Career Resources:
Articles and Advice from the Recruiter
THE COUNTER OFFER
If you make a commitment to leave a company, the decision should
be final. When you find another position, your employer may try
to keep you by making a counter offer: a promotion, a higher salary,
a promise to head up a new project. It is crucial that you never
consider taking a counter offer.
The problems in your old company that caused you to look for another
job still exist. Whatever quick fix seems to beckon within that
counter offer is a false hope. And if you were motivated enough
to spend weeks and months exploring the job market and make a commitment
to another company, it’s time to move on.
Studies have found that a high percentage of employees who accept
counter offers end up leaving their employer within six months
anyway;
for one thing, your employer may well be conditioned not to trust
your commitment to his company anymore. The truth is that accepting
counter offers is bad business. You put your integrity in question
and stay in an environment where someone above you feels like
you
slapped his child and stole his bicycle. “Good luck with
your career in that environment,” says Tim LaBruyere, Vice
President with Kimmel & Associates. He adds, “take a
counter offer and you will doom yourself to a very uncomfortable,
and probably short-lived,
existence at that company.”
Back to Articles
|