So, I’ve given several two week notices throughout my career. Unfortunately, I recently had to give one over the phone instead of in person. I only report to one guy and he was on vacation. I could have just given it to HR but that would have felt scummy. I called him and gave him my notice then sent him a letter of resignation. Feels bad man. Anyone else ever have to give a two week notice in an awkward/unfortunate way?

  • the_grass_trainer@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Working for walmart i once put in my two weeks to my Assistant Manager who then said “are you serious?” And my final response was “i can make today my last day.”

    And then walked out of the office to never return again.

  • AxExRx@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    Only 2 weeks ive ever given was as an ultimatum to the restaurant I was working at.

    They’d just fired the chef over a dispute, and I told they had 2 weeks to fix it or id leave behind him. Besides him, I was the only other person on staff woth a food saftey cert- which our town requires someone on staff to have at all times a restaurant is open.

    I quit, walked by the next day, saw the doors were open, and called the health inspector. He closed them for 2 weeks. They decided, that since they were closed for 2 weeks, to just have the staff take a 2 week vacation. Hired another ‘chef’ (he was new to town and eventually became a colleague and friend) and told him to start the day they could reopen.

    So they all walk back into a kitchen full of rotting product,start cleaning up, and the health inspector shows back up. Closed them down for a month. They never tried to reopen.

    Meanwhile I had gotten a job at a resort in town, was actually recruited by the executive chef, who was an old coleague, that first night- he saw me out for a drink at 7pm , asked why I wasnt cooking. I told him, and he hired me on the spot, and then hired my 3 cooks when the other place folded.

  • Sineljora@sh.itjust.works
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    18 hours ago

    The safest is to line up other business first, go straight to HR and tell them today is your last day to get instructions for returning equipment, and NEVER talk to anyone about why you’re leaving, where you’re going, or anything. Say as little as possible and don’t say goodbye to anyone. NEVER provide any feedback because it won’t change anything and can only be used against you. Process the pain of change on your own.

  • AllHailTheSheep@sh.itjust.works
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    19 hours ago

    depends on the job. shitty jobs I won’t give two weeks especially if there’s already animosity from management (which has lead to some pretty entertaining quitting stories). most I’ll do for something like that is ask my coworkers if they think they can get by without me (assuming I also liked the coworkers).

    if it’s a job I liked, I typically give notice via email and then go and bring it up in person to the recipient as well.

  • DJKJuicy@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    I always give two weeks. I’ve never quit a job without having another lined up, so maybe that’s the difference.

    Honestly I love the feeling during those two weeks. The “I don’t gove a fuck” vibe that I feel deep down in my bones is kind of nice.

  • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I was put on a pip and had to write an essay on how I failed and how I’ll fix it.

    so I wrote an essay on how they failed me as managers and how leaving was going to fix my problems.

    I gave them one week.

    • WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Ah yes, good use of company time to write an essay that will get no actual work done that drives progress.

      Managers are stupid.

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    I typically do NOT give 2 weeks notice.

    I went from ‘camp’ jobs where you’re fired and you have until the truck or boat or plane comes to pack all the shit you can carry and leave, to secret-squirrel jobs where quitting renders you instantly from “valued human asset” to “probably a diseased criminal”.

    I have

    • given two weeks at the start of my 2-week vacation
    • given notice that the taxi arriving now is taking me to the airport to my new city and job
    • just ghosted (that was an international one)
    • came in, dropped off my stuff, catalogued it with a peer and then had the peer escort me offsite
  • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I used to work as a cheapo part-time-on-paper software developer to pay for university. All devs in the company were student workers and the quality of the work reflected that. That clown show of a job actually took so much of my energy and attention that it delayed my thesis by two years. Yikes.

    My boss was straight up delusional. Among his many bizarre ideas was the assumption that I’d stay on for about nine months after my graduation, obviously for the absurdly low pay I was making as a student. That arrangement would’ve worked out very well for him so he assumed I’d be all for it.

    Unfortunately for him, I was already working out the terms of my employment with another company. On the other side of the country. Who actually employed real full-time devs for real market-rate pay. There was no chance I’d stay on for longer than necessary.

    So I hand-delivered my written resignation, effective in two months – that being the legal minimum notice period based on my employment duration at the time. Boy, was he upset. He thought we had an agreement (that I never agreed to) and that I’d take as much time as needed to finish up that major project we’d recently started (because clearly that’s a reason to work for pennies).

    Hell no. I did tell him I’d reconsider… if he beat the other company’s offer. That would’ve meant a 200% pay rise. Suddenly he was much more amenable to my leaving.

    • owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      What country are you in? I’m not aware of any with any legally mandated notice time (mine is explicitly opposite–employment is “at-will”)

      • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Germany.

        The minimum notice time scales with employment duration (if the company terminates the contact) or is four weeks (if the employee quits). However, the contact can state a longer period; this is often done to make the notice time symmetrical. The notice period for the employee can never exceed that for the company. Usually, contacts can only be terminated effective at the end of a month so that can extend things a bit further.

        At-will employment is not a thing in Germany except for informal arrangement like paying the neighbor’s kid to mow the lawn. Even during the trial period (a period of typically six months at the start of an employment where firing the employee is much easier) two weeks are the absolute minimum.

      • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        It’s a common thing in employment contracts, its where 2wk notice comes from, but more valued positions can have longer notices. It usually works both ways except in certain circumstances. It may or may not actually be legal but if legal could supersede “at will” depending on the specifics.

    • Victor@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Damn, so you tripled your salary, very nice.

      Mind me asking what you’re making now?

      • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I’ve changed jobs since then; these days I still do software but in the financial sector (which is a highly annoying sector since the problem domain is complex and unintuitive).

        Back then I did almost triple my salary (more like x 2.5 but it routine taken triple pay to get me to stay) but that’s more reflective of how terribly the old job paid.

        • Victor@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Alright, it’s okay if you don’t want to divulge. 🙂👍 Glad you got out of that bad situation in the beginning!

          • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            No, I misread (“do” instead of “make”).

            I went from something like 25k to something like 50k, which still wasn’t impressive but okay for a junior-level dev. And vastly better than what I made before.

            These days I’m somewhere north of 80k but monthly bonuses tied to company performance make it hard to give an accurate number off the top of my head. Depending on who you ask that’s either above or below average for someone of my experience level.

            • Victor@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              That’s very, very good. How much are you able to save of that 80 or so K? To give an estimate of the living costs of where you live? (I swear I’m not trying to dox you 😅)

              • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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                23 hours ago

                Well, that heavily depends upon factors like what kind of lifestyle you’re living. For example, I save a shitload of money by not needing a car.

                In general I’d say that someone who lives in my town and makes roughly what I do could save 1k to 2k per month depending on how much discretionary spending they want to be able to do. Possibly more if they’re very frugal.

                In case we’re comparing to the USA here, Germany has lower wages and higher taxes but a lot of stuff is way cheaper, especially education and healthcare. My health insurance premium can’t exceed 14.6% of my income, deductibles don’t exist, and most procedures are fully covered – for instance, when I went to a hospital for surgery and stayed for four days, my total bill was 40 €.

  • owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    I’ve been working at the same place for over a decade, had the same boss for many years. I respect him, so I’ll give him at least two weeks when I leave. But if he leaves before me, I’ll be giving no notice at all.

    My company has experienced a lot of enshittification over the last decade. In the last few years, the company has begun firing people with no notice. That is, you get a meeting notice for a one-on-one with your supervisor (which is a common enough thing), and security is there to walk you out. Someone else is sent to your desk to get your shit for you. Do not pass go, do not collect $200. Want to say goodbye to your coworkers? Fuck you.

    In the last round of firings, they gathered a hundred or so people in the training center and told them there that they were all fired. Because apparently we’re cattle or something.

    So yeah, if my boss leaves before I do, I’ll be following company policy and give my two-seconds notice with my laptop and badge on a Friday around lunch time.

    • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      In the last round of firings, they gathered a hundred or so people in the training center and told them there that they were all fired. Because apparently we’re cattle or something.

      IBM used to hold all-hands in the big office, kill the power to the building, and selected people would be led with flashlights to their cube to pack a box under view of a security dood with the flashlight.

  • TootSweet@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I worked at a place whose policy was that you had to give four weeks notice to get your vacation paid out.

    I remember getting the call from the place I was going to where they gave me the offer. I said yes and they asked when I would start. They said “well, you probably have to give like two weeks notice so that would put us at such-and-such date” and I had to tell them that no, I had to give four weeks notice. I remember them being surprised that that was a thing.

    At the place I was leaving, I also had a real asshole boss. He decided randomly that we were slacking off or some shit and started demanding 7:00am demoes every day. (I wrote software there.) When I’d secured a position elsewhere, I pulled the boss aside and gave him my 4-week notice. I was the tech lead and lead architect and basically in-charge-guy on the team of only 4 people for “Big Project™”. The boss had arbitrarily made up a due date for “Big Project™” and promised that timeline to the managers over him over my team’s objections. By the time I quit, the arbitrary deadline had already passed and he was getting pressured. With me gone, it was doomed to slip much later still.

    The asshole boss asked me why and I ended up telling him – politely – exactly all the problems I had with him. That and leaving him in the lurch of his own making were kinda cathartic, honestly.

    The asshole boss got fired on a “do not pass go, do not clear out your desk, security will escort you out” basis after I left. As if I wasn’t already overdosing on schadenfreude. What exactly he did to get fired is the subject of rumor only. I heard someone say he called the CTO incompetent and promised to replace him in a meeting with lots of people. Another rumor involved a possible affair with someone else high up in the IT department.

    Whatever the case, I think it was more awkward for asshole boss than for me. But he deserved it.

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I just wrote up a small letter saying that I will be leaving and my last day of work will be X day.

    If they as questions I do answer them but don’t go into detail.

  • stringere@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    “Due to the continued denial for training and commensurate pay increases which were part of the employment agreement, I have chosen to explore other options. I am providing 4 weeks notice to allow time for a replacement to be found.”

    Before the day was done my mamager walked me out of the building with the agreement they would pay me for the 4 weeks but I did not have to come back to the office.

  • tensorpudding@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I pretty much have always given at least two weeks notice, the one exception was during training at a warehouse job and I think I was going to get fired shortly if I didn’t quit since it was clearly not working. Sometimes you have to give notice in bad situations.

    In retrospect I’m glad I took that job anyway though, it got me out of a job I hated and I quickly found a workplace that respected me. I did worry a lot at the time though, I didn’t have much savings. Also, a few days after I became unemployed Hurricane Harvey hit us in Houston, which could have turned out pretty badly for me if I lost my apartment or my car, but it had no serious impact on my livelihood. Giving no notice definitely feels better when you have options and the ability to burn bridges.

  • Bizzle@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I’ve never given two weeks usually I just walk out on the job when I’ve had enough