How to Resign When You Can't Give Two Weeks' Notice

April 19, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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While it's been drilled into everyone with a sense of professionalism that you must give at least two weeks' notice when resigning from a job--and in some jobs more than that--there are occasionally circumstances that make it impossible: a family member suddenly requires around-the-clock care, or, say, you're moving for a new job and need time to make the move before your start date.

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To be clear, these circumstances are the rare exception; don't take this as license to throw the two-week rule out the window. But if you find yourself in this situation, what's the best way to handle it? Two things are key:

1. First, you must be apologetic. The fact is that leaving in less than two weeks does violate professional convention. Right or wrong, it's seen as unprofessional. So if you're matter-of-fact about it, you'll come across as if you don't care. This will make matters worse. Instead, you want to be explicitly apologetic. Sounding genuinely sorry, even mortified, will make most people want to cut you some slack.

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2. Offer to work extra hours in whatever remaining time you have. Also, be available for questions for a short period after you're gone. The whole reason employers expect two weeks notice is so that they have time to transition the work to someone new. If you go out of your way to help with that, it can negate the impact of the shorter notice period.

If you don't do the above, you'll burn bridges, jeopardize future references, and potentially even impact your professional reputation. But if you do, you'll likely be able to leave the situation on good terms.

Alison Green is the author of Managing to Change the World: The Nonprofit Leader's Guide to Getting Results. She is chief of staff for the Marijuana Policy Project, a nonprofit lobbying organization, where she oversees day-to-day management of the staff as well as hiring, firing, and staff development. Her writings have been published in the Washington Post, the New York Times, Maxim, and dozens of other newspapers. She blogs at Ask a Manager.

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When my professional employer fires me doesnt he need to give me 2 weeks notice ? . In this beautiful country the law works only in one way.

Roman of IL 6:21PM February 17, 2013

I worked at a gov agency in a startup project for over a year in a rock-bottom entry level position. I was doing an insane amount of work for 4 different supervisors total. I was constantly commended on the quality and quantity of my work. At first, I was also fed a line of bs about promotion and/or a reduced schedule so that I can work on my graduate degree. When I was ready to start school, all of a sudden they would not work with my schedule. And the promotion offer was a joke. I was at a clerk pay-grade, yet was doing a great deal of my supervisor's work (a woman who happened to be a racist, ignorant, former military shrew who could barely read and write). For example she could not write professional level correspondence or contracts, so I was assigned this work several levels above my pay grade. Fine. I don't mind learning new skills. But I also don't want to be taken advantage of. Basically, the workload, the frustration of working with my idiot primary supervisor, and lack of promotional and educational opportunity forced me to quit. I gave 2 weeks notice and they managed to pull someone from another department that I did my best to train. I cleaned up after myself and tied up loose ends before I left. And I can't get a reference from anyone at that company. I was doing so much before I quit that my leaving meant some people actually had to do some work. They wanted me to give several weeks notice. I would never have done that, because they would have taken advantage of me even more in that space of time. The more notice you give an employer, the more the ball is in their court.

I did everything right and can't get a reference from them. Since that's the case. I might as well of just left and let them slip around in their own mess.

Zezoe of AR 12:08PM January 26, 2013

Do you think you should give a 2 weeks notice when you have only been at the job for 3 days?

Serina M. of CA 11:49PM December 20, 2011

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