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posted by martyb on Sunday September 25 2016, @08:37AM   Printer-friendly
from the take-this-job-and... dept.

Most everybody has been there: you've decided to quit your job and now you have to inform your employer that you're leaving. So what is the best way to resign?

Turns out, there are generally seven ways in which people quit their jobs, and there are two key factors that determine whether a person resigns in a positive way or in a way that could have damaging consequences for the business, new research from Oregon State University shows.

[...] Through a series of studies, including interviews with employees and employers, the researchers found that generally, employees quit in one of seven ways:

  • By the book: These resignations involve a face-to-face meeting with one's manager to announce the resignation, a standard notice period, and an explanation of the reason for quitting.
  • Perfunctory: These resignations are similar to "by the book" resignations, except the meeting tends to be shorter and the reason for quitting is not provided.
  • Grateful goodbye: Employees express gratitude toward their employer and often offer to help with the transition period.
  • In the loop: In these resignations, employees typically confide in their manager that they are contemplating quitting, or are looking for another job, before formally resigning.
  • Avoidant: This occurs when employees let other employees such as peers, mentors, or human resources representatives know that they plan to leave rather than giving notice to their immediate boss.
  • Bridge burning: In this resignation style, employees seek to harm the organization or its members on their way out the door, often through verbal assaults.
  • Impulsive quitting: Some employees simply walk off the job, never to return or communicate with their employer again. This can leave the organization in quite a lurch, given it is the only style in which no notice is provided.

The by the book and perfunctory resignations are the most common, but roughly one in 10 employees quits in bridge-burning style. Avoidant, bridge burning and impulsive quitting are seen as potentially harmful resignation styles for employers.

In addition, the researchers found that managers were particularly frustrated by employees who resigned using bridge burning, avoidant or perfunctory styles, so employees who want to leave on good terms should avoid those styles, Klotz said.

Have any Soylentils seen employees quit in notable or epic ways?


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 25 2016, @04:01PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 25 2016, @04:01PM (#406289)

    SigOther once worked for a biotech company then found out 2 months after starting that they were being sued for negotiating in bad faith with another biotech company. Turns out the CEO at the time had made a deal with another company to use some tech but with plans to never pay the favor back. The board of directors fired that CEO in a semi-distasteful way and he decided that he would sing like a canary and became the prosecution's star witness. He testified that the board had forced him to negotiate the deal in bad faith and that there were no plans to pay for the use of the other company's tech.

    Needless to say the rest of the company had a terrible toxic management culture. Also the job was in a "Right to Work" state. SO then decided to leave with no notice because it was quite obvious the company was going to lose their defense of the lawsuit and go under (also his boss was a micromanager and a dick).

    Three weeks later. The entire R&D department, all IT staff except one desktop support, and most of the office faculty were escorted out of the door (many thinking it was for a breakfast meeting/event), THEN told they were fired and to go home immediately (including said micromanager dick boss). Company lost the lawsuit. Stock plummeted. Company was de-listed; then filed for bankruptcy.

    SO got a sweet new gig in Europe.

    Score one for escaping a sinking ship!

  • (Score: 0, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 25 2016, @04:54PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 25 2016, @04:54PM (#406308)

    > Also the job was in a "Right to Work" state. SO then decided to leave with no notice

    "Right to work" means companies are forbidden from signing exclusive labor contracts with groups of people (aka unions). One of those cases where republicans think having big government interfere in private business is good because fuck the working-class.

    You mean "employment at will" which is all 50 states.