making a commitment while backing out the door?
making a commitment while backing out the door?
(OP)
Hallo Eng-Tippers!
I don't think exactly this question has been asked here before; the closest is the "do I take this job knowing I'll still keep looking elsewhere for something better?" type of question but I think this is sufficiently different.
I have a stable job, but I do not plan to stay at this job. In addition, I've done more to let my superiors know this is coming than anyone in their right mind would.
Some of what I've been saying about leaving I would expect them not to believe--I've been saying for as long as I've been here that I don't plan to stay in this geographic region. But I've been saying that for long enough that I could see how they wouldn't believe me any more.
However, in the last couple of years I've also been telling them I don't plan to stick around very long once project X is done. And project X is now almost done.
It turns out, though, that they haven't listened to a word of that either. And now they want to increase my responsibilities, which means putting me through time-consuming and expensive training. This is the kind of thing I would have liked to do if I planned to stay, but I don't.
As I said, I've done more to let on to them that I lack long-term commitment than any sane employee would do. But it's one thing to say in passing that I don't think I'll still be around by the time the project gets into the usual post-construction finger-pointing phase, or that I don't think I'll be around much longer than so-and-so (who is retiring soon); another entirely to sit in a "where is your career here headed next" meeting with the boss and boss's boss and look them in the eye and tell them I've been updating my resume and not to count on any serious commitment from me any more.
So, other than stall and dodge these new responsibilities and training through the unknown length of a job search in These Trying Times, what do I do? It would be suicide to tell them I'm seriously looking elsewhere. But it doesn't feel ethical to accept the training and the credentials that I won't use for them. (Training is soon; use of it will probably not be for a couple of years.)
Predicted Eng-Tips answer: "You never know, you might still be there in a few years, take the training, you owe them nothing."
Response round 1: (a) I'm very, very done with this job and this location. I can't stay here for a few more years. I would sooner go back to grad school than stay here a few more years. (b) I won't feel guilty about them investing *time* in me when they could be working up another candidate (not that there is someone else right now or I'd be suggesting that someone else be given the opportunity) or a different plan altogether (which they'll have to do once I leave anyway), but it feels really wrong accepting thousands of dollars in training and a valuable credential just in time to walk away with it. Except that this appears to be the kind of offer I can't refuse.
Answer round 2?
OJD
p.s. It just occurred to me that these new responsibilities could be not so much a failure to take a hint but rather a deliberate attempt to win me over, as I've been rather overtly disgruntled lately; I'm not sure whether, if that's true, it makes me feel better or worse about the situation.
I don't think exactly this question has been asked here before; the closest is the "do I take this job knowing I'll still keep looking elsewhere for something better?" type of question but I think this is sufficiently different.
I have a stable job, but I do not plan to stay at this job. In addition, I've done more to let my superiors know this is coming than anyone in their right mind would.
Some of what I've been saying about leaving I would expect them not to believe--I've been saying for as long as I've been here that I don't plan to stay in this geographic region. But I've been saying that for long enough that I could see how they wouldn't believe me any more.
However, in the last couple of years I've also been telling them I don't plan to stick around very long once project X is done. And project X is now almost done.
It turns out, though, that they haven't listened to a word of that either. And now they want to increase my responsibilities, which means putting me through time-consuming and expensive training. This is the kind of thing I would have liked to do if I planned to stay, but I don't.
As I said, I've done more to let on to them that I lack long-term commitment than any sane employee would do. But it's one thing to say in passing that I don't think I'll still be around by the time the project gets into the usual post-construction finger-pointing phase, or that I don't think I'll be around much longer than so-and-so (who is retiring soon); another entirely to sit in a "where is your career here headed next" meeting with the boss and boss's boss and look them in the eye and tell them I've been updating my resume and not to count on any serious commitment from me any more.
So, other than stall and dodge these new responsibilities and training through the unknown length of a job search in These Trying Times, what do I do? It would be suicide to tell them I'm seriously looking elsewhere. But it doesn't feel ethical to accept the training and the credentials that I won't use for them. (Training is soon; use of it will probably not be for a couple of years.)
Predicted Eng-Tips answer: "You never know, you might still be there in a few years, take the training, you owe them nothing."
Response round 1: (a) I'm very, very done with this job and this location. I can't stay here for a few more years. I would sooner go back to grad school than stay here a few more years. (b) I won't feel guilty about them investing *time* in me when they could be working up another candidate (not that there is someone else right now or I'd be suggesting that someone else be given the opportunity) or a different plan altogether (which they'll have to do once I leave anyway), but it feels really wrong accepting thousands of dollars in training and a valuable credential just in time to walk away with it. Except that this appears to be the kind of offer I can't refuse.
Answer round 2?
OJD
p.s. It just occurred to me that these new responsibilities could be not so much a failure to take a hint but rather a deliberate attempt to win me over, as I've been rather overtly disgruntled lately; I'm not sure whether, if that's true, it makes me feel better or worse about the situation.





RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
If they didn't ask, but just told you to do the training, just do it.
If you have dependants relying on your income it is more important to keep the job for as long as it suits you, compared to refusing the training and getting fired.
And yes, you never know, you might still be there in a few years.
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
I've not had your specific situation, but I have turned down several "opportunities" to spend less time with my family, and I'm none the worse for wear.
TTFN
FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Is there such a thing as an overblown sense of ethics?
OJD
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
You can refuse an assignment, politely or tell them to go shove it. You can accept the assignment and leave whenever you like. At the end of the day, people come people come people go; handing in your registration form is always hard, but really not that hard. Stop worrying about them saying that you wasted there money, because I am sure that they will waste more on bank fee's.
Arguing with an engineer is like wrestling with a pig in mud. After a while you realize that they like it
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Why is that? If you were told that they wanted you to go work in the Timbuktu office, wouldn't you refuse because you "don't feel like it?" There's a separate thread about "What you see yourself doing in XX yrs?" That's part of the reason for refusing, you're more happy doing what you're doing now.
The engineering VP at a previous company, told my boss, upon my boss refusing a move to Chicaco because his wife would divorce him, stated, "Well, you can always get another wife."
New responsibilities come with new time and dedication commitments, invariably interfering with your home life and quality thereof. That's a perfectly acceptable grounds for refusing an assignment. And yes, that may cost you, but that might also give you the motivation to go and do what you supposedly want to do.
TTFN
FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Your approach is fine if you are prepared to lose your job prematurely, which the OP isn't at this stage.
And I'm sure that you can see the difference between undertaking some useful training at the company's time and expense, and being told to relocate interstate.
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Arguing with an engineer is like wrestling with a pig in mud. After a while you realize that they like it
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
@rowingengineer: Yes, this is all about feeling guilty--but isn't guilt a sign of having done something wrong?
Related to this somewhat: Common advice here is not to unload on the way out the door but rather to leave on as good terms as possible. Common advice is also "do what you gotta do, don't worry about pissing them off." Seems to me if there's some path to not pissing them off on the way out I should take it.
I'm just envisioning the scenario. I hand them my nicely worded and delighfully brief letter of resignation, and they say, "How dare you take all that training from us when you knew you were leaving?" I can say: (a) I told you I was leaving; you chose not to hear me; I chose not to press the point. (b) You wouldn't have taken no for an answer without my telling you I was leaving, and I'm sure you understand why I wouldn't tell you that. (c) something not so snarky, where I won't be poison thereafter?
OJD
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
look this notice period is really short conidering the length of our projects, any chance of you sticking around for an extra few weeks? (you- No).
We'll pay you double time for every week you stick around, (you - NO).
O'well all the best in the future, pity about all the training, guess the next offer must be good? (you - yes).
Well we'll make sure we don't leave you anytime for a proper hand over and however takes your place will be in the shit from day dot.
Arguing with an engineer is like wrestling with a pig in mud. After a while you realize that they like it
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
OJD
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
As for the other, if you are financially OK with leaving and not having another job, then do it...otherwise play out the game until you are ready to actually leave.
During all this, are you actually committed to doing a good job? Somehow it doesn't seem so.
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Not really set up to leave before I have something else. If I were independently wealthy, I'd not be even looking.
OJD
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
There are those that have considered being laid off as the best thing that ever happened to them, because it forced them to do what actually made them happy.
TTFN
FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Engineering is the art of modelling materials we do not wholly understand, into shapes we cannot precisely analyse so as to withstand forces we cannot properly assess, in such a way that the public has no reason to suspect the extent of our ignorance.
-A R Dykes
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
-- MechEng2005
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
@IRStuff--you're right, my geographical gripe has been around for long enough that I'm not surprised no one takes me seriously. But when I changed my tune from "at some point I gotta get out of here" to "at the end of this project, I'm going to go," I thought they'd hear it. I've had my kick in the rear (end of great project plus increased job dissatisfaction on other fronts) and am actively looking.
OJD
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
I think MechEng has given me what I need to live with myself (and justify myself to others) when the inevitable comes to pass.
OJD
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Yep.
Heck, I was signed up for some $4,000 worth of training, then got laid off. They indicated that I could finish the training, and I did. They flushed their money down the drain, and that should be the same thought for you if you have told them you are leaving.
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
You shouldn't have said anything in the first place. You're the person who put yourself in this situation.
I would still take the training,though.
Is it something that is company specific? Or can it be used somewhere else?
V
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
"If you are going to walk on thin ice, you might as well dance!"
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Fe
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
There's a world of difference between casual talk about what my future plans are and what is said during a performance-planning session.
Suppose I hadn't dropped any hints. I guess the situation would be better in that I wouldn't be annoyed at their failure to take a hint, but it would be worse in that I'd be more guilty about planning to leave. Either way I'm being offered valuable training resulting in a diamond ring, I mean credential, that I will be able to take with me, and either way I am not anticipating being available to deliver to them what they think they'll be getting out of this transaction.
I must 'fess that at first I was hoping to snag that credential on my way out regardless, but that was when it was just another bit of professional enrichment that we've talked about occasionally for various people in the office. When I brought it up, they upped the ante by tying my credential in particular to these anticipated increased job duties and also adding in the fancy training course to get the credential (plan A was a lower-rent option).
I still like the house-buying analogy. "Remember when so-and-so bought a house near the office, and then you cancelled his contract and said that he had been told this could happen and should have anticipated the possibility? This is like that."
Ah well. I suppose I could still be here a year from now, and although we don't really anticipate the need for me to use this training for another couple of years, in truth it could happen at any time. Which is what half of you are saying.
OJD
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Now, I'd say accept it gratefully, but don't feel obligated to stay even a second longer than you want to be there.
Is it because the world changed, or because my perception of the world changed? It doesn't matter, really.
The current state of the world is that a company will express exactly zero loyalty to you, as mandated by the rules and laws that govern companies.
Similarly, you should not confuse your company with a friend.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
In an age where few (any?) companies will hang onto their talent when times get tough, I have no compunction about walking out the door. They'd drop me in a heartbeat if it meant their bottom line increased.
Dan - Owner

http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA
RE: making a commitment while backing out the door?
b) eventually you will enjoy your increased responsibilities;
c)If you do find another job, be polite in your way out;
d)Offer them a reasonable time for the handover;
Is it fair to take an expensive training to leave before the company can recover the investment? No.
Should you sacrifice yourself doing something that you hate because you feel that you are not being fair? No, unless you like masoquism.
So, good luck with the training and with the job hunt.