5 Ways To Know When It's Time To Find Another Job
5 Ways To Know When It's Time To Find Another Job
Are you underpaid and overworked? That's an obvious sign of a bad job; career experts from Challenger Gray & Christmas and Monster.com offer advice on when you should consider your next career move.
By Sharon Gaudin
InformationWeek
Ever wonder if it's time to start looking for another job?
After the dot-com bubble burst several years ago, a lot of high-tech workers simply felt lucky to have a job--any job. Gone were the days when chief security officers, Java developers, and project managers could pick up a new, and better, job as easily as picking up a latte. Human Resources managers stopped worrying about how to keep good employees from leaving for better jobs. People who had decent jobs counted themselves lucky, kept their heads down and just hoped they weren't next to be outsourced or otherwise pink slipped.
Those days are gone. High-tech jobs are being created. There are new positions to move into. A lot of people, though, aren't picking up stakes and moving on. They're stuck in that head-down mentality and maybe they're missing the opportunity to find that great next job.
The tech sector has not only shown signs of life over the past few years, but there's been some real signs of strength, according to John Challenger, chief executive officer of Challenger Gray & Christmas, a global outplacement firm based in Chicago. He says next-generation companies like MySpace, YouTube and Google are shaking things up, and he's seeing a steady stream of new jobs being advertised.
"If people are thinking that at this point in the game, they could be selling themselves short," says Norma Gaffin, director of content at Monster.com, the Internet job board. "Especially people who went through the bust " they don't realize they could find a better position or the right position for them. I think a lot of people aren't asking themselves the questions."
And according to Gaffin, those questions don't have to include, "Am I miserable?" People don't have to " and shouldn't " wait until they hate the thought of getting up and going in to work every morning before they start looking for a new job.
Some career counselors say people should reevaluate their jobs at least once a year, giving some thought about the work they're doing, who they're working with and where they're going in the company and in their career. There are many reasons to look for a different job and they don't have to be for better money or because you hate your boss.
To help out, InformationWeek interviewed three
experts in the careers industry and sorted through their best advice.
Here are the five ways to know when it may be time to move on.
"The barometer that I use is you ask yourself the question: Are you learning? Says Gaffin. "If you're no longer learning, the indication is that your time there is over. If you have a really good boss, it can be hard to leave that. But if you've learned everything you can from that company and that great boss, you're not helping yourself by staying." She also points out that if someone isn't learning in their current position but they like the company, they first should look to see if there's a better spot they could move into. If there isn't, however, then it's time to look outside the company for a company that has new skills to teach you. "I think people do forget to ask themselves this question," Gaffin adds. "The job has to work for you. The company has to work for you. The problem is the better off you have it at the company, the less likely you are to ask yourself if you're still learning." Gaffin even goes so far as suggest giving each job an expiration date, so people will spot the date, much like they do with a milk carton, and give their job something of sniff test to see if it stinks or if it's still good for another several months. "Are you getting the training you need?" she asks. "Are you being put in a position where you can advance? Is it still helping you continue on that path you want to be on beyond this job?"
Robin Ryan, the author of 60 Seconds and You're Hired, says there almost always are rumors floating around the office. Someone's leaving. Someone's coming on board. A project is being scrapped. Most of the rumors don't merit any real attention or concern. However, there are those rumors " the persistent niggling ones " that should make you sit up and take notice. "It's rare that rumors stay alive when there's nothing behind them," says Ryan. "Pay attention to the rumor mill when it's about acquisitions, mergers and layoffs. Mergers and acquisitions are a real red flag that some of you will go, if not all of you. There's a lot of rumors but when everybody is talking about layoffs and it's being said and said and management isn't coming out and denying it, then that's not good Your job is in the most jeopardy if your company has just been acquired. This is the scariest time."
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