The Resignation Palava Part 1
Luck smiled again on Temiloluwa after several
applications to various companies in search for a new job but she was stuck on
what to do. Although she wasn’t unemployed, yet Temiloluwa desired to change
her job in pursuit of her passion in Advertising away from customer service.
She had been on the customer service unit of a
telecommunication company for two years and has convinced herself that to be a
communications expert she needed to be grounded in all aspects of communications
which also included PR and Advert.
She therefore started making plans towards securing a
place in a PR and Advert company. She
took professional courses in Advert and PR while also applying for jobs on the
field.
She was lucky thrice during the course of her work to
be offered a position in three reputable companies of which she rejected all.
Why was this?
First she was stuck on her present job as her emotions
override her choice of self love. She was so loyal to the company that she
didn’t know how to announce that she was leaving. She thus continued working
with her present company and rejected the job offer.
When the second job offer came, a colleague of hers
resigned. Being a supposedly loyal
employee, she had to reject the offer so the company do not feel the gap of
having to replace two colleagues in same department at once. By the way, they
were just two in the department.
So she was stuck on how to resign formally from her present
place of work as it requested that she gave three weeks’ notice or forfeit a
month’s salary.
She had only a week to make the decision.
She met with her present HR who stated that she must
stay for a month before leaving for proper handover. “How could I stay for a month when this new
requires that I resume immediately? This is a job that has more security and
offers thrice my present salary.” She thought.
This scenario happens to more job seekers as often
times some HR managers do not keep to the resignation clause they put in an employment
letter.
They are usually so quick to put in the 3 weeks or a
month period of notice for resignation but how many consider giving their
prospective new employees the same period of time to allow them formally resign
from their place of work?
HR managers should respect this clause and give ample
time for their prospective employees to resign before closing the job
opportunity on them.

In addition, employers /HR managers should prepare
adequately in case an employee decides to leave the company abruptly. I could
remember a case of an HR officer who gave a leaving employee a four page non-
disclosure contract to sign after she submitted her resignation letter. Then I asked, what happened to signing the
contract after she accepted your offer of employment? Why does it have to come when she
was taking a leave?
Why stuck an employee with so much work and processes because he/she tendered a resignation letter? These and many abnormalities we must resolve to make the transition
process easy for employees.
Any addition to this? Or have you noticed other issues
that need to be resolved? Kindly comment below.
Thank you.
(Are you a job seeker, follow @greatblogging on twitter and facebook; @great_blogging on Instagram for more career tips and job vacancies)
Best of luck!

For the employee leaving the company, I'd say she isn't ready yet or she doesn't quite know what she wants. When she's ready, she'll leave. As for her present offer, she may have to forfeit it since she didn't plan herself well. Every company will ask you how soon you can resume with with them during an interview. The appropriate response is to give at least, the minimum notice period required of you to resign from you present job. It's her fault she's in this situation. However, her choices IMO are:
ReplyDelete1)outrightly forfeit the new job and continue with the present
2)contact the new company and see if she can get the resumption date extended
3)talk to her current HR for God's sake. She can't be scared of the unknown. Maybe her present company will let her off easily. She should see if it's possible to leave within the short time frame. Else...
4) every contract has a payment clause in leu of resignation notice. If she's truly interested in joining the new company, she should pay the money and leave.
As for the HR and company, well, this is Nigeria. Most times, it's either the HR manager is playing according to the management's (bad) instructions, or they are downright clumsy because some of the processes mentioned above aren't proper management/HR practices.
Thanks for your response Joy.
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