaps an appropriate response.

There's also something to be said for when explaining yourself is meaningless. For example, imagine that you want to walk out because, say, you're being paid below-market but your bosses think your job rate is perfectly fine. If the possibility of having a meaningful conversation with management is zero, then simply leaving might make sense - whether you're only starting or have worked there for a while.

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vote up 3 vote down

Burning bridges that you don't really have to burn isn't a very good idea. You never know when you may need to cross them again.

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Right; it means you're almost certainly not working at that place again. This is not necessarily a Bad Thing. – David Thornley Feb 11 at 15:41
The other consideration is that the people you piss off at one company may not stay with that company forever. You may run into them again elsewhere, and hopefully they won't still hold a grudge. =) – gnovice Feb 11 at 15:57
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It is acceptable iff you fear for your safety. In which case you should leave and go to the police.

Otherwise, act like a grown-up and give two weeks' notice.

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Two weeks of employment isn't going to help them. In this field, you're a liability if you're only there two weeks, and they're better off if you phone in from lunch and resign. I'm pretty good at making myself useful, and my normal goal is to be a net zero within a couple of months. – David Thornley Feb 11 at 15:49
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Professionalism is required first and foremost in all we do at the workplace. I was in the same boat as you once and I empathize; its terrible. In my situation I had negotiated a 3 month window where we could feel each other out. I struggled through three months but knew I had a minimum commitment. When I completed it, I setup an exit interview, gave professional explanations to why it wasn't working out and moved on. Dealing with the pains in life is what prepares us for the future. My skin thickened and it prepared me for going independent.

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vote up 1 vote down

Yes, if you get hit by a bus. Otherwise No.

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