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Switching Jobs

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  • P Pierre Leclercq

    Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:

    My last job required 4 weeks notice (not a typo, repeat four (4) weeks).

    Before I got my first job in the US, I had a job that required me 3 months notice! I remember telling this over the phone to the guy in charge, he coughed and almost lost his breath, but they hired me anyway :)

    A Offline
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    amclint
    wrote on last edited by
    #18

    ROFL, why would anyone give 3 mo notice? That seems very peculiar unless you are in an executive position.

    if (!interested){return false} amclint

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    • N Nemanja Trifunovic

      Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:

      My last job required 4 weeks notice (not a typo, repeat four (4) weeks).

      Out of curiosity: what can they do to enforce such a "requirement"? AFAIK, giving 2 week notice is a matter of maintaining a good relashionship with your former employeer - there is no law that requires this.


      Programming Blog utf8-cpp

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      El Corazon
      wrote on last edited by
      #19

      Nemanja Trifunovic wrote:

      there is no law that requires this.

      true, but many companies make you sign up front a policies and procedures. Violation of that can result in many things from suits for damages (major) to simply putting out a bad word (minor). In my case he already put out the word to everyone in town not to hire me, which is why I changed careers. If no one in town will hire you as a favor to your boss, leave town. :)

      _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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      • G Gary Wheeler

        Sounds like you dynamited that bridge, not just burned it!


        Software Zen: delete this;

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        Chris Losinger
        wrote on last edited by
        #20

        :) maybe.

        image processing | batch image processing | blogging

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        • G Gary Wheeler

          One of my previous employers laid off our entire branch office in Dayton, Ohio. The last of us left were responsible for packing things up and shipping them to the home office in California. The very last day, our final paychecks and severance were supposed to arrive in the FedEx shipment by 10:30 a.m. Unknown to us, the home office had arranged for our telephone line to be turned off at 10:00 a.m. You can see what's coming. Our checks didn't arrive in the morning FedEx shipment. We went to use the phones, and they had been turned off. Needless to say, we were pissed. We finally piled into the building's elevator, which had an outgoing phone line, and called the home office collect. At 11:00 a.m. Dayton time, it's only 7:00 a.m. in California. By the time we reached someone in CA, it was well after 1:00 p.m. our time. Some nitwit in the home office the night before had seen a package in the FedEx pile with our office as the destination, and had removed it and set it aside. After all, the office is closing; why send them anything? They ended up putting a secretary on the next flight to Dayton, who hand-carried our checks to us. She arrived about 8:00 p.m. that evening. The poor secretary spent the night in a hotel with no luggage before heading back the next day. She was :cool: about it, though; she took all of us out to dinner on her expense account.


          Software Zen: delete this;

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          Chris Meech
          wrote on last edited by
          #21

          Gary Wheeler wrote:

          They ended up putting a secretary on the next flight to Dayton, who hand-carried our checks to us. She arrived about 8:00 p.m. that evening. The poor secretary spent the night in a hotel with no luggage before heading back the next day. She was about it, though; she took all of us out to dinner on her expense account.

          That was a pretty nice touch, considering all of the circumstances. :)

          Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] I agree with you that my argument is useless. [Red Stateler] Hey, I am part of a special bread, we are called smart people [Captain See Sharp] The zen of the soapbox is hard to attain...[Jörgen Sigvardsson] I wish I could remember what it was like to only have a short term memory.[David Kentley]

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          • A amclint

            I'm switching jobs, Monday being my last day at my current place...just curious if anyone has any funny stories about their last days at a job. I gave my two weeks notice over the thanksgiving holiday so everyone was out of town except me and one HR person I handed my letter to. I didn't intend on it working out like that, but what happened is that by the time everyone got back into town it was more like 1 week of notice.

            if (!interested){return false} amclint

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            Dave Kreskowiak
            wrote on last edited by
            #22

            I left a big note on my desk written with a large Sharpie: "The beatings will continue until morale improves!". My cohorts left a lit candle on my empty desk for 3 days...an electric candle because of fire codes, but the thought was there...

            Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic

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            • C Chris Meech

              Gary Wheeler wrote:

              They ended up putting a secretary on the next flight to Dayton, who hand-carried our checks to us. She arrived about 8:00 p.m. that evening. The poor secretary spent the night in a hotel with no luggage before heading back the next day. She was about it, though; she took all of us out to dinner on her expense account.

              That was a pretty nice touch, considering all of the circumstances. :)

              Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] I agree with you that my argument is useless. [Red Stateler] Hey, I am part of a special bread, we are called smart people [Captain See Sharp] The zen of the soapbox is hard to attain...[Jörgen Sigvardsson] I wish I could remember what it was like to only have a short term memory.[David Kentley]

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              G Offline
              Gary Wheeler
              wrote on last edited by
              #23

              I think the dinner was more her idea of being gracious in a bad situation. She told us at dinner that they were initially going to just blow it off, and send our checks via normal mail. Our former office manager (who had been moved to the home office a few months before) heard about this and went ballistic. He told the company owners that they would either put our checks on a plane right f***ing NOW or they would see his ass walking out the door, permanently. He was a good guy, and one of the best people I've ever worked for. The secretary volunteered to carry the checks to us. I think she felt somewhat responsible for the fiasco, since she normally handled the outgoing FedEx stuff, but had handed it off to someone else that day.


              Software Zen: delete this;

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              • G Gary Wheeler

                I think the dinner was more her idea of being gracious in a bad situation. She told us at dinner that they were initially going to just blow it off, and send our checks via normal mail. Our former office manager (who had been moved to the home office a few months before) heard about this and went ballistic. He told the company owners that they would either put our checks on a plane right f***ing NOW or they would see his ass walking out the door, permanently. He was a good guy, and one of the best people I've ever worked for. The secretary volunteered to carry the checks to us. I think she felt somewhat responsible for the fiasco, since she normally handled the outgoing FedEx stuff, but had handed it off to someone else that day.


                Software Zen: delete this;

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                Dan Neely
                wrote on last edited by
                #24

                Gary Wheeler wrote:

                I think the dinner was more her idea of being gracious in a bad situation.

                Probably, and it's not like the expense account is actually real money. :P

                -- Rules of thumb should not be taken for the whole hand.

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                • P Pierre Leclercq

                  Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:

                  My last job required 4 weeks notice (not a typo, repeat four (4) weeks).

                  Before I got my first job in the US, I had a job that required me 3 months notice! I remember telling this over the phone to the guy in charge, he coughed and almost lost his breath, but they hired me anyway :)

                  P Offline
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                  Paul M Watt
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #25

                  Was that part of your employment agreement, or that is what they wanted you to do?

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                  • A amclint

                    I'm switching jobs, Monday being my last day at my current place...just curious if anyone has any funny stories about their last days at a job. I gave my two weeks notice over the thanksgiving holiday so everyone was out of town except me and one HR person I handed my letter to. I didn't intend on it working out like that, but what happened is that by the time everyone got back into town it was more like 1 week of notice.

                    if (!interested){return false} amclint

                    P Offline
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                    Paul M Watt
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #26

                    I worked for a printer company that had a satelite office at which I worked with all of the other software developers. Three of us were sent to the company headquarters in Chicago for a two day training seminar with other employees in the company. This training was held on company grounds and it was actually pretty cool. At the same time, corporate was sending out some accountants to renegotiate the lease with the office space we were currently in. The morning of the first training, we decided to go find and meet the hardware engineers that we always talked over the phone with but never met. One of the managers was shocked to see us, and reacted kind of weird, "Why are you here?" So we went on to the training that day, no big deal. The next day (Friday) we arrived at the training at 9:00, and around 10:00 a note was passed to the instructor that someone wanted to meet with the three of us at 10:30. We called our office to see if they knew what was going on. I joked around that maybe they were calling us in to tell us what a great job we were doing. My co-workers didn't buy it. The guy from HR came to get us, and he asked us to follow him through a maze of hallways. The first thing I asked him was "we still have our jobs right?" He didnt understand me and said "What?". I repeated my questions, and he said what again. So I said it a 3rd time real slow and real loud "WEEE STIIILLLL HAAAVE OOOUR JOBBBBBS RIGGGGGGHHHTT?" He turned around and started walking really fast. When we got to a private conference room, he told us they were shutting down the office and gave us our severance terms. They didnt let us return to our training. So while we were waiting in the office with debriefing, two of us went back to the lobby. They had a printer where you type in your name and you get a visitor badge that says "Hello, I am Paul". We made new badges that said "Hello, I am Unemployed", and we walked around the office for a few more minutes until they kicked us out. Then we decided to go to downtown chicago since we had the rest of the day to kill. We went to the Sears tower and then some sports bar and got the best feast we could find and expensed it to the company. We got back to our offices the next day, and there was a security guard looking over the office. We talked her into letting us in to grab our personal stuff. All in all it wasnt a bad experience, but it sure was weird and they had no idea we were in Chicago at the time, and it was such a shock to them when we showed up in the

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                    • A amclint

                      ROFL, why would anyone give 3 mo notice? That seems very peculiar unless you are in an executive position.

                      if (!interested){return false} amclint

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                      P Offline
                      Pierre Leclercq
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #27

                      Here, this is a government regulation. Notice length is written into law, and depends on the type of position you have, wether it's full-time, or long-term, and certainly other factors. -- modified at 3:34 Saturday 2nd December, 2006

                      amclint wrote:

                      ForumThe Lounge Subject:Re: Switching Jobs Sender:amclint Date:15:27 1 Dec '06 ROFL,

                      You're right ROFL too :)

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                      • P Paul M Watt

                        Was that part of your employment agreement, or that is what they wanted you to do?

                        P Offline
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                        Pierre Leclercq
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #28

                        Actually that was not part of my employment agreement, that was part of the law in this country. And yes that's also what they wanted me to do. They really had a hard time letting go. They talked to my new employer, and even though I was several thousand miles away, they wanted me to keep on working for them, through my new employer! You don't get that on Dilbert.com, do you? :)

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                        • E El Corazon

                          Nemanja Trifunovic wrote:

                          there is no law that requires this.

                          true, but many companies make you sign up front a policies and procedures. Violation of that can result in many things from suits for damages (major) to simply putting out a bad word (minor). In my case he already put out the word to everyone in town not to hire me, which is why I changed careers. If no one in town will hire you as a favor to your boss, leave town. :)

                          _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

                          P Offline
                          P Offline
                          Pierre Leclercq
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #29

                          Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:

                          put out the word to everyone in town not to hire me

                          Dxxn! How could a boss be so mean to an employee? That is really low. Even if two people don't get along, it's a job! Do you have any idea why they did this to you?

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                          • C Christian Graus

                            When I started my last office job, I was leaving a place where I was the sole author of a GUI framework in C++ and Python. I spent the last two weeks writing documentation, which they then lost. The job before that was sales, and I spent the last two weeks rewriting their website for them, as best I could at the time ( which basically means a frame on the left, buttons with rollovers. It now looks hideous, it really was a major step up from what they had, but still wasn't spectacular at the time, and last I looked, they were still using it.

                            Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog

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                            Pierre Leclercq
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #30

                            Christian Graus wrote:

                            last I looked, they were still using it.

                            This is actually a nice thing to see your stuff still being used in a commercial product.

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                            • P Pierre Leclercq

                              Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:

                              put out the word to everyone in town not to hire me

                              Dxxn! How could a boss be so mean to an employee? That is really low. Even if two people don't get along, it's a job! Do you have any idea why they did this to you?

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                              El Corazon
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #31

                              No such ego here, he did it to everyone once they signed on. No one leaves unless he says so. He had influence and used it, no more, no less. As with any company, he controlled his assets, just in this case, ALL of them. Obviously he could not control the whole town, so all I had to do was switch careers slightly... drop business computing and accounting and jump up a notch. In the end it gave me the incentive to jump ship in more ways than one, I decided to get as far away from his influence as possible.

                              _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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