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Most Fun Way to Leave a Bad Job?

medscaper asks: "I have an awesome opportunity this morning. Since the market is opening up, I was offered a great new tech job over the weekend, and have been stuck in a miserable one for the past several years. I spend more time stressing out and anxious about keeping my job than getting any quality work done. I'm SO looking forward to walking into my boss's office this morning to let him know that I'll be leaving. I'm tempted to do it with style, especially because I got a (completely unwarranted) PHB-style threatening lecture last week about my work habits. I really don't need the recommendation or a reference, so it doesn't matter much how I leave. Should I politely give the standard 2-weeks? Or should I have a little fun with it and burn some bridges? Anyone have any stories to relate?"

16 of 371 comments (clear)

  1. Na dun burn bridges by NanoGator · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, it might be fun, but you never know when you will bump into people you worked with down the road.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
    1. Re:Na dun burn bridges by Nos. · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Precisely, but ask for an exit interview. Explain why you are leaving, and why you don't like the position. If nothing else, your (former) co-workers might get a bit of a break. Also, sometimes management may not actually realize the environment they're creating.

  2. Don't Burn Bridges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You NEWER know where someone will end up in 5 years. The Boss you screw over today could be interviewing you in 5 years at some other company.

    I know a guy who used to work in a specific industry, then went to work for one of the large consulting firms. He was sent to one of the companies to pitch a $30M project. He ended up pitching to someone he had seriously screwed a number of years earlier. Needless to say regardless of his current companies abilities, they didn't get the contact.

    1. Re:Don't Burn Bridges by bwt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In addition, don't burn bridges for your co-workers.

      I agree. Be classy. People will remember how you left. If your real motivation is to screw the company, do it with a smile while being polite -- put in two weeks notice, actually do your work, and quietly try to recruit other key people to leave too. This way, your coworkers will remember that you were a good guy (whether they follow you or not).

    2. Re:Don't Burn Bridges by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The Boss you screw over today could be interviewing you in 5 years at some other company.

      Perhaps more significantly, your boss's boss or peer, who had nothing against you until they heard from your boss how you screwed him, could be interviewing you later on somewhere else.

      Never burn bridges, ever. It's unprofessional, and your professional reputation is worth more than any temporary smugness you might achieve.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  3. MOD PARENT UP by SewersOfRivendell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seriously, AC is giving you solid advice -- don't burn bridges. Doesn't matter if he's an asshole. You never know who you're going to work with again or why circumstances should conspire to make you do so...

  4. ok, so I feel old saying this but... by tvadakia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    never burn bridges.

    --
    Unique.
    1. Re:ok, so I feel old saying this but... by Zardoz44 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Hey Fred. Nice day for a BBQ. Have you met my Wife? ... Btw, I just got this resume from a guy who says he used to work at your company. Ever hear of Medscaper?

      Fuck yeah! You want to know what he did when he quit? Don't hire that asshole. Don't waste your time.

      Small world. Good thing I talked to you first.

      ---------

      I can't tell you how many stories I've heard of burned bridges haunting someone years down the road. Do you know the phrase I'm about to butcher? Treat a customer well and they'll tell two people; treat them badly and they'll tell ten. Same goes with burnt bridges. People remember bad things.

  5. Re:Leave the Fight Club way by Directrix1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, you could do that. Or you could go a step further and: replace everyone's desktop with a bitmap image of their desktop (of course I like to make a batch file that runs at startup and just continuously renames the desktop so icons disappear and reappear), sign up the companys mailing lists to as many spam lists as you can find, jam pencil leads in the dollar slot of the vending machines, wd-40 his break pads, leave sexually harassing notes for your coworkers from your boss, and eat all the good donuts in the breakroom. Of course if you had a single neuron in that skull of yours you would not have the audacity to assume that you're new job is going to work out. Assume for just one moment that maybe having options to fall back on is a good thing. Now quit posting to slashdot and decide something for yourself. I think you know the answer already.

    --
    Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  6. Don't do anything rash by jezmund · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't piss anyone off! While it may be satisfying to finally tell some one off, it's just not worth it. Look at it this way; it doesn't cost you anything to just quietly and politely leave. Whereas your boss or some one he knows may one day be in a position to make life difficult for you. I've burned bridges in the past, and have almost always regretted it. I have never had occassion to regret the few opportunities I've been smart enough to take the high road. You can certainly express unhappiness as you leave, but I would avoid doing anything rash. Just my two cents.

    --

    "fist in the air in the land of hypocrisy"
  7. Better be nice by dtfinch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've known _of_ employers who would offer a job but not follow through if the prospective employee was willing to dump their previous employer without notice.

    So, you say you're already employed?
    Yes, but I'm not very fond of the work

    So can you start immediately?
    Sure.

    Sorry, can't hire you.

  8. Re:One day I quit my phone tech support job... by cujo_1111 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That is a really pissweak way of quitting if you don't mind me saying so.

    Running away isn't going to fix anything. You should have given your original presentation and added a slide to the end saying that if the trainees have any questions, please see the person who made the process changes.

    You would still have a chance at losing your job but you would have a ton more fun in the process.

    --
    If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
  9. Don't be Juvenile by fuzzybunny · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Discretely pack up your things and save any documentation or files you want to take along, and write a polite letter giving two weeks (or however much you agreed on) notice.

    Ask if "they" would like feedback, and write a list of what bugged you, what was good, and what could have been done better.

    Finish what you were working on if you can, offer to take care of any handover work, as you firmly should state that you will not be available for it after you have left.

    Don't burn bridges; it's not so much that these people might come back to haunt you someday, as that it's an adolescent thing to do.

    --
    Cole's Law: Thinly sliced cabbage
  10. Two Basic Approaches by fm6 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    1. Do some kind of childish stunt. That might make you feel good for a while, but it won't convince your asshole boss that he treated you badly. In fact, he'll use your childishness to justify his assholedness. "You see why I was easing him out?"
    2. You can find some way to make upper management aware that you're leaving in part because your boss is an asshole. Think out that will make him look with his boss.
    That's the basic choice. I'm sure you can fill in the details yourself.
  11. Re:Burn the bridges by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 4, Insightful
    the only things you can really reveal about a former employee are their hire dates, salary and whether they're elligable for rehire.

    "Mr. Smith? Hi, this is Mr. Anderson over at Fubarco? You hired one of our former employees, a Mr. Jones? I just needed to tell you that his reference status has changed---he is no longer eligible for rehire. Federal law prohibits me from specifying the particulars behind why there's not a chance in hell we would allow Mr. Jones to work here ever again. Just thought I'd let you know. Which reminds me---and this is a completely different and unrelated topic that has nothing to do with the reason we won't allow Mr. Jones to work here ever again---do you have any knowledge of how to remove dead fish from a ventilation system? No? Just thought I'd ask. Well, best of luck!"

    --
    This is not my sandwich.
  12. Get an offer letter... FIRST. by Fished · · Score: 5, Insightful
    When I've switched jobs (quite a bit in the 90's) I always insisted on getting a written letter of offer stating my salary etc. before I would say _ANYTHING_ to my currenty employer. Many people have been burned by moving to a new job, only to "discover" that the salary and benefits discussed were "talking points" and "accounting won't let us do that." With an offer letter, you can sue for all kinds of damages. Without one, you get butkis. I read a book on employment law a couple of years ago, and his remark was that, inevitably, the side with the biggest stack of paper wins.

    Also, I would strongly urge you not to quit "with style." What you call "with style" is really anything but. You should always try to maintain cordial and polite relationships with your former employer. Every job I've ever left, I've given a written letter of resignation, naming my last day (at least two weeks, sometimes more) and letting them know that I would be available free for "quick questions" on a short term basis to ease the transition. (I did not state, but implied, that if it was more than a "quick question" they should expect to pay me for my time.)

    In 2000, this served me well. I had just left a large Internet Company, and discovered the company I went with was going out of business after only two months. I went back to work for the Internet Company, got a pay raise and full-time telecommuting. And that's the job I've held for the past 4 years through a crappy economy while all the other geeks were whining about outsourcing.

    Bridges are good, a thing of utility and a thing of beauty. Never burn them unnecessarily.

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1