“I can’t take this job any more. I am working over 60 hours a week and still never get caught up. The demands here are ridiculous and my efforts are never really recognized. I almost walked out twice last week. I need to find a better job NOW!”
“I have totally lost interest in my work. The people are nice and the pay is good but I just can’t get fired up about my career anymore. I used to be really excited about my job but now I don’t even want to go to work. A promotion just passed me by and I didn’t even care. I’ve decided to leave and start a business.”
“This company is so screwed up. They keep making bad decisions and just sent half my team’s jobs overseas. They are always trying “new” things that are really just how we were doing them five years ago, and they didn’t work then either! My boss is an idiot and my teammates are always trying to get me to do their work. As soon as I find something else, I’m outta here!”

These are the stories that come into the coaching career line every day. People hanging at the end of their career rope who are fed up and ready to take this job and shove it! They want a fast track out of an intolerable situation and are ready to move heaven and earth to make it happen. So they find a new job or business, turn in their notice and jump ship (not necessarily in that order). Freedom at last! Or not. Unfortunately many discover that an unwelcome stowaway jumped on board when they packed their boxes on that final day: the problem came along with them.

Don’t get me wrong. Change is good. The slowest road to promotion, top salary and high job satisfaction is to stay in the same job or company year after year. But when change is driven by the need to escape from a bad job, you often miss the mark. This “move away from” strategy has several major flaws:

First – you assume that you are not part of the problem and miss out on learning an important lesson or two. Maybe you are working 60 hours a week and being taken advantage of by your team members because you haven’t learned the art of saying NO when you should. Maybe you are overly resistant to change or tend to blame others when things go wrong. You can run but you cannot hide from yourself. These issues will keep cropping up no matter where you go!

Second – you move to the opposite end of the spectrum, assuming things will have to be better there. If you think your boss is demanding, just wait until you become your own boss! While a 60+ hour job is a huge challenge, a really boring job with no overtime can be twice as draining. Two years later you’ll be on the job hunt path again.

Third – you don’t take the time to figure out what you really want. Trial and error is a common method and many people spend their whole lives searching for the perfect job without taking time to stop and think about what it really is. If you don’t know what you want, you’ll never find it.

Ready to look before you leap?

Steps for a successful exit strategy:

Own your part of the problem. Job issues are never one-sided and righteous indignation just gets in the way of seeing how you contribute. Even if leaving your job is ultimately a good strategy for you, stick around long enough to use your current challenge as a learning opportunity. As in the examples above, you may choose to develop stronger boundaries, improve your communication skills or learn how to adapt effectively to a rapidly changing environment. Changing your approach often dramatically improves the situation.

Check your attitude. A bad attitude feeds off of itself and makes things unnecessarily worse. Once you begin to use this job as a training ground for the next one, you can move your energy from hating your current situation to seeing it as a way to prepare for the next one. Done well, this attitude shift buys you the time and energy you need to do it right.

Design your next job purposefully and from a positive perspective. Rather than focusing on what you don’t want, consider all the criteria that you need for a great job match. Begin by designing a perfect day at work, right down to the last detail! Here are some ideas to get you started: role, work hours, commute, challenge, flexibility, work environment, team dynamics, promotion opportunities, travel, skills used, pace of change.

Use your shopping list of perfect job criteria to measure each potential opportunity against what you really want.

Now you have a “move towards” strategy and are prepared to seek out new roles, new jobs, and new careers that really fit. Now you can take this job and love it!

Author's Bio: 

Teresa Pool is the President and founder of Transitions for Life. She is a professional coach with a passion for assisting individuals in achieving their full potential. Her specialty is re-energizing careers; guiding executives, professionals and business owners through transformational change. Transitions for Life focuses on motivating change, supporting leaders through significant challenges, diverting career burnout, preparing for promotion and improving performance at all levels. She has been coaching professionally since January 2000 and is credentialed by the International Coach Federation as a Professional Certified Coach (PCC). A Certified Professional Behavioral Analyst (CPBA) and Neuro Linguistic Practitioner, Teresa specializes in improving business communication and relationships. She is a staff coach for the University of Texas Executive MBA program.

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