You’ve
decided to leave the organization, and the decision was driven by your needs as
a working parent. Maybe you’re taking a new job with fewer hours or less travel
so you can spend more time with the kids; maybe you’re “up-ramping” and taking
on a position with more responsibility, pressure, and pay – so you can afford
those looming college bills; or maybe you’ve decided to put your focus on
responsibilities at home before looking for a different opportunity.
Regardless of the specific reason why, the
question now is how – how to leave in the right way, how to be credible, honest
and transparent while acting in your own best interests, and how to preserve
the long-term career capital you’ve worked so hard to create.
Unfortunately for working parents, there’s
no offboarding playbook, and when you’ve got your kids and family in mind, the
raft of emotions attached to a professional exit can swell to very large
proportions. You may feel guilty, excited, conflicted, angry, or relieved,
perhaps all at the same time, and many other emotions in between….none of which
puts you on your front foot to handle your exit in a way that can enhance your
network or career.
But there are strategies that work —
specific techniques that can make your transition as effective and
non-stressful as possible.
As a longtime human capital professional, I
watched many employees make career changes, some very effectively and
gracefully, and learned their personal techniques and approaches. Now, as an
executive coach and advisor to working parent professionals, I work with many
executives seeking to make career transitions smartly, and advise them on
incorporating these strategies in their moves. And as a full-time working
mother who’s changed jobs twice since my first daughter arrived five years ago,
I’ve had the chance to use them myself.
Here are seven tactics any working parent
should use when transitioning out of a job:
Say it plain — without an edge. “Bill, I’ve decided to leave the organization. I’ve
taken a role at Other Company that will give me the flexibility to meet my
family responsibilities in the way I need to.” Like a good newspaper article,
the most important information should be conveyed upfront, factually, and
neutrally. Don’t wait five minutes into the conversation to make your
announcement, and don’t address any gripes you had about the lifestyle or hours
on the job when breaking the news — those are in the rearview mirror.
Be a class act — regardless of
your feelings. Even if your manager screamed at you about missing a
weekly update meeting to take your sick child to the pediatrician, it’s time to
rise above. Remember: Last impressions are lasting impressions, and yours need
to convey your value and style as a professional. Saying “I’ve appreciated the
four years I spent here, and the opportunity to be part of a great team” puts
you in a much better long-term position than a negative statement will.
Play
through the negative reaction. Your
manager may be surprised, or even angry. Maybe you were the “work-life poster
child” the company wanted to keep, or maybe your departure means the department
loses the headcount. Be prepared for negative reactions — pushback,
derision, irritation, disbelief — and rehearse the jujitsu moves you can
make to neutralize them. Empathize and acknowledge: “I understand this is a
surprise.” Make things more personal: “ I understand your point of view as a
leader of the company, but I’ve made this decision as an individual, and a
father.” And praise: “My decision has nothing to do with how I see you as a
manager. You’ve been a great advocate for me, and I appreciate it.”
Keep
an open mind. Many of my
working-parent coachees are shocked, upon resigning, to find out how much their
organizations value them – and are suddenly willing to provide new roles, more
flexibility, even sabbatical leaves in a desperate bid to keep them. As firm as
your intention to leave is, remain open to new options that are offered. You
may find an unexpected solution that’s actually better than the one you’ve
committed to. At the very least, it’s worth a conversation.
Put
on blinders. Inevitably, any
working parent leaving his or her job for anything remotely to do with family
reasons will be on the receiving end of editorial comments — lots and lots of
them, some clumsy (“Couldn’t take it, huh?”) to well-intentioned but
disheartening (“Be careful — my law school roommate left after her first was
born and she could never find a job again.”). The comments have nothing to do
with you, so ignore them. Put on blinders, look down the straightaway, and run
your own race, with the guardrails and mile markers you’ve set for yourself —
not the ones others set for you.
Become
a consultant. Once the
announcement has been made, go above and beyond to help your colleagues
transition into their future without you. Spreadsheet summaries, checklists,
flow charts documenting complex operations, project planning meetings …pretend
you’re from McKinsey, and your job is to help the organization manage without
you. Stay late a few days to demonstrate how committed you are to supporting
colleagues through your departure. You’ll look like the top-flight professional
you are — efficient, professional, and graceful to boot.
Take
your relationships with you. When
you leave a job, don’t leave your professional connections along with it. Take
the relationships you’ve had — with managers, colleagues, mentors, mentees, and
everyone in between — into your next role, even if your next role is spending
time at home. Statements like “While we won’t be working together anymore, I
want you to know that I’ve always considered you a mentor, and will continue
to” or “I certainly hope we get to be members of the same team again” appeal to
and leave lasting positive impressions with the crustiest of colleagues. Think
of your professional network as a portfolio, and make sure that no important
assets fall out of it as you change roles.
Anyone
making a working-parent-related job change will inevitably have some concerns
and self-doubt. But by focusing on the mechanics of your exit, you can make the
transition resound to your credit and keep doors open for the future.
Daisy Wademan
Dowling
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