Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be really worried that quitting prematurely would affect my new job offer - basically that the new employer would find out, judge me lacking and then renege on the offer.
How on earth would the new job find out?
If you haven't started yet, HR could call to verify employment or someone could call for a reference. "Oh, Larla, yes she used to work here. She quit 2 days ago. Kinda left us in a jam with the annual conference. What do you want to know about Larla?"
If OP is quitting I doubt she is listing anyone at her current company as a reference.
After a candidate has accepted, I always call former supervisors for a reference even if they're not listed by the candidate as a reference.
Former. Not current. Also, if the candidate hasn't listed them as a reference, how would you even have their name and contact information?
I don't think Op should quit but I am not a fan of you doing this. If someone is leaving, there is a very real possibility that they have some difference with their boss, be that personal or professional. I had a former boss leave our company because her new boss bullied her. If you had called the COO to ask about my boss, you would've heard horrible things - even though my boss was beloved by the rest of us (and yes, the bad COO was eventually fired because without my boss, she started bullying others)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be really worried that quitting prematurely would affect my new job offer - basically that the new employer would find out, judge me lacking and then renege on the offer.
How on earth would the new job find out?
If you haven't started yet, HR could call to verify employment or someone could call for a reference. "Oh, Larla, yes she used to work here. She quit 2 days ago. Kinda left us in a jam with the annual conference. What do you want to know about Larla?"
If OP is quitting I doubt she is listing anyone at her current company as a reference.
After a candidate has accepted, I always call former supervisors for a reference even if they're not listed by the candidate as a reference.
Anonymous wrote:You’re insane!
You’re going to burn bridges with your current job and you don’t have a new job lined up yet! Yikes! That is terrible judgement.
Here’s an idea. Take a vacation. Use all your PTO now. Then if you get the new job, you’re refreshed and ready to go. If you don’t get the job, which is a very real possibility, then you’re still looking for a a new job from a position of strength instead of weakness. Imagine another dream job with a slow hiring process.
NEVER quit until you have a new job lined up. The event is irrelevant btw. If you get an offer the day before you can quit on the spot—BUT wait until you actually have a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be really worried that quitting prematurely would affect my new job offer - basically that the new employer would find out, judge me lacking and then renege on the offer.
How on earth would the new job find out?
If you haven't started yet, HR could call to verify employment or someone could call for a reference. "Oh, Larla, yes she used to work here. She quit 2 days ago. Kinda left us in a jam with the annual conference. What do you want to know about Larla?"
If OP is quitting I doubt she is listing anyone at her current company as a reference.
Anonymous wrote:You’re insane!
You’re going to burn bridges with your current job and you don’t have a new job lined up yet! Yikes! That is terrible judgement.
Here’s an idea. Take a vacation. Use all your PTO now. Then if you get the new job, you’re refreshed and ready to go. If you don’t get the job, which is a very real possibility, then you’re still looking for a a new job from a position of strength instead of weakness. Imagine another dream job with a slow hiring process.
NEVER quit until you have a new job lined up. The event is irrelevant btw. If you get an offer the day before you can quit on the spot—BUT wait until you actually have a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be really worried that quitting prematurely would affect my new job offer - basically that the new employer would find out, judge me lacking and then renege on the offer.
How on earth would the new job find out?
If you haven't started yet, HR could call to verify employment or someone could call for a reference. "Oh, Larla, yes she used to work here. She quit 2 days ago. Kinda left us in a jam with the annual conference. What do you want to know about Larla?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be really worried that quitting prematurely would affect my new job offer - basically that the new employer would find out, judge me lacking and then renege on the offer.
How on earth would the new job find out?
Anonymous wrote:I would be really worried that quitting prematurely would affect my new job offer - basically that the new employer would find out, judge me lacking and then renege on the offer.
Anonymous wrote:I would be really worried that quitting prematurely would affect my new job offer - basically that the new employer would find out, judge me lacking and then renege on the offer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also find it ironic that you're saying that your work is undervalued and you're basically reinforcing that your work in not valuable by dipping out of a significant event just because you don't feel like going.
In her defense, when you've been undervalued for a long time, your attitude tends to become "No one cares, so why bother." Speaking from experience here. I did great work before that job, I did great work at that job for half of it, and then I went on to a new job where I've done great work, but once you feel devalued your morale is a goner.