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Counter Offers: Avoiding the Temptation to Keep your Own
The unexpected resignation of an employee is never welcome or
well-timed. When an employee decides to move closer to an infirm
mother five states away, that’s one thing. But when an employee
resigns with the announcement that he’s moving cross-town
to a similar position with your fiercest competitor, that’s
something else altogether.
In that case, the employer’s reaction is often emotional,
even panicked. It is common for a manager to react with haste and
issue a counter offer. Whether the employee takes it or not is
in a sense irrelevant. Because, considered rationally, counteroffers
set a dangerous precedent. Word gets around in small companies
as well as large. In a company that is prone to counter offers,
there might as well be a sign in the break room that states that
the company is giving out raises to anyone who threatens to quit.
It is possible that other employees might start using resignations
to get raises for themselves.
Before long the internal wage structure of the company has been
violated. "Actually it's cheaper to just replace the person," says
Frank Bruckner of Kimmel & Associates. "It's better for
the overall morale of the staff, too."
The main point, though, is the fact that an employee has spent
considerable time and effort to look at other opportunities.
He has been in the offices of your top competitors discussing your
projects and plans. The reasons that led him to interview won't
go away just because you start throwing money at him. His loyalty
and dedication should be questioned. If an employee isn't truly
content, the team would be better off without him.
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