Wednesday, April 15, 2020
When Its Time to Leave Your First Job
When It's Time to Leave Your First Job Your first job out of college wonât be your last, but how will you know when itâs time to bow out? âIf you ask 10 people that question youâll have 10 different answers on that,â says Jeff Reep, director of career services at Cedarville University in Ohio. âIt could mean three to five years, or if the situation warrants, even after a year.â About 33% of millennials surveyed recently by crowdsourced talent acquisition platform RecruitiFi said they planned to stay in their current jobs for three to five years, while 20% said they would leave after one to two years. Thereâs no one-size-fits-all answer for how long you should stay at your first job, but experts say there are a few key signs that signal itâs time to make a career move. Itâs a bad fit As you work you might find youâre not a good fit for the company culture or you see little upward mobility in your future. However, experts say thereâs a difference between a lack of opportunity in a position and a lack of your own moxie. âI hear a lot of young professionals tell me thereâs not enough opportunity. I ask them, âWhat does opportunity look like to you?â â says Christine DiDonato, founder and president of Career Revolution Inc. in San Diego. Ask your boss for mentorship or guidance rather than waiting for it to be given to you, she adds. But working for a company that canât support your career path? Thatâs a different story. âIf youâve asked your boss for opportunity, youâve gone above and beyond and have taken on responsibility no one asked you to do and you feel in four or five months that youâre not challenged at all, then youâre in a place that doesnât have the right opportunity for you,â DiDonato says. Youâre in the wrong field Your first job is an opportunity to learn more about your chosen field and figure out how you might fit into it â" if at all. âIf youâre in a banking job and realize banking isnât for you, then you might not want to stay and learn more about banking,â says David DeLong, author of âGraduate to a Great Job: Make Your College Degree Pay Off in Todayâs Market.â If the field isnât exactly what you hoped for, but the general skills youâre learning are helpful, then sticking it out for longer isnât a bad idea, he adds. Youâve learned all that you can Before leaving a job, consider the skill set and experience you want to be able to present to a future employer. âSometimes people have to step back and think about what is the career journey they want rather than just immediately think about the destination,â says Sridhar Balasubramanian, associate dean of the full-time and online MBA programs at the University of North Carolinaâs Kenan-Flagler Business School. Balasubramanian suggests staying at a job that aligns with your existing skill set and experience to learn all you can from it. âOnce youâve established some street cred, then that might be the chance to move forward to the next job,â he says. Work long enough to show you have learned through accomplishments, says Randy Rosenberger, a professor of accounting, business and economics at Juniata College in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania. He adds, âDepending on the industry and the kind of work youâre doing, that could be a promotion or two to show that. It might mean completion of a project or two. Itâs always better if you can show whoever might hire you next what youâve done.â You have a sound opportunity elsewhere Your first job is probably not your dream job. If an ideal opportunity presents itself, then that could be your ticket out. Michael Berkowitz, a 2010 marketing graduate of Yeshiva Universityâs Sy Syms School of Business, knew it was time to leave his position at a commodities firm when he decided to pursue a more entrepreneurial venture. From there he worked at a hedge fund while starting up Norwegian Wool, an upscale fashion company that sells a line of coats for men. Now heâs heading Norwegian Wool full time. He didnât make the decision to start a business lightly, Berkowitz says, and strongly credits his first positions for giving him skills that are still useful in his current venture. âYou can switch the environment, but youâll find out business is business and a lot of things carry over and [youâll] learn. Thatâs very valuable,â he says. Youâre in a toxic situation Not liking your boss might make it easier to leave, but it should not be the sole reason to jump ship. A truly toxic environment is a different story. âToxic never means youâre working too hard or you donât love the work. Toxic is working with people who are truly dysfunctional, mean, passive-aggressive or abusive in some way. It means emotionally toxic,â DeLong says. If youâre going to leave, then leave quickly, Balasubramanian suggests. âUltimately, the toxic environment will grow on you and youâll be jaded by the time you go to the next job,â he says. âIf you were at a job for 15 days to a month, you could say it wasnât a good fit. Thatâs an honest answer that could be well appreciated by someone.â Bonus advice for job-hoppers: Expect some resistance from future employers Employers can be wary about job-hoppers because they seem riskier. A bad hire is costly, both financially and in terms of productivity. Any job youâve spent less than six months at should be left off of a resume, says Amanda Earle, career advising team leader at the University of Wisconsin School of Business. Any position you stay at beyond six months is an opportunity to demonstrate that you graduated and have been working, she says. Learn how to frame job hopping as a positive to a new employer. In your next interview focus on the skills and experiences you gained from your first job, rather than highlighting entry-level boredom or a temperamental manager. More from NerdWallet: 3 Apps to Take Your Job Search to the Next Level What to Wear to a Startup or Tech Job Interview Ask Brianna: Job and Money Tips for Recent Grads Figuring It Out
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