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Withstanding The Pressure Of Counter Offers
Withstanding The Pressure Of Counter Offers:
By Kevin T. Buckley,
CPC
Here's
the situation: You are submitting your resignation
with the sincere hope that your present employer
will accept your career objectives. You are
expecting them to graciously give you their blessing
as you head off for new challenges.
Wait a minute. They are frowning at you and saying
they can’t accept your decision to leave. They are
telling you how sad it will be to see you go; how
they can’t do without you, and how you are leaving
all your friends behind. They are looking at you
with disappointment. They are upset about your
decision. You are letting them down and at an
important time of the year, too. You didn’t expect
this and you don’t know what to say.
This wasn’t the way it was supposed to go. Why are
they giving you this reaction? All you want is to
leave with goodwill and their best wishes for your
continued success. Why aren’t they accepting what
you are saying?
You are now involved in the counter-offer process.
They are indicating their refusal to accept that you
are leaving. You didn’t anticipate an emotional
reaction that seems out of place. How are you going
to handle this with tact and diplomacy and still
keep your goal in sight? In the counter-offer
process emotional manipulation is used to make you
change your mind. Management appeals to your
loyalty, your sense of guilt or buyer remorse and
tries to find your weak point to convince you to
stay.
It is the day after you submitted your resignation.
You are getting the cold shoulder. They are grilling
you like a B-movie perpetrator about which
competitor you are joining, how much salary you are
getting, and why you are even thinking of
considering a move. You are sitting in front of a
senior executive and he is patiently painting for
you a picture of how great it is going to be for you
if you decide to stay.
Day 3. Colleagues from all over the company are
calling you and telling you how sorry they are to
see you leaving the team. They are taking you out to
lunch individually or as a group and over coffee and
friendly conversation they are probing your
motivations and weak points, to find the chinks in
your armour. This is a common tactic to make you
reconsider your choice based on the emotional
attachments you may have formed with certain people
in the company.
Day 4. Your employer announces to you that they will
use the opportunity of your resignation to finally
give in to your previously unmet requests for a
raise. They are assuring you that they were going to
do this anyway. You are starting to think that they
are finally beginning to recognize your worth. What
has actually happened is that you are putting
pressure on them and they are reacting to it. They
are facing the prospect of replacing you. It is
cheaper and less of a problem to offer more money to
match or exceed your offer and hope you’ll take the
bait. You haven’t received the extra money because
they think you deserve it, you have the extra money
because they feel they have no choice but to cough
it up in order to keep you. Otherwise, you would
already have it.
Here is another common approach: your employer
doesn’t have extra money to match/exceed your offer
right now, so he is promising that soon things will
improve; there are new projects developing and if
you can just hang on a little longer you can be
involved and maybe move upwards in responsibility or
authority. If you leave now however, well, you’ll
lose out. That is the promise of future rewards
offered in lieu of cash. This is one of the toughest
counter-offers to resist.
Your employer is responsible for hiring, firing and
developing staff. Management has invested money in
you and your training. They don’t want to lose that
investment. You are good at your job and customers
and staff like you. People leave from companies all
the time. You have made your decision but now you
are starting to question yourself and why you are
leaving.
They just won’t quit pressuring you to stay. You are
confused and a little ticked off that they won’t let
matters be. Stay firm in your integrity and you
won’t be bought by promises that things will get
better, or that you will be given the opportunities
that weren’t available for you previously. Don’t
forget why you chose to leave in the first place.
Will you have to resign to get what you want next
time also?
It is hard because you do have friends there. You
like some of the people you work with. It isn’t easy
to leave people that you have good feelings about.
You aren’t alone. Many people are experiencing the
same internal tug of war that you are feeling. Good
friendships survive these situations. You don’t have
to cut all ties.
You know that the future is waiting for you at your
new employer. You understand that it is time to move
on. You have made your decision carefully after
weighing all the factors. There is a transition time
between tendering your resignation and joining the
new firm.
Remember that you have at most two weeks to go until
you step forward to your future. It is natural to
feel a little nervous. Change requires courage and
confidence. You have made the right decision. Your
employer has his/her company’s interests foremost in
mind. This is natural. You are giving your employer
a problem to solve. They don’t want to replace you.
They may genuinely like you as a person and want you
to stay but ultimately they know that people do move
on in their careers. They did also to arrive here.
Keep believing in yourself and your decision-making
despite the pressures put upon you to stay. Your
decision does have validity; it is your
decision after all. Your boss wasn’t born in the
company. He/she didn’t grow up there. He/she came
from another company and made a decision to get
there, just as you have made a decision to move on.
See why
they are doing this. It isn’t personal. They have a
job to do as a manager to keep staff. It is
important to keep relations friendly and to stop
further discussions about what you need to stay. You
know what you want. You tell them you are happy to
wrap up your work, and that you have fond memories
of working there. In a friendly yet firm way you ask
them to respect your decision. Your decision is
final. You ask them how you can get on with
transferring your files and tying up loose ends. You
don’t have to burn any bridges.
Keep
your eyes on your goal. Your goal is a brighter
future with new challenges and new opportunities to
learn and grow. That is where you want to be. Make
the change.
This is your future. |