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Ask Slashdot: Is It Ever OK To Quit Without Giving Notice? 765

HughPickens.com writes: Employees and employers alike have the right under at-will employment laws in almost all states to end their relationship without notice, for any reason, but the two-week rule is a widely accepted standard of workplace conduct. However, Sue Shellenbarger writes at the WSJ that a growing number of workers are leaving without giving two weeks' notice. Some bosses blame young employees who feel frustrated by limited prospects or have little sense of attachment to their workplace. But employment experts say some older workers are quitting without notice as well. They feel overworked or unappreciated after years of laboring under pay cuts and expanded workloads imposed during the recession. One employee at Dupray, a customer-service rep, scheduled a meeting and announced she was quitting, then rose and headed for the exit. She seemed surprised when the director of human resources stopped her and explained that employees are expected to give two weeks' notice. "She said, 'I've been watching 'Suits,' and this is how it happens,'" referring to the TV drama set in a law firm.

According to Shellenbarger, quitting without notice is sometimes justified. Employees with access to proprietary information, such as those working in sales or new-product development, face a conflict of interest if they accept a job with a competitor. Employees in such cases typically depart right away -- ideally, by mutual agreement. It can also be best to exit quickly if an employer is abusive, or if you suspect your employer is doing something illegal. More often, quitting without notice "is done in the heat of emotion, by someone who is completely frustrated, angry, offended or upset," says David Lewis, president of OperationsInc., a Norwalk, Conn., human-resources consulting firm. That approach can burn bridges and generate bad references. Phyllis Hartman says employees have a responsibility to try to communicate about what's wrong. "Start figuring out if there is anything you can do to fix it. The worst that can happen is that nobody listens or they tell you no."
What do you Slashdotters think about providing employers notice of departure? Has there ever been a circumstance that warranted quitting your job without any prior notice?
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Ask Slashdot: Is It Ever OK To Quit Without Giving Notice?

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  • by edmudama ( 155475 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:32PM (#52467001)

    A company cannot fight for right-to-work laws, then be upset when employees exercise their right to not work.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:51PM (#52467163)

      I agree: worked @ at DuPont Fibers for 30 years, unit sold to Koch brothers from Kansa ( yes them ) which put us as a private company for them. Had some layoffs and during this time, nobody got a raise for the first 3-4 years under them. Then it was decided to move jobs to Mexico.

      I found another job in 2009 when full-time jobs were hard to get and gave them 2 hours notice on my last Friday at work before starting the new job on Monday, this after 35 years. Reason for no 2 week notice: people that did, got treated like shit during those 2 weeks including a boss. Seen what happened and did what I did w/o any regret. Probably would do same thing at current job, as companies now, really don't inspire or try to build loyalty like they use to.

    • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:52PM (#52467167)

      but the two-week rule is a widely accepted standard of workplace conduct.

      when companies only offer you 'contract work' when you are over 50 (since its easier to fire you, being a protected age class if you are NOT fulltime) - and they walk your ass out right after the project is over, the days of company loyalty are ALSO LONG GONE.

      I could care less about the company I work for. they could care less about me.

      I hate that. I used to care. but they stopped, and so, I had to.

      its just that simple.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        I could care less about the company I work for. they could care less about me.

        Watch and learn something, then you might have a better job finding employment...

        https://youtu.be/om7O0MFkmpw [youtu.be]

      • by mattack2 ( 1165421 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @09:00PM (#52467617)

        I could care less about the company I work for.

        So you DO care about them, then.

      • by gfxguy ( 98788 ) on Friday July 08, 2016 @12:37AM (#52468567)

        Unless you've done something that justifies immediate dismissal, the company I work for generally gives you notice that you're being laid off ahead of time, and also offers a generous severance to everyone (not just executives). If they had a habit of just kicking people out without warning, I wouldn't feel obliged to give two weeks notice. If the company treats you like crap, though, I don't see where it's written into any contracts that two weeks is required, so too bad.

        I have seen cases where people were asked to leave immediately - even escorted out of the building, but then I don't necessarily know the circumstances of their dismissal. In all cases where I know there was no impropriety, work continued for those people laid off for sometimes a month or more (and then severance after that). I guess the point of what I'm saying is that some employers don't deserve the respect of being given notice, but some employers are really quite good about how they handle their employees, and it behooves the person leaving to not "burn bridges," as the TFA mentions.

    • by TiggertheMad ( 556308 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:52PM (#52467179) Journal
      More to the point, a company can (and will) fire you w/o notice if they feel like it. Why should you not be able to 'fire' them in the same fashion?

      Companies are sociopath entities that are only as good to you as they least friendly person to you in any position of power. They don't care anything about you or your well being. People within the company might, but the company does not, it exists to make money. You might owe people loyalty, but never a company.
      • by mariox19 ( 632969 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @09:49PM (#52467855)

        You're absolutely right in your characterization of things, but this is what a lot of people fail to get. What we have here are two separate moral standards going on.

        Human beings have lived most of their existence in groups of no more than 150 individuals. Even for most of recorded history, most people lived in villages or in neighborhoods in cities where they knew just about every face they saw during the day, every day of their lives. Whatever kind of innate moral sense we have and whatever moral codes we have developed have all developed within this context of face-to-face interactions and persistent relationships. So, human beings have a hard time doing anything that isn't "nice." It's not "nice" to quit without giving notice. What "decent" person does a thing like that?

        Companies, by contrast, operate on a system of profit and loss. I am not saying that's a bad thing. What I'm saying is that people shouldn't kid themselves. When a company decides to show you the door, that's excused as being "nothing personal, just business." In other words, they are doing solely what is the interest of the company: most particularly, their bottom line.

        People need to understand that these are the rules. By all means, when you're interacting with friends, family, neighbors, or even strangers on the subway, do the right thing—the thing that human interactions have relied on for millennia. But when you're dealing with a company—when it's business—think first what's in your best interest, and then do that without a qualm.

        Maybe giving notice is right for you, then and there. Then, go ahead. But, maybe walking right out the door is the best thing for you. In that case then, by all means, don't let the door hit you in the ass.

      • Um, most companies which fire you without notice will pay you a severance package of several weeks or months worth of pay. This is equivalent to giving you several weeks or months notice, except they don't require you to work those weeks or month. So the company is actually more considerate to your well-being than an employee who quits with notice is to the company (they'd have to work without pay during the notice period for the situation to be equivalent).

        I suppose people who quit without notice coul
        • "Um, most companies which fire you without notice will pay you a severance package of several weeks or months worth of pay."

          No, no they don't. Such packages exist but they definitely not the norm, even where they do exist they are normally only paid under certain limited circumstances like lay offs.

          Don't kid yourself, the company attaches strings to such offers like not filing unemployment (so they can avoid their rates going up), gag terms, etc. There is nothing altruistic about this.

          On the other hand I've
          • Clearly we can tell who are CEOs and who are not.

            A CEO gets fired, and they get 5 years salary, even if they only worked for a single year.

    • by Tommy Carpenter ( 4202129 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:55PM (#52467199)
      yep. Nailed it. If employers want the right to fire you for any reason without notice, then it works both ways. This is really simple.
      • by sumdumass ( 711423 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:55PM (#52467587) Journal

        That's all good in theory until they list you as terminated for job abandoning. It also doesn't look good to future employers if they just said you quit without notice. They want some sense of stability when investing in a new hire.

        Of course if it is a similar field in a close area, they probably already understand the conditions or reasons because you wouldn't be the first to do so.

        • job abandoning

          you made that up. its not 'a thing'. firstly, you QUIT. they can't say anything else. its their word against yours. and you would never list a company you quit from as a ref.

          what planet are you from??

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          This happened to me. Gave my employer FOUR WEEKS notice, even though contractually I only had to give two. About a week before I was due to finish they realized that my replacement (actually just my boss who was somehow going to do two jobs) was on holiday for two weeks and they needed me to stay on. I refused, I had committed to my new employer and they had work lined up.

          I can't ask them for a reference now as they are adamant that I walked out. Fortunately when I switched jobs again I just explained what

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by bloodhawk ( 813939 )
      I agree BUT, burning your bridges is never a smart idea if it is not necessary, you never know when the work colleague, boss etc are going to sometime in future have a say over your future prospects somewhere else, they move around employers too and you don't want them having to make a decision about you with that tainted memory in mind.
  • That's the Cosmic Shame [youtu.be].

  • Double Standard (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:36PM (#52467017)

    Employers LOVE at-will, when it's in their favor. But a lowly employee exercising that same right? Ohh nooo, you're just young and inexperienced.

    If I'm an employee and I fuck up or do something that is grounds for termination... no employer in an at-will state is going to say "Okay, we're firing you, but we're going to let you keep working here for two more weeks while you look for a new job". No, you'll be out on your ass.

    Well, if a company treats me in a way that I view as unacceptable, guess what.. I'm not giving you two more weeks of my life. The whole "employees are expected to give two weeks" bullshit is a such a double standard in many cases.

    I will give you notice if you treat me in a way that deserves for notice to be given.

    • Has anyone ever accomplished much of value in their two week period? It's rarely enough time to replace you, let alone give you any time to transition any worthwhile knowledge to them.

      Usually it seems to mostly involve them groveling and offering more money, but I've never known anyone that said "you know what, that sounds great I'll just stay"

      • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:33PM (#52467441) Journal

        When I last changed jobs, I spent much of that two weeks cleaning up documentation and writing a simple and direct "introduction to the position" document for my replacement. During that time, my boss and backup did my normal duties. In doing so, she ran into a few hurdles, some questions. I was there to assist. By the day I left, she had been doing my daily job for two weeks. (While interviewing, I arranged for our workload to be light for the following few weeks).

        At my current job, my boss recently quit. During his two weeks, he spent probably 60 hours documenting like crazy and demonstrating stuff for those of us he left behind. That was VERY helpful for us.

    • Yes, what's good for the goose is good for the gander, after all.

      My employer pays out 2 weeks of severance if they fire someone. So I think it's fair to give 2 weeks notice to them. If they didn't, it would depend on the circumstances if I gave leave or not.

  • Dupe? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:37PM (#52467025)

    If this story leaves you a feeling of dejavu, don't worry, it's just Hugh Pickens cross-posting on /. and SN [soylentnews.org] again to attract more traffic to his site

  • Karma is a bitch (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:38PM (#52467037)
    As a contractor, I have more than once had a manager come to me on friday afternoon and tell me, "Don't bother coming in Monday... or ever!" As such, when I was offered $25/hour more than I was currently working to start another contract, but I had to start right away, I didn't bother giving notice, and was informed "yeah, just leave your page and parking permit with the security guard on your way out." As far as I can tell, nobody cares about notice anymore.
    • Re:Karma is a bitch (Score:4, Interesting)

      by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:58PM (#52467229)

      I worked at cisco as a contractor. was on a 6month contract and on a thursday I got a call from my contract company telling me that tomorrow, friday, is my last day. the boss didn't call me, didn't email me, didn't give a warning, didn't give a repair plan, didn't get SHIT. didn't even have the BALLS to tell me himself.

      to this day, I can't use cisco as a ref since that son of a bitch still works there and its impossible to work at a place like that again if the boss is still there. they WILL find out who he is and he WILL rat on you.

      I've tried to ask the guy, nicely, to not stand in the way of my gainful employment. I did nothing wrong, I was never given a reason for the dismissal but to this day, he refuses to answer any ref calls, not even to just say the minimal.

      he costed me a lot of money and many months of being out of work. again, no fault of my own; something political happened (my best guess) and I was out the very next day. my contractor company would not even tell me. not kidding.

      this is SOP and its why I could care less about bosses, these days. they will happily screw you even though they gain nothing but ego from it. for me, I was out of work a long time and nearly lost my home. he could care less.

      fuck cisco. be warned, young guys; this will happen to you if you work long enough and get old enough. do NOT give companies your loyalty. they will screw you every fucking time.

      • Re: Karma is a bitch (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Reading your posts over the last 6 months it's 1 of two things or a combination of both.
        1. You have Asperger'sand need to work on your people skills a bit.
        2. You are smart AF and ur boss was scared of ur technical skills.

        I am in the middle of looking for a new hire and I am frightened they will be that much better than me I will be out the door. So looking for the Luke warm porridge is a skill.

        I'd say you should underestimate your abilitiesso you don't frighten your next employer.

  • Vacation (Score:4, Interesting)

    by DudeTheMath ( 522264 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:40PM (#52467049) Homepage

    I have like ten weeks vacay banked. I can give ten weeks notice and walk right out the door.

    I will, of course, generously offer to consult hourly at 90% of the rate my boss charges clients for my time for the first three months.

    • by Guspaz ( 556486 )

      I don't know about where you are, but here there employer gets to say when you're allowed to take vacation time, and you're required by law to give reasonable notice of resignation, which is generally understood to be two weeks. Employers are also required to pay out your vacation time when you quit. So you could give two weeks notice, and then after two weeks, you'd be done, and given ten weeks pay.

      Labour laws vary, of course, but I can't imagine that there are places where employees can take vacation wher

  • without any warning. The answer is IT ALWAYS OK TO QUIT without notice. Fuck'em and Feed'em fish heads.
  • Typically when a company lays off an employee (or a few employees) as part of a layoff, how much notice do they give?

    Usually it's immediate and involves a security escort to HR.

    • Typically when a company lays off an employee (or a few employees) as part of a layoff, how much notice do they give?

      Usually it's immediate and involves a security escort to HR.

      This, so much this. If your employer is one of the good ones and treats their employees fairly then feel free to give two weeks or however long it takes for a handover.
      However if they just got done firing 1000 employees so the VP can make his bonus, and you are one of the skeleton crew left feel free to drop their ass like a bad habit. They show no loyalty and should get none in return.

    • by Shados ( 741919 )

      Definately depends on the field and the company.

      Quite a few companies will start by putting employees on "performance improvement plans", that can be as much as 6 months in some cases, with feedback along the way as to how you're doing.

      With layoffs often come severance. And not all companies are Disney forcing employees to train their replacements.

      If you work for a company like that, then, IMO, some mutual respect is appropriate.

      If you work the cash at McD? WHATEVER!

  • Never (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ElusiveMind ( 1714020 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:41PM (#52467069) Homepage
    I left a job and gave them two days notice because I saw the writing on the wall. They were hemorrhaging money and couldn't keep talent and I knew the job wouldn't last. I got another job in another city and they asked me to report the following week. This was on Wednesday. So I walked back inside, told them I Friday I was done. They scowled, scoffed, criticized and demonized me to the rest of the company. I even had to pay back a signing bonus I received due to a contract I signed. Didn't care. 10 days after I left the company, they folded - gave everyone pink slips and no severance. Loyalty doesn't mean anything, anywhere, anytime. Look out for yourself. Protect yourself. I gave a company I worked for previously a month's notice and they still complained I screwed them over ... so you can't win. Do what is best for you.
    • by adri ( 173121 )

      Yup. That happened at my previous employer (norse.) I'm glad I saw the writing on the wall..

      • norse? omg!!

        I was VERY close to joining them, too. they dragged it out for weeks and weeks. such bullshit.

        missed it by a hair. months later, they melted down and everyone (nearly) was let go.

  • Does your workspace always give a two week notice for laid off employees? If not, why should employees bother when the situation is reversed?

    On the same note, do you expect employees to invest major effort into protecting your confidential information? Better secure employees SSNs and other confidential information well and offer financial compensation if the system is hacked.

  • by IonOtter ( 629215 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:43PM (#52467087) Homepage

    If you're not being mistreated, then don't be a jerk. *Especially* if your leaving without notice will screw over your co-workers, who plan to stay. If you have a good working relationship with your boss and co-workers, then jumping ship to greener pastures is not only acceptable, but even celebrated.

    I know for a fact, that if someone in *my* group were to quit, it would totally fuck over for my vacation plans, and I would lose a LOT of money.

    Your network is absolutely vital in today's job market. Screw over your employer, or worse, your fellow employees? They'll remember that. And they'll post about it on Facebook and LinkedIn.

    But if this is because you're a daily ration of crap? And you're in a right-to-work state? AND you have no reason to expect you'll ever work with your fellow employees again, or your leaving won't hurt them?

    Drop that bomb with pride.

    • Giving you 2 weeks notice 2 weeks away from your vacation would change all that, how?

      If your leave was rescinded because someone left, then it would be rescinded if someone was injured/sick as well.

      If your team is that fragile, invest in some travel insurance. If you were posting all over Facebook and LinkedIn about failing to manage risk I'd think you were the jackass.

  • by mhkohne ( 3854 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:44PM (#52467091) Homepage

    Quitting without giving notice is rude. That's all, just rude.

    If your employer has been reasonable and supported you with things you want (perhaps flexibility in hours, or training), then two weeks notice is only the polite thing to do.

    If they've been extorting god-awful amounts of overtime from you, perhaps with the ever-present threat of being let go for no reason at all, then a little rudeness isn't out of place.

  • There's no loyalty the other way, employers fought long and hard to make sure it works that way; why do you owe them anything?

  • Certainly. Pretty much any question framed that way yields a 'Yes' answer. I've walked out on abusive bosses. Most notable was as a single dad and the SOB said I should bring my two year old daughter in evenings and on Saturday because he'd made promises that couldn't be kept. That company destroyed two marriages I know of.

    BUT, have backup money or you're an idiot (especially in my circumstance). If no money, make sure you're walking right into another job.

  • by PrimaryConsult ( 1546585 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:55PM (#52467205)

    Seriously, if they don't boot you the moment you give notice, the two week "lame duck" phase can be the best part of your time working there. Spend a day finishing your leftover projects and writing some halfassed documentation, bullshit by the watercooler 7 hours a day for 8 more, and turn in your work on day 10. The next guy can deal with any do-overs needed.

    And if you hate your job due to your immediate boss but don't have another one lined up, never quit! Turn it into a job you like until they fire you. Do the projects you like and completely ignore the ones you don't like. Boss complains about 1 hour lunches? Take a 2 hour lunch instead. If you work for a large enough company there's enough red tape and "protocol" to keep you employed for at least a month while you do whatever the fuck you want. Bonus, if you play by the rules they won't even be able to fire you "with cause".

    The man who told me this secret managed to "work" a full extra year while giving 0 fucks at a job he would have hated, had he cared.

    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      My problem with that advice is what if the employee is the problem in this scenario and not the boss or the work place. Now we have a great way for a problem employee to be more of a problem.

    • by lucm ( 889690 )

      You sir are a Zen master.

  • I have personally worked at firms that felt it was OK to lay people off without two-weeks' notice (and without severance pay). So, yeah, I think it's ok. Have I ever done it? No. Would I ever have done it? It would take some pretty extreme circumstances, since I'm a firm believer in not burning bridges (unnecessarily). However, at this point, I'm 63 and self-employed, so it's not likely to come up again in my own life. :-)

  • Given the acceptance of terminating and laying off employees without notice; why exactly would you expect them to be more courteous to you?
  • by SeattleLawGuy ( 4561077 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @07:58PM (#52467225)

    The question posed is "Has there ever been a circumstance that warranted quitting your job without any prior notice?"

    Of course such situations arise. Giving notice should be the default, out of respect for co-workers who may have to juggle their tasks and schedules if you leave and ideally out of a respect for your employer. But if you work in an abusive workplace and have no ability to change that, then leaving immediately is often justified by the way you are being treated or by the way your employer is treating others.

    Whether it is legally advisable, financially plausible, will hurt your career to leave, or will leave good co-workers in the lurch if you leave are all other questions that will influence the decision of whether to actually do it.

  • by ewibble ( 1655195 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:03PM (#52467263)

    If the employee is so angry or annoyed that they are willing to leave without notice, it is probably best that they are just allowed to leave.

    Do you really want a disgruntled employee, serving your customers, maintaining your IT system, managing your finances, ... for two weeks?

    It maybe in the contract but it makes no sense to force someone to stay unless they are very closely supervised.

  • Two choices (Score:5, Interesting)

    by naughtynaughty ( 1154069 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:03PM (#52467267)

    Leave without notice and start working the next day at your new job:
    Result: Guaranteed no lost income

    Leave with two weeks notice:
    Result #1: Company fires you on the spot, walks you out and you lose two weeks of income
    Result #2: Company keeps you on the payroll the two weeks, no loss of pay

    All the risk is yours when you give two weeks notice, you give all the options to the company. When the shoe is on the other foot it is pretty much guaranteed that the company won't give you two weeks notice that they are going to let you go and few will pay you two weeks even though they'll walk you out right after telling you that you are fired.

    My suggestion is spend a day or two putting together a transition folder, hand it in on the day you quit and wish them the best. Tell them that for security reasons you can't provide two weeks notice.

  • Well, it does depend a little on circumstances, and it's not without its consequences. You should generally avoid burning any bridges you don't have to, and it's not just the company's attitude to you that you need to worry about; other employees might remember you as that guy who up and left unexpectedly which made life difficult for everyone. Which can bite you in the arse a year or two down the line when they're a different company you're applying at and might have a say in hiring.

    But if the company's tr

  • by StandardCell ( 589682 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:05PM (#52467281)
    I just quit without notice from a job at an established old and large corporation after less than three months. The main reasons were:
    • * Being told our group was in a "startup" mode and a huge red flag at any established company, especially with a paltry sum of shares barely above $5k.
    • * The first week I was there I was told the Tier 2 customer care person was leaving and that I'd be taking over their duties in addition to mine - a position that consumed >55 hours/week, but was not told this at the interview and was completely different than the job description I was given.
    • * When I asked about a product roadmap, I was told not to worry about it and to focus on the next six months of work (which didn't matter since the product was obviously not going anywhere and was severely underfunded while architected around a third-party solution that was insanely expensive).
    • * Complete disorganization to the point where development was accused of slipping but there was no product feature backlog nor user acceptance testing, despite being called an "Agile" development environment; just trying to put together a backlog and some processes that remotely resembled a proper development environment was a 60 hour/week job and they wanted to scale!
    • * A micro-manager who gave ZERO positive feedback about ANYTHING, claimed that they were not, who would change their mind on a whim (too much this time, too little next time, too little the following time, etc. etc.) and throw everyone under the bus, indicating a lack of empathy and self-awareness; also the first time I had ever worked somewhere where my office mates had thrown some item at a desk or on the floor out of frustration.
    • * Horrendously long commute which would've been tolerable if it was a good job with good treatment.

    The last day I showed up to work, I was thrown under the bus by the manager in front of our VP and the rest of the team for a lie to cover up the manager's incompetence. I went home, got up the next day, went to my doctor for a note to get the rest of the week off, and marched in on the following Monday to the reception desk with a letter of resignation and dropping off all of the company equipment. Didn't even talk to my manager, and didn't answer any of the manager's phone calls or e-mails, nor anyone else on the team after the day I got thrown under the bus. I, quite literally, disappeared.

    Why did I quit like this, especially without another source of income or health care coverage? Because leaving a gaping hole with a giant question mark in my wake was the only bit of power I had left to send a message for all of the misrepresentation, incompetence, unreasonable expectations and malice of the team that I had experienced . My mental and physical health has improved substantially since quitting, and so has the relationship with my loved ones. That team was screwed either way, but royally so with some of their deadlines that I had left the gaping hole in their roster for. I would've loved to have worked for another part of the company and was more than qualified to do so, but corporate rules prevent changes in position for the first year, and I had no expectation of a good review despite having been a high performing employee at other companies.

    In the end, these issues point directly to the utter contempt that technology employers have for their employees, particularly their low-to-mid-tier individual contributors. What else should they expect when they themselves give no notice to employees when they terminate them? What else should they expect when they treat their employees like trash, expect them to work startup hours while receiving established company pay and bonuses, change job descriptions at a whim, and don't have the decency to form any kind of coherent team environment or structure?

    The real message to HR departments and upper management on this phenomenon is this: if employees are quitting without notice more frequently, your problem is with your current corporate structure, management, and business, not with the employee that quits without notice, and you ignore this problem at your own peril.

  • by duke_cheetah2003 ( 862933 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:06PM (#52467289) Homepage

    In the workplace of today, when employers ditch people in favor of cheaper offshore replacement, or downsize you out of a job with no notice, or the myriad of other crap employers pull, I think quitting with no notice is perfectly acceptable. That road goes both ways after all, if employers treat their employees like disposable commodities, we the employees can and should do the exact same thing.

    That's how I feel at least. My current employer has treated me well, and seems to treat others well, too. So I'd probably be respectful and give notice. But I think if I worked for a company treating people poorly, I would feel no obligation to be courteous about leaving them.

  • by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:07PM (#52467295) Homepage Journal

    I was working for a major defense contractor. Fortune 500 (probably Fortune 100).

    Manager came in and told me that over his objections, I was being transferred to the Project From Hell. Before I even had a chance to think, the first words out of my mouth were, "I quit!". And my immediate reaction after that was "Oh my G-d... what the hell have I just done?"

    Lucky for me, I was fairly senior, and the two other guys who were supposed to go to said project (who were senior to me) had identical reactions.

    The three of us wound up in a meeting with the division's VP of Engineering. We didn't quit, we didn't have to transfer, and (fortunately), our careers weren't ruined (probably because the PfH had a reputation throughout the division).

  • by l0n3s0m3phr34k ( 2613107 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:08PM (#52467297)
    Many corps have a blanket policy against professional references. I've had a real problem with Hewlett Packard Enterprise in this regard; their HR says are OK with "personal references" but "advise against giving professional references". This is HR speak for "you can't give professional references". I had one company tell me they required professional references from a manager from a position in the last three years; which was impossible since HPE was my only employer for those three years.

    Even more hypocritical is that HPE wants professional references yet refuses to give the same. And what is a "personal reference" anyway? That I can grill a good burger, and am fun at parties? That might fulfill a part of what potential employers are looking for (works well with others) but does little to ascertain how I function in a technical position. Once I finally pinned down their exact HR policy I told them the difference what they would allow for people seeking references; I guess it worked since I'm starting a new job Monday lol.
  • It was the employer that wrote the at-will terms into the agreement. If they don't like their own terms, Not My Problem. For me it depends on two things: how satisfied or annoyed I am at my current position, and how anxious the new position is to have me start. If I'm relatively happy with my managers and co-workers and it's just that the new position's offering me better pay or different work, I'm going to push for 2 weeks notice before I start the new position just out of courtesy. If my current employer'

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:16PM (#52467353)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I've been laid off with no notice and no severance in the tech industry before. So why should I give any employer a 2 week notice?

  • by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @08:19PM (#52467369)

    Even in situations where the place was going to hell and was suffering under the worst managers. (In the case I'm thinking of; a big, very bro-y, MBA-ish, golf-buddies-get-promoted, east-coast logistics company acquired the close-knit San Francisco tech company I worked for. The cultural differences were irreconcilable for more than a few of us.) The thing is, I wasn't giving notice for the benefit of the company. I was giving notice for the benefit of my co-workers. (The legacy ones from our days as our own company, that is.). Two weeks may not be enough time to hire an actual replacement. But if you're on the ball, you can cram in a lot of knowledge transfer and not leave your friends and colleagues hanging (Any more than is absolutely necessary as a consequence of your leaving.).

    To provoke a no-notice resignation, I think I'd have to have become aware that the company was breaking the law or engaged in a serious ethical violation. Physical violence, or sexual harassment or orientation discrimination would probably do the trick too.

  • Two Way Street (Score:4, Interesting)

    by nick_davison ( 217681 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @09:25PM (#52467735)

    Does the company give at least two weeks paid notice to everyone it terminates?
    Then my minimum will also be two weeks notice.

    Does the company usually just tell people to gather their things and pay out the minimum it's legally required to?
    Then my minimum will be the same.

    Does the company generally give a couple of weeks severance unless for cause?
    Then my minimum is also two weeks unless I'm quitting due to their cause.

    Does the company have a good standard severance package?
    Then I will also give them the option to have my work out longer.

    Note: I say minimums. I'm also aware that, as poor as their behavior may be, I've also got my own reputation to watch out for. They may be a bunch of asshats. But my next employer is likely looking for reassurance that they'll get a respectful notice period and my quitting without notice, unless it's really easy to justify, just makes me look bad to future employers who background check.

  • As A Manager... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nick_davison ( 217681 ) on Thursday July 07, 2016 @09:32PM (#52467789)

    If I'm doing my job properly as a manager, no one should ever be indispensable.

    Highly valued? Sure. I want to build a team where everyone is exceptionally valued.

    But if anyone ever becomes indispensable, I've failed in my job as a manager.

    Why? The hit by a bus factor. That wonderful employee who loves me, who I love... can still get hit by a bus. Can still get sick. Can still have a loved one die. Can still have a relative offer to pay all expenses for a once in a lifetime six week world trip.

    If I have any employee that I can't keep my team running without, even at zero notice, I'm not running my team well.

    It may suck. It may be sad. It may require some juggling I'd much rather not do. But any indispensability means I've done my job badly.

    This means, if someone quits with zero notice, I can handle it.

    At that point, it's actually a good thing anyway. If they're so pissed off that they'd statement quit, I don't need them in the office, poisoning others, dragging their heels through their short timer's disease. Let's get them somewhere where they're happy and get my team of great people back doing great things. We'll live.

    Strange thing? When you have a well run team that you can already be confident in, people rarely statement quit anyway. For some reason, they don't seem to feel the need. Imagine that. And when they do? You've got it handled anyway.

  • I've been on the job market - while employed and with my employer fully aware that I am searching - for well over a year now. I hold an advanced STEM degree. The job market quite simply sucks giant blue whale testicles. Yeah, there are lots of jobs out there but in the geographic region I'm in they are looking mostly for engineers while I am a scientist (I try to convince them otherwise and they ignore me). The biggest problem is getting my resume read by an actual living breathing human being; many people know that the vast overwhelming majority of employers do their initial screening with a commercial algorithm that their own HR department doesn't being to know the first thing about. If I manage to hit the right key works to get past there, I find that I applied to a position that the employer already had a candidate for.

    In other words, an applicant faces so many hurdles beyond their control right now that it would be a poor idea for them to place any more in their own way. I've had employers in the past with whom I gave 2 weeks notice to and they accepted it and allowed me to leave earlier to start my new job; this is not terribly uncommon. It is far better to give the notice to retain the positive reference if at all possible.
  • by Terje Mathisen ( 128806 ) on Friday July 08, 2016 @03:09AM (#52469023)

    I have worked previously in the US but I must say that I prefer the Scandinavian setup we have here (in Oslo, Norway):

    You must give notice, typically 3 months from the end of the current month, and if your employer wants to fire you they must also give similar notice, i.e. 3+ months.

    For older/more senior employees the notice interval increases for the employer, up to 6+ months for a worker in her sixties.

    What this means is that both parties know that they have to stay civilized.

    In a case of possible conflict of interest it is common for these long notice intervals to be negotiated down, sometimes to zero. I.e. when I considered leaving my then job to go work for a major client of ours, my CEO told me that I would be allowed to leave immediately. (I didn't accept that offer so the question became moot.)

    OTOH, I have been in a situation where I effectively quit immediately, but that was only an in-house transfer:

    I went to my yearly performance review after a year of effectively being my own boss, but I still needed someone to be responsible for signing my time sheets and travel expenses etc, so the same person was doing my review.

    The guy started the review by saying "Terje, as we both know you aren't really working for me so I had to go out and ask a few of the people you have been helping over the last year, and according to them it sounded like we should put a statue of you outside the corporate headquarters!"

    OK, so at this point I was thinking 'This is going very well!' but then he continued "- but since I have a limited sum to distribute for pay raises I have reserved that for my own people and given you a negative evaluation so you will not be getting anything this year".

    At this point I stood up, saying "I don't think we have anything else to talk about", left the room and went directly to HR telling them they had better find me a new boss to report to.

    Terje

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