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Oh Boy! I Just Went In To Quit, and My Company Gave Me a Counter-Offer! I Can't Wait To... Um... Huh.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

About a month ago, a recruiter contacted you about a new job opportunity. Truth be told, you were getting a little bored in your current job, so the timing was good. You updated your résumé, went on the interviews, and hot-diggety-dog - you got the job! As a matter of fact, you received a written job offer, and accepted the position.

You ask to speak with your manager so that you can resign. After sauntering into his office, you thank him for the opportunity to work with the company, and you hand him your resignation letter.

You read the panic in your manager's eyes. Your resignation is now his very problem. Your projects are now his projects, and he's going to need to replace you. He asks you about your new job - responsibilities, salary, title. Then he thanks for you for coming into his office.

A couple hours later, your manager asks you if you could step into his office for a few minutes. He's holding an envelope in his hand.

He closes the door. After telling you how much they value you at the company and that he would like you reconsider your decision, he hands you the envelope he's been holding.

You open the envelope. Inside is a counter-offer. Your company would like you to stick around. And to do so, they are offering you more money. In fact, it's a raise greater than than the other company offered you. In addition, they're offering you an increase in job title, too.

You're puzzled. Okay, maybe your last performance review was good, but you were told at the time that you "need more time in your current position to master your job before being ready for a promotion."

What do you do?

Companies give counter-offers for many possible reasons. The two biggies are:

  • They value you a great deal. They weren't able to push through a raise / promotion / etc. before, but now you've given them a compelling reason to fight and make it happen.
  • They need your skills - right now. And it would be painful to replace you.

It's nice to be wanted. Really nice. And few things feel nicer than your boss showering you with compliments and cash to stick around.

But counter-offers are tricky business. Before accepting any counter-offer, consider the following:

  • The company makes a counter-offer from a position of weakness - they need you, and you're leaving. Although they may be giving you incentive to stay, their position of weakness ends the moment you decide to stick around.
  • What does it say that the company needs you to have a competing offer in order to provide you with a raise or promotion?
  • I've heard of people who have successfully leveraged a counter-offer into a better situation for themselves at work.
  • Some companies may extend a counter-offer to keep you around, while in the meantime they simultaneously conduct a confidential search to hire somebody new into your job. Your acceptance of the counter offer buys them the time to find an individual who hasn't demonstrated "disloyalty" to them.
  • Accepting a company's counter-offer tells them that you have a price.
  • Remember why you decided to explore other job opportunities to begin with. If you were frustrated with the environment, that's certainly not going to change. Ditto for your boss, the commute, and the business model.
  • By accepting a counter-offer, you will burn a bridge with the other company who originally extended you an offer. They were expecting you to join them, and now you've screwed up their plans.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. He is a Human Resources professional and staffing expert with almost two decades of in-house corporate HR and staffing firm experience, and is a Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW) and Certified Professional Career Coach (CPCC).

Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, and career coaching services, including a free resume review. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

 

Three Weekly Easy Peasy Lemon Squeezy Job Hunting Tips - June 29, 2015

Lemon Squeezy
Lemon Squeezy

Here are three simple job hunting tips for you to begin your week!

  1. Do you know where your interview is taking place? Companies have multiple locations. Or, sometimes mapping programs can get the location wrong (i.e., East 97th Street versus West 97th Street). It would suck to be late, and you'd look bad. Unless you're 100% certain where you're going for that interview, do a test drive before your interview. Scope out the location in person to do an "eyeball test." You could unwittingly end up at a muffler repair shop rather than at your interview.
  2. Arrive a few minutes early for your interview. Being fashionably late may work at the clubs on South Beach, but your interviewer has a schedule to keep. Don't get bumped due to carelessness.
  3. Want to apply to a company, but don't see any posted jobs fitting your skill set? Your first option is to go to the company website, and see if they have a "general" application, where they accept unsolicited résumés. Your second option is to search for a corporate recruiter at your target company. Recruiters will often include their email address in their LinkedIn profile, to make themselves accessible - send them a polite cover letter indicating your area of interest and a copy of your résumé.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. He is a Human Resources professional and staffing expert with almost two decades of in-house corporate HR and staffing firm experience, and is a Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW) and Certified Professional Career Coach (CPCC).

Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, and career coaching services, including a free resume review. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

 

Why Do Companies Advertise Job Openings When They Plan to Hire Internally?

Answers to your Questions
Answers to your Questions

Question from the mailbag: "Why do companies post openings when they know they are going to hire someone internally? I have lost out to many positions because the company already had an internal candidate in mind. The companies I have applied to are big and small, public and private.  I have started to ask if there are any internal candidates applying for this role and the answer is usually yes."

I love this question, because it addresses a widespread frustration among job seekers. Remarkably, there are several reasons why a company may post a job opening to the outside world while they have an internal applicant in the wings:

  • Company policy requires them to post every job. Every. Single. One. The bad news is, this frustrates external candidates to no end. The good news is that the company values internal movement and promotion of employees over external applicants, and gives internal applicant a chance at mobility. Should you get the job, at least you know you hit a high bar and you'll get the same consideration for future opportunities.
  • Union rules. Some collective bargaining agreements have it written into their contracts with companies that all jobs be posted for internal employees.
  • The company wants to see who else is out there. Maybe the internal employee is good - but not thatgood. Often the posting rules indicate that, all qualifications being equal, the internal employee receives the nod. But if the external applicant holds better qualifications, the outsider gets the job.
  • The hiring manager hopes a specific internal employee will apply. Sometimes the internal employee may be asked to apply, but ultimately decides she's happy in her current role. It happens. And if the company hadn't advertised outside, they wouldn't have any candidates in the pipeline.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. He is a Human Resources professional and staffing expert with almost two decades of in-house corporate HR and staffing firm experience, and is a Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW) and Certified Professional Career Coach (CPCC).

Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, and career coaching services, including a free resume review. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.