A perception that has stuck with many
managers and HR professionals is that people who
job-hop are not committed and a liability to
hire.
Here is why this idea may need to be
reconsidered.
People in their 20s on average change jobs
every 18 months. People in their 30s - at least
the ones that continue to do well in their careers
- change jobs frequently as well, although at a
slower pace than the 20 somethings.
So if you think job-hopping is bad, change
your thinking. Job hoppers are not quitters. In
fact, they make better co-workers and better
employees and I bet are generally more satisfied
with their work life.
Here's why:
1. Job hoppers have more
intellectually rewarding careers.
In almost any job, the learning curve is
very steep early on. And then it goes flat. So by
the end of two years at the same job, you often
have little left to learn. Which makes me wonder
what people are doing to keep their brains alive
if they stay at the same job for 20 years. It also
makes me certain that job hoppers know more.
If you change jobs often, then you're
always challenged with a lot to learn - your
learning curve stays high. The more you have to
navigate corporate hierarchies and deal with
office dramas, the more you learn about people and
the better you will become at making people
comfortable at work. And that's a great skill to
have.
2. Job hoppers have more stable
careers.
Jobs in the world today don't provide
stability for its employees. There are layoffs and
downsizing and just-in-time hiring and contract
workers - realities that barely existed a
generation ago. The stability you get in your
career comes from you.
The way you do that is through networking.
Because you can be sure you'll need to find many
jobs in your lifetime, you want network as
efficiently as you can. After all, the most
efficient way to find a job is through a network.
It's how most people land jobs. People who work
for lots of companies have a larger network than
people who stay in one place for long periods of
time. Which is why job-hopping creates
stability.
3. Job hoppers are higher
performers.
If you know you are going to leave your
job in the next year, you're going to be very
conscious of your resume - that is, what skills
you're tackling, what you're achieving, whether
you're becoming an expert in your field. These
issues do not generally concern someone who has
been in a job for five years and knows he's going
to stay another five years. So job hoppers are
always looking to do really well at work, if for
no other reason than it helps them get their next
job.
You can't job hop if don't add value each
place you go. That's why job hoppers are usually
overachievers on projects they are involved in;
they want something good to put on their resume.
So from employers' perspective, this is a good
thing. Companies benefit more from having a strong
performer for 18 months than a mediocre employee
for 20 years.
4. Job hoppers are more
loyal.
Loyalty is caring about the people you're
with, right? Job hoppers are generally great team
players because that's all they have. Job hoppers
don't identify with a company's long-term
performance, they identify with their work group's
short-term performance. Job hoppers want their
boss to adore them so they get a good reference.
Job hoppers want to bond with their co-workers so
they can all help each other get jobs later on.
And job hoppers want to make sure everyone who
comes into contact with them has a good experience
with them; it's not like they have ten years on
the job to fix a first impression.
5. Job hoppers are more emotionally
mature.
It takes a good deal of self-knowledge to
know what you want to do next, and to choose to go
get it rather than stay someplace that for the
moment seems safe. It takes commitment to personal
growth to give up career complacency and embrace a
challenging learning curve throughout your career
- over and over. And it's a brave person who can
tell someone, "I know I've only been working here
for a month, but it's not right for me, so I'm
leaving."
Doubtless you'll hear that you should
stick it out, show some loyalty, give it at least
a year or two. But why should you take time out of
your life to spend your days doing something you
know is not right for you?
It is okay to quit.
No career is interesting if it's not engaging and
challenging, and your most important job is to
find that - over and over. Do not settle for
outdated workplace models that accept complacency
and downplay self-knowledge. Sure, the job
market is tough nowadays - but that's no reason to
settle. (Source
BNET)