How should I explain why I left my last job at an interview?

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I have a job interview coming up in a few days but I'm worried about what to say if asked about why I left my last job. Well not if, I know they will definitely ask why I left my last position.



The truth is that I was given way too much work and there was no way of getting it done despite me working long hours and weekends. In the end I just resigned.



I'm worried that if I say that in the interview they will think I can't handle pressure or that I'm a liability. Either way I am worried that it won't sound good.



Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off? That sounds better but there is a small risk my lie might get discovered.



What should I do? Please help me out here.







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  • 4




    Most people here I suspect will stick to honesty. Being outed as a liar is far more egregious than having too much on your plate. Your professional integrity is at stake.
    – CKM
    Feb 25 '16 at 22:05










  • Don't say Laid Off. You can say the work life balance was very poor.You can add any other reasons but don't give them a long list. just 2-3 reasons. Example 1) Work Life Balance Poor 2) Nature of Challenges didn's suit you. .Be ready to explain if they ask what do you mean by that.
    – Learner_101
    Feb 26 '16 at 3:54











  • @JoeStrazzere, depending on how long the hours he was working, he might not have had a choice because there was no time available to interview. I had to quit a job under such circumstances once, too. You can;t job hunt while working 18 hour days and weekends.
    – HLGEM
    Feb 29 '16 at 18:14
















up vote
6
down vote

favorite












I have a job interview coming up in a few days but I'm worried about what to say if asked about why I left my last job. Well not if, I know they will definitely ask why I left my last position.



The truth is that I was given way too much work and there was no way of getting it done despite me working long hours and weekends. In the end I just resigned.



I'm worried that if I say that in the interview they will think I can't handle pressure or that I'm a liability. Either way I am worried that it won't sound good.



Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off? That sounds better but there is a small risk my lie might get discovered.



What should I do? Please help me out here.







share|improve this question
















  • 4




    Most people here I suspect will stick to honesty. Being outed as a liar is far more egregious than having too much on your plate. Your professional integrity is at stake.
    – CKM
    Feb 25 '16 at 22:05










  • Don't say Laid Off. You can say the work life balance was very poor.You can add any other reasons but don't give them a long list. just 2-3 reasons. Example 1) Work Life Balance Poor 2) Nature of Challenges didn's suit you. .Be ready to explain if they ask what do you mean by that.
    – Learner_101
    Feb 26 '16 at 3:54











  • @JoeStrazzere, depending on how long the hours he was working, he might not have had a choice because there was no time available to interview. I had to quit a job under such circumstances once, too. You can;t job hunt while working 18 hour days and weekends.
    – HLGEM
    Feb 29 '16 at 18:14












up vote
6
down vote

favorite









up vote
6
down vote

favorite











I have a job interview coming up in a few days but I'm worried about what to say if asked about why I left my last job. Well not if, I know they will definitely ask why I left my last position.



The truth is that I was given way too much work and there was no way of getting it done despite me working long hours and weekends. In the end I just resigned.



I'm worried that if I say that in the interview they will think I can't handle pressure or that I'm a liability. Either way I am worried that it won't sound good.



Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off? That sounds better but there is a small risk my lie might get discovered.



What should I do? Please help me out here.







share|improve this question












I have a job interview coming up in a few days but I'm worried about what to say if asked about why I left my last job. Well not if, I know they will definitely ask why I left my last position.



The truth is that I was given way too much work and there was no way of getting it done despite me working long hours and weekends. In the end I just resigned.



I'm worried that if I say that in the interview they will think I can't handle pressure or that I'm a liability. Either way I am worried that it won't sound good.



Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off? That sounds better but there is a small risk my lie might get discovered.



What should I do? Please help me out here.









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Feb 25 '16 at 22:01









user5982986

334




334







  • 4




    Most people here I suspect will stick to honesty. Being outed as a liar is far more egregious than having too much on your plate. Your professional integrity is at stake.
    – CKM
    Feb 25 '16 at 22:05










  • Don't say Laid Off. You can say the work life balance was very poor.You can add any other reasons but don't give them a long list. just 2-3 reasons. Example 1) Work Life Balance Poor 2) Nature of Challenges didn's suit you. .Be ready to explain if they ask what do you mean by that.
    – Learner_101
    Feb 26 '16 at 3:54











  • @JoeStrazzere, depending on how long the hours he was working, he might not have had a choice because there was no time available to interview. I had to quit a job under such circumstances once, too. You can;t job hunt while working 18 hour days and weekends.
    – HLGEM
    Feb 29 '16 at 18:14












  • 4




    Most people here I suspect will stick to honesty. Being outed as a liar is far more egregious than having too much on your plate. Your professional integrity is at stake.
    – CKM
    Feb 25 '16 at 22:05










  • Don't say Laid Off. You can say the work life balance was very poor.You can add any other reasons but don't give them a long list. just 2-3 reasons. Example 1) Work Life Balance Poor 2) Nature of Challenges didn's suit you. .Be ready to explain if they ask what do you mean by that.
    – Learner_101
    Feb 26 '16 at 3:54











  • @JoeStrazzere, depending on how long the hours he was working, he might not have had a choice because there was no time available to interview. I had to quit a job under such circumstances once, too. You can;t job hunt while working 18 hour days and weekends.
    – HLGEM
    Feb 29 '16 at 18:14







4




4




Most people here I suspect will stick to honesty. Being outed as a liar is far more egregious than having too much on your plate. Your professional integrity is at stake.
– CKM
Feb 25 '16 at 22:05




Most people here I suspect will stick to honesty. Being outed as a liar is far more egregious than having too much on your plate. Your professional integrity is at stake.
– CKM
Feb 25 '16 at 22:05












Don't say Laid Off. You can say the work life balance was very poor.You can add any other reasons but don't give them a long list. just 2-3 reasons. Example 1) Work Life Balance Poor 2) Nature of Challenges didn's suit you. .Be ready to explain if they ask what do you mean by that.
– Learner_101
Feb 26 '16 at 3:54





Don't say Laid Off. You can say the work life balance was very poor.You can add any other reasons but don't give them a long list. just 2-3 reasons. Example 1) Work Life Balance Poor 2) Nature of Challenges didn's suit you. .Be ready to explain if they ask what do you mean by that.
– Learner_101
Feb 26 '16 at 3:54













@JoeStrazzere, depending on how long the hours he was working, he might not have had a choice because there was no time available to interview. I had to quit a job under such circumstances once, too. You can;t job hunt while working 18 hour days and weekends.
– HLGEM
Feb 29 '16 at 18:14




@JoeStrazzere, depending on how long the hours he was working, he might not have had a choice because there was no time available to interview. I had to quit a job under such circumstances once, too. You can;t job hunt while working 18 hour days and weekends.
– HLGEM
Feb 29 '16 at 18:14










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
6
down vote



accepted










Would you admit that you were a criminal to hide that you were the victim of a crime?



I'm not saying long hours are a crime--I'm just saying that you're admitting to something far less desirable. You left on your own terms. That is critical.



Imagine you were founding your own company on an idea that you just knew was revolutionary, and would accomplish all your worldly goals. I best you'd work long hours for little pay, knowing that either the pay-off or immense personal satisfaction were worth the effort.



Now imagine that you have to work 4 hours a month cleaning the bathrooms of the Port Authority in New York (imagine hell, but with a worse smell). I bet you'd love to quit that job as soon as possible.



You left a position because the balance between the work and the payoff was horrible. That's usually why people leave a job. You have nothing to hide. I'm sure you don't mind a big crunch for a reason, or an extra busy schedule for meaningful work. Emphasize whatever you have there.






share|improve this answer




















  • Good answer. Being honest will be a good thing. If they are similar to your last company, they may not hire you, but you wouldn't want to be. If they value a work life balance they won't mind it. Remember your goal isn't to get the job in a interview, it is to see if it would be a good fit for both parties.
    – Ronnie W.
    Aug 24 '16 at 16:01

















up vote
12
down vote













It depends on what you are trying to achieve and how bad it actually was and how typical those conditions are for your industry or profession.



I had a job where the shortest day I worked was 11 hours and the most common was 18 hours and I worked every weekend for 4 months. Since I didn't want to get into that type of situation again, I was open about the working conditions having changed to ones that were not acceptable and I described what I was trying to avoid.



I had no problems with anyone finding it unacceptable to want to leave those conditions. I made sure they understood, I was open to working appropriate overtime, but not to make my job be the only thing I did except sleep. I pointed out that I wasn't mad at the company, just that the organization culture was one I did not wish to continue in. If you choose to disclose the corporate culture you don;t want to be in, it has to be presented in such a way that you are not bad-mouthing the company. It is one thing to say, "The workload evolved until it reached a level I personally could not sustain." and it is another to say, " I hated every minute of working for company ABC because they never let me go home and sleep but the %^#& managers always left on time." If the work conditions are truly ones you don't want again, then letting people know that is not a problem as long as you accept than some employers might also be that bad and you will lose that opportunity. I personally see that as a plus. YMMV.



However, if I have been working say 50 hours which is fairly typical from my industry, it would have been more of a concern. In that case I would have fallen back on the old standby of looking for more opportunities to grow my skills or greater opportunity for advancement both of which are always acceptable answers to the question.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    +1 interviews are two way filters, and if the next company doesn't meet your expectations on work/life balance, then you wouldn't want to get hired there.
    – HorusKol
    Feb 25 '16 at 22:52










  • +1 while there are ways to euphemistically and politely state that you were overwhelmed by the workload, you gain nothing by telling them something else entirely.
    – NotVonKaiser
    Feb 29 '16 at 18:03

















up vote
9
down vote














Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off?




No, don't lie at interviews it's too risky.



You don't need to go into detail, just tell them you couldn't see a way forwards in your previous employment so you've been looking for work in a company where you can advance or something similar. Don't complain about overwork or anything else, it's a bad look.






share|improve this answer




















  • It depends on the amount of overwork - if the OP was getting into 12 hour days, they should be open about that otherwise they'd just end up getting another job that expects the same...
    – HorusKol
    Feb 25 '16 at 22:50










  • I concur on several points. I've been laid off a few times in my career, and "laid off" == "tainted". Also, it's foolish to lie on a resume or in an interview about something that can be easily verified.
    – Nolo Problemo
    Feb 26 '16 at 18:13

















up vote
1
down vote













Don't lie, but make sure you frame your response in a way to reflect you've learned something from this.



You didn't see the signs of burn-out until it was too late and you made a poor choice. Yes, leaving that job before you found a new one was a bad idea. If this weren't the case, you wouldn't be in this situation.



Start learning how to manage the stress. Could you have mentioned it to your previous employer and worked something out? Take time off. Pace yourself.



Recognize this new job doesn't seem to have the time requirements and that is why it appeals to you. Show you have a positive way to deal with a demanding job without quiting.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    To say you were laid off is worse than saying you resigned. To have been terminated indicates that you were possibly at fault or somehow incompetent. You don't need to go in to detail about why you resigned.



    Simply say that you did not feel challenged in your last job, and are looking for a new position with opportunities (as Kilisi notes) to advance.



    In the future, if you have any choice in the matter, it's always better to look for employment while you already have a job. There's an unfortunate stigma against unemployed people, which only gets worse the longer you're unemployed.






    share|improve this answer
















    • 1




      It is a pretty terrible attitude to think a layoff somehow means you are at fault. Sometimes your whole department is eliminated, sometimes, you just don't have seniority and sometimes, the company went under. I have seen many outstanding employees get caught in a layoff even when employees considered to be poor got to stay.
      – HLGEM
      Feb 25 '16 at 22:48










    • laid off != terminated/fired
      – HorusKol
      Feb 25 '16 at 22:49






    • 1




      it does sound brutal, but nethertheless there is that taint attached to it sometimes
      – Kilisi
      Feb 26 '16 at 6:31






    • 1




      @HorusKol I suppose "terminated" has negative connotations, but whether you are laid off without cause, or fired with cause, your employer has terminated the working relationship.
      – mcknz
      Feb 26 '16 at 14:42






    • 1




      @mcknz - and sometimes companies choose to lay off expensive full-time workers and replace them with cheaper part-time staff (who somehow end up working the same hours). Being laid-off doesn't send the same red-flags to HR, whereas terminated has a very specific meaning to managers and HR - no connotations, terminated is negative.
      – HorusKol
      Feb 26 '16 at 21:58

















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    You are right about being worried. Why should they hire someone with a little doubt on, instead of someone with clear background? Therefore you must have some evidence that they are giving you a workload more than you can carry.



    For example, the fact that you resigned but not laid off is a strong plus. You should show the work hours to clarify that it was an unusual situation. But don't hand over those papers as soon as you hear the question though, show them if they want to know more about it persistently.



    Some companies likes to dig in, some just asks and continues. It's best to put it in a few words and continue, since everyone have an unpleasant reason to leave his/her job anyway.






    share|improve this answer




















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      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes








      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      6
      down vote



      accepted










      Would you admit that you were a criminal to hide that you were the victim of a crime?



      I'm not saying long hours are a crime--I'm just saying that you're admitting to something far less desirable. You left on your own terms. That is critical.



      Imagine you were founding your own company on an idea that you just knew was revolutionary, and would accomplish all your worldly goals. I best you'd work long hours for little pay, knowing that either the pay-off or immense personal satisfaction were worth the effort.



      Now imagine that you have to work 4 hours a month cleaning the bathrooms of the Port Authority in New York (imagine hell, but with a worse smell). I bet you'd love to quit that job as soon as possible.



      You left a position because the balance between the work and the payoff was horrible. That's usually why people leave a job. You have nothing to hide. I'm sure you don't mind a big crunch for a reason, or an extra busy schedule for meaningful work. Emphasize whatever you have there.






      share|improve this answer




















      • Good answer. Being honest will be a good thing. If they are similar to your last company, they may not hire you, but you wouldn't want to be. If they value a work life balance they won't mind it. Remember your goal isn't to get the job in a interview, it is to see if it would be a good fit for both parties.
        – Ronnie W.
        Aug 24 '16 at 16:01














      up vote
      6
      down vote



      accepted










      Would you admit that you were a criminal to hide that you were the victim of a crime?



      I'm not saying long hours are a crime--I'm just saying that you're admitting to something far less desirable. You left on your own terms. That is critical.



      Imagine you were founding your own company on an idea that you just knew was revolutionary, and would accomplish all your worldly goals. I best you'd work long hours for little pay, knowing that either the pay-off or immense personal satisfaction were worth the effort.



      Now imagine that you have to work 4 hours a month cleaning the bathrooms of the Port Authority in New York (imagine hell, but with a worse smell). I bet you'd love to quit that job as soon as possible.



      You left a position because the balance between the work and the payoff was horrible. That's usually why people leave a job. You have nothing to hide. I'm sure you don't mind a big crunch for a reason, or an extra busy schedule for meaningful work. Emphasize whatever you have there.






      share|improve this answer




















      • Good answer. Being honest will be a good thing. If they are similar to your last company, they may not hire you, but you wouldn't want to be. If they value a work life balance they won't mind it. Remember your goal isn't to get the job in a interview, it is to see if it would be a good fit for both parties.
        – Ronnie W.
        Aug 24 '16 at 16:01












      up vote
      6
      down vote



      accepted







      up vote
      6
      down vote



      accepted






      Would you admit that you were a criminal to hide that you were the victim of a crime?



      I'm not saying long hours are a crime--I'm just saying that you're admitting to something far less desirable. You left on your own terms. That is critical.



      Imagine you were founding your own company on an idea that you just knew was revolutionary, and would accomplish all your worldly goals. I best you'd work long hours for little pay, knowing that either the pay-off or immense personal satisfaction were worth the effort.



      Now imagine that you have to work 4 hours a month cleaning the bathrooms of the Port Authority in New York (imagine hell, but with a worse smell). I bet you'd love to quit that job as soon as possible.



      You left a position because the balance between the work and the payoff was horrible. That's usually why people leave a job. You have nothing to hide. I'm sure you don't mind a big crunch for a reason, or an extra busy schedule for meaningful work. Emphasize whatever you have there.






      share|improve this answer












      Would you admit that you were a criminal to hide that you were the victim of a crime?



      I'm not saying long hours are a crime--I'm just saying that you're admitting to something far less desirable. You left on your own terms. That is critical.



      Imagine you were founding your own company on an idea that you just knew was revolutionary, and would accomplish all your worldly goals. I best you'd work long hours for little pay, knowing that either the pay-off or immense personal satisfaction were worth the effort.



      Now imagine that you have to work 4 hours a month cleaning the bathrooms of the Port Authority in New York (imagine hell, but with a worse smell). I bet you'd love to quit that job as soon as possible.



      You left a position because the balance between the work and the payoff was horrible. That's usually why people leave a job. You have nothing to hide. I'm sure you don't mind a big crunch for a reason, or an extra busy schedule for meaningful work. Emphasize whatever you have there.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Feb 26 '16 at 1:58









      jimm101

      11.6k72753




      11.6k72753











      • Good answer. Being honest will be a good thing. If they are similar to your last company, they may not hire you, but you wouldn't want to be. If they value a work life balance they won't mind it. Remember your goal isn't to get the job in a interview, it is to see if it would be a good fit for both parties.
        – Ronnie W.
        Aug 24 '16 at 16:01
















      • Good answer. Being honest will be a good thing. If they are similar to your last company, they may not hire you, but you wouldn't want to be. If they value a work life balance they won't mind it. Remember your goal isn't to get the job in a interview, it is to see if it would be a good fit for both parties.
        – Ronnie W.
        Aug 24 '16 at 16:01















      Good answer. Being honest will be a good thing. If they are similar to your last company, they may not hire you, but you wouldn't want to be. If they value a work life balance they won't mind it. Remember your goal isn't to get the job in a interview, it is to see if it would be a good fit for both parties.
      – Ronnie W.
      Aug 24 '16 at 16:01




      Good answer. Being honest will be a good thing. If they are similar to your last company, they may not hire you, but you wouldn't want to be. If they value a work life balance they won't mind it. Remember your goal isn't to get the job in a interview, it is to see if it would be a good fit for both parties.
      – Ronnie W.
      Aug 24 '16 at 16:01












      up vote
      12
      down vote













      It depends on what you are trying to achieve and how bad it actually was and how typical those conditions are for your industry or profession.



      I had a job where the shortest day I worked was 11 hours and the most common was 18 hours and I worked every weekend for 4 months. Since I didn't want to get into that type of situation again, I was open about the working conditions having changed to ones that were not acceptable and I described what I was trying to avoid.



      I had no problems with anyone finding it unacceptable to want to leave those conditions. I made sure they understood, I was open to working appropriate overtime, but not to make my job be the only thing I did except sleep. I pointed out that I wasn't mad at the company, just that the organization culture was one I did not wish to continue in. If you choose to disclose the corporate culture you don;t want to be in, it has to be presented in such a way that you are not bad-mouthing the company. It is one thing to say, "The workload evolved until it reached a level I personally could not sustain." and it is another to say, " I hated every minute of working for company ABC because they never let me go home and sleep but the %^#& managers always left on time." If the work conditions are truly ones you don't want again, then letting people know that is not a problem as long as you accept than some employers might also be that bad and you will lose that opportunity. I personally see that as a plus. YMMV.



      However, if I have been working say 50 hours which is fairly typical from my industry, it would have been more of a concern. In that case I would have fallen back on the old standby of looking for more opportunities to grow my skills or greater opportunity for advancement both of which are always acceptable answers to the question.






      share|improve this answer
















      • 2




        +1 interviews are two way filters, and if the next company doesn't meet your expectations on work/life balance, then you wouldn't want to get hired there.
        – HorusKol
        Feb 25 '16 at 22:52










      • +1 while there are ways to euphemistically and politely state that you were overwhelmed by the workload, you gain nothing by telling them something else entirely.
        – NotVonKaiser
        Feb 29 '16 at 18:03














      up vote
      12
      down vote













      It depends on what you are trying to achieve and how bad it actually was and how typical those conditions are for your industry or profession.



      I had a job where the shortest day I worked was 11 hours and the most common was 18 hours and I worked every weekend for 4 months. Since I didn't want to get into that type of situation again, I was open about the working conditions having changed to ones that were not acceptable and I described what I was trying to avoid.



      I had no problems with anyone finding it unacceptable to want to leave those conditions. I made sure they understood, I was open to working appropriate overtime, but not to make my job be the only thing I did except sleep. I pointed out that I wasn't mad at the company, just that the organization culture was one I did not wish to continue in. If you choose to disclose the corporate culture you don;t want to be in, it has to be presented in such a way that you are not bad-mouthing the company. It is one thing to say, "The workload evolved until it reached a level I personally could not sustain." and it is another to say, " I hated every minute of working for company ABC because they never let me go home and sleep but the %^#& managers always left on time." If the work conditions are truly ones you don't want again, then letting people know that is not a problem as long as you accept than some employers might also be that bad and you will lose that opportunity. I personally see that as a plus. YMMV.



      However, if I have been working say 50 hours which is fairly typical from my industry, it would have been more of a concern. In that case I would have fallen back on the old standby of looking for more opportunities to grow my skills or greater opportunity for advancement both of which are always acceptable answers to the question.






      share|improve this answer
















      • 2




        +1 interviews are two way filters, and if the next company doesn't meet your expectations on work/life balance, then you wouldn't want to get hired there.
        – HorusKol
        Feb 25 '16 at 22:52










      • +1 while there are ways to euphemistically and politely state that you were overwhelmed by the workload, you gain nothing by telling them something else entirely.
        – NotVonKaiser
        Feb 29 '16 at 18:03












      up vote
      12
      down vote










      up vote
      12
      down vote









      It depends on what you are trying to achieve and how bad it actually was and how typical those conditions are for your industry or profession.



      I had a job where the shortest day I worked was 11 hours and the most common was 18 hours and I worked every weekend for 4 months. Since I didn't want to get into that type of situation again, I was open about the working conditions having changed to ones that were not acceptable and I described what I was trying to avoid.



      I had no problems with anyone finding it unacceptable to want to leave those conditions. I made sure they understood, I was open to working appropriate overtime, but not to make my job be the only thing I did except sleep. I pointed out that I wasn't mad at the company, just that the organization culture was one I did not wish to continue in. If you choose to disclose the corporate culture you don;t want to be in, it has to be presented in such a way that you are not bad-mouthing the company. It is one thing to say, "The workload evolved until it reached a level I personally could not sustain." and it is another to say, " I hated every minute of working for company ABC because they never let me go home and sleep but the %^#& managers always left on time." If the work conditions are truly ones you don't want again, then letting people know that is not a problem as long as you accept than some employers might also be that bad and you will lose that opportunity. I personally see that as a plus. YMMV.



      However, if I have been working say 50 hours which is fairly typical from my industry, it would have been more of a concern. In that case I would have fallen back on the old standby of looking for more opportunities to grow my skills or greater opportunity for advancement both of which are always acceptable answers to the question.






      share|improve this answer












      It depends on what you are trying to achieve and how bad it actually was and how typical those conditions are for your industry or profession.



      I had a job where the shortest day I worked was 11 hours and the most common was 18 hours and I worked every weekend for 4 months. Since I didn't want to get into that type of situation again, I was open about the working conditions having changed to ones that were not acceptable and I described what I was trying to avoid.



      I had no problems with anyone finding it unacceptable to want to leave those conditions. I made sure they understood, I was open to working appropriate overtime, but not to make my job be the only thing I did except sleep. I pointed out that I wasn't mad at the company, just that the organization culture was one I did not wish to continue in. If you choose to disclose the corporate culture you don;t want to be in, it has to be presented in such a way that you are not bad-mouthing the company. It is one thing to say, "The workload evolved until it reached a level I personally could not sustain." and it is another to say, " I hated every minute of working for company ABC because they never let me go home and sleep but the %^#& managers always left on time." If the work conditions are truly ones you don't want again, then letting people know that is not a problem as long as you accept than some employers might also be that bad and you will lose that opportunity. I personally see that as a plus. YMMV.



      However, if I have been working say 50 hours which is fairly typical from my industry, it would have been more of a concern. In that case I would have fallen back on the old standby of looking for more opportunities to grow my skills or greater opportunity for advancement both of which are always acceptable answers to the question.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Feb 25 '16 at 22:46









      HLGEM

      133k25226489




      133k25226489







      • 2




        +1 interviews are two way filters, and if the next company doesn't meet your expectations on work/life balance, then you wouldn't want to get hired there.
        – HorusKol
        Feb 25 '16 at 22:52










      • +1 while there are ways to euphemistically and politely state that you were overwhelmed by the workload, you gain nothing by telling them something else entirely.
        – NotVonKaiser
        Feb 29 '16 at 18:03












      • 2




        +1 interviews are two way filters, and if the next company doesn't meet your expectations on work/life balance, then you wouldn't want to get hired there.
        – HorusKol
        Feb 25 '16 at 22:52










      • +1 while there are ways to euphemistically and politely state that you were overwhelmed by the workload, you gain nothing by telling them something else entirely.
        – NotVonKaiser
        Feb 29 '16 at 18:03







      2




      2




      +1 interviews are two way filters, and if the next company doesn't meet your expectations on work/life balance, then you wouldn't want to get hired there.
      – HorusKol
      Feb 25 '16 at 22:52




      +1 interviews are two way filters, and if the next company doesn't meet your expectations on work/life balance, then you wouldn't want to get hired there.
      – HorusKol
      Feb 25 '16 at 22:52












      +1 while there are ways to euphemistically and politely state that you were overwhelmed by the workload, you gain nothing by telling them something else entirely.
      – NotVonKaiser
      Feb 29 '16 at 18:03




      +1 while there are ways to euphemistically and politely state that you were overwhelmed by the workload, you gain nothing by telling them something else entirely.
      – NotVonKaiser
      Feb 29 '16 at 18:03










      up vote
      9
      down vote














      Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off?




      No, don't lie at interviews it's too risky.



      You don't need to go into detail, just tell them you couldn't see a way forwards in your previous employment so you've been looking for work in a company where you can advance or something similar. Don't complain about overwork or anything else, it's a bad look.






      share|improve this answer




















      • It depends on the amount of overwork - if the OP was getting into 12 hour days, they should be open about that otherwise they'd just end up getting another job that expects the same...
        – HorusKol
        Feb 25 '16 at 22:50










      • I concur on several points. I've been laid off a few times in my career, and "laid off" == "tainted". Also, it's foolish to lie on a resume or in an interview about something that can be easily verified.
        – Nolo Problemo
        Feb 26 '16 at 18:13














      up vote
      9
      down vote














      Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off?




      No, don't lie at interviews it's too risky.



      You don't need to go into detail, just tell them you couldn't see a way forwards in your previous employment so you've been looking for work in a company where you can advance or something similar. Don't complain about overwork or anything else, it's a bad look.






      share|improve this answer




















      • It depends on the amount of overwork - if the OP was getting into 12 hour days, they should be open about that otherwise they'd just end up getting another job that expects the same...
        – HorusKol
        Feb 25 '16 at 22:50










      • I concur on several points. I've been laid off a few times in my career, and "laid off" == "tainted". Also, it's foolish to lie on a resume or in an interview about something that can be easily verified.
        – Nolo Problemo
        Feb 26 '16 at 18:13












      up vote
      9
      down vote










      up vote
      9
      down vote










      Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off?




      No, don't lie at interviews it's too risky.



      You don't need to go into detail, just tell them you couldn't see a way forwards in your previous employment so you've been looking for work in a company where you can advance or something similar. Don't complain about overwork or anything else, it's a bad look.






      share|improve this answer













      Should I tell a white lie and just say I was laid off?




      No, don't lie at interviews it's too risky.



      You don't need to go into detail, just tell them you couldn't see a way forwards in your previous employment so you've been looking for work in a company where you can advance or something similar. Don't complain about overwork or anything else, it's a bad look.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Feb 25 '16 at 22:24









      Kilisi

      94.6k50216376




      94.6k50216376











      • It depends on the amount of overwork - if the OP was getting into 12 hour days, they should be open about that otherwise they'd just end up getting another job that expects the same...
        – HorusKol
        Feb 25 '16 at 22:50










      • I concur on several points. I've been laid off a few times in my career, and "laid off" == "tainted". Also, it's foolish to lie on a resume or in an interview about something that can be easily verified.
        – Nolo Problemo
        Feb 26 '16 at 18:13
















      • It depends on the amount of overwork - if the OP was getting into 12 hour days, they should be open about that otherwise they'd just end up getting another job that expects the same...
        – HorusKol
        Feb 25 '16 at 22:50










      • I concur on several points. I've been laid off a few times in my career, and "laid off" == "tainted". Also, it's foolish to lie on a resume or in an interview about something that can be easily verified.
        – Nolo Problemo
        Feb 26 '16 at 18:13















      It depends on the amount of overwork - if the OP was getting into 12 hour days, they should be open about that otherwise they'd just end up getting another job that expects the same...
      – HorusKol
      Feb 25 '16 at 22:50




      It depends on the amount of overwork - if the OP was getting into 12 hour days, they should be open about that otherwise they'd just end up getting another job that expects the same...
      – HorusKol
      Feb 25 '16 at 22:50












      I concur on several points. I've been laid off a few times in my career, and "laid off" == "tainted". Also, it's foolish to lie on a resume or in an interview about something that can be easily verified.
      – Nolo Problemo
      Feb 26 '16 at 18:13




      I concur on several points. I've been laid off a few times in my career, and "laid off" == "tainted". Also, it's foolish to lie on a resume or in an interview about something that can be easily verified.
      – Nolo Problemo
      Feb 26 '16 at 18:13










      up vote
      1
      down vote













      Don't lie, but make sure you frame your response in a way to reflect you've learned something from this.



      You didn't see the signs of burn-out until it was too late and you made a poor choice. Yes, leaving that job before you found a new one was a bad idea. If this weren't the case, you wouldn't be in this situation.



      Start learning how to manage the stress. Could you have mentioned it to your previous employer and worked something out? Take time off. Pace yourself.



      Recognize this new job doesn't seem to have the time requirements and that is why it appeals to you. Show you have a positive way to deal with a demanding job without quiting.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        1
        down vote













        Don't lie, but make sure you frame your response in a way to reflect you've learned something from this.



        You didn't see the signs of burn-out until it was too late and you made a poor choice. Yes, leaving that job before you found a new one was a bad idea. If this weren't the case, you wouldn't be in this situation.



        Start learning how to manage the stress. Could you have mentioned it to your previous employer and worked something out? Take time off. Pace yourself.



        Recognize this new job doesn't seem to have the time requirements and that is why it appeals to you. Show you have a positive way to deal with a demanding job without quiting.






        share|improve this answer






















          up vote
          1
          down vote










          up vote
          1
          down vote









          Don't lie, but make sure you frame your response in a way to reflect you've learned something from this.



          You didn't see the signs of burn-out until it was too late and you made a poor choice. Yes, leaving that job before you found a new one was a bad idea. If this weren't the case, you wouldn't be in this situation.



          Start learning how to manage the stress. Could you have mentioned it to your previous employer and worked something out? Take time off. Pace yourself.



          Recognize this new job doesn't seem to have the time requirements and that is why it appeals to you. Show you have a positive way to deal with a demanding job without quiting.






          share|improve this answer












          Don't lie, but make sure you frame your response in a way to reflect you've learned something from this.



          You didn't see the signs of burn-out until it was too late and you made a poor choice. Yes, leaving that job before you found a new one was a bad idea. If this weren't the case, you wouldn't be in this situation.



          Start learning how to manage the stress. Could you have mentioned it to your previous employer and worked something out? Take time off. Pace yourself.



          Recognize this new job doesn't seem to have the time requirements and that is why it appeals to you. Show you have a positive way to deal with a demanding job without quiting.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Feb 29 '16 at 17:23







          user8365



























              up vote
              0
              down vote













              To say you were laid off is worse than saying you resigned. To have been terminated indicates that you were possibly at fault or somehow incompetent. You don't need to go in to detail about why you resigned.



              Simply say that you did not feel challenged in your last job, and are looking for a new position with opportunities (as Kilisi notes) to advance.



              In the future, if you have any choice in the matter, it's always better to look for employment while you already have a job. There's an unfortunate stigma against unemployed people, which only gets worse the longer you're unemployed.






              share|improve this answer
















              • 1




                It is a pretty terrible attitude to think a layoff somehow means you are at fault. Sometimes your whole department is eliminated, sometimes, you just don't have seniority and sometimes, the company went under. I have seen many outstanding employees get caught in a layoff even when employees considered to be poor got to stay.
                – HLGEM
                Feb 25 '16 at 22:48










              • laid off != terminated/fired
                – HorusKol
                Feb 25 '16 at 22:49






              • 1




                it does sound brutal, but nethertheless there is that taint attached to it sometimes
                – Kilisi
                Feb 26 '16 at 6:31






              • 1




                @HorusKol I suppose "terminated" has negative connotations, but whether you are laid off without cause, or fired with cause, your employer has terminated the working relationship.
                – mcknz
                Feb 26 '16 at 14:42






              • 1




                @mcknz - and sometimes companies choose to lay off expensive full-time workers and replace them with cheaper part-time staff (who somehow end up working the same hours). Being laid-off doesn't send the same red-flags to HR, whereas terminated has a very specific meaning to managers and HR - no connotations, terminated is negative.
                – HorusKol
                Feb 26 '16 at 21:58














              up vote
              0
              down vote













              To say you were laid off is worse than saying you resigned. To have been terminated indicates that you were possibly at fault or somehow incompetent. You don't need to go in to detail about why you resigned.



              Simply say that you did not feel challenged in your last job, and are looking for a new position with opportunities (as Kilisi notes) to advance.



              In the future, if you have any choice in the matter, it's always better to look for employment while you already have a job. There's an unfortunate stigma against unemployed people, which only gets worse the longer you're unemployed.






              share|improve this answer
















              • 1




                It is a pretty terrible attitude to think a layoff somehow means you are at fault. Sometimes your whole department is eliminated, sometimes, you just don't have seniority and sometimes, the company went under. I have seen many outstanding employees get caught in a layoff even when employees considered to be poor got to stay.
                – HLGEM
                Feb 25 '16 at 22:48










              • laid off != terminated/fired
                – HorusKol
                Feb 25 '16 at 22:49






              • 1




                it does sound brutal, but nethertheless there is that taint attached to it sometimes
                – Kilisi
                Feb 26 '16 at 6:31






              • 1




                @HorusKol I suppose "terminated" has negative connotations, but whether you are laid off without cause, or fired with cause, your employer has terminated the working relationship.
                – mcknz
                Feb 26 '16 at 14:42






              • 1




                @mcknz - and sometimes companies choose to lay off expensive full-time workers and replace them with cheaper part-time staff (who somehow end up working the same hours). Being laid-off doesn't send the same red-flags to HR, whereas terminated has a very specific meaning to managers and HR - no connotations, terminated is negative.
                – HorusKol
                Feb 26 '16 at 21:58












              up vote
              0
              down vote










              up vote
              0
              down vote









              To say you were laid off is worse than saying you resigned. To have been terminated indicates that you were possibly at fault or somehow incompetent. You don't need to go in to detail about why you resigned.



              Simply say that you did not feel challenged in your last job, and are looking for a new position with opportunities (as Kilisi notes) to advance.



              In the future, if you have any choice in the matter, it's always better to look for employment while you already have a job. There's an unfortunate stigma against unemployed people, which only gets worse the longer you're unemployed.






              share|improve this answer












              To say you were laid off is worse than saying you resigned. To have been terminated indicates that you were possibly at fault or somehow incompetent. You don't need to go in to detail about why you resigned.



              Simply say that you did not feel challenged in your last job, and are looking for a new position with opportunities (as Kilisi notes) to advance.



              In the future, if you have any choice in the matter, it's always better to look for employment while you already have a job. There's an unfortunate stigma against unemployed people, which only gets worse the longer you're unemployed.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Feb 25 '16 at 22:36









              mcknz

              15.6k55468




              15.6k55468







              • 1




                It is a pretty terrible attitude to think a layoff somehow means you are at fault. Sometimes your whole department is eliminated, sometimes, you just don't have seniority and sometimes, the company went under. I have seen many outstanding employees get caught in a layoff even when employees considered to be poor got to stay.
                – HLGEM
                Feb 25 '16 at 22:48










              • laid off != terminated/fired
                – HorusKol
                Feb 25 '16 at 22:49






              • 1




                it does sound brutal, but nethertheless there is that taint attached to it sometimes
                – Kilisi
                Feb 26 '16 at 6:31






              • 1




                @HorusKol I suppose "terminated" has negative connotations, but whether you are laid off without cause, or fired with cause, your employer has terminated the working relationship.
                – mcknz
                Feb 26 '16 at 14:42






              • 1




                @mcknz - and sometimes companies choose to lay off expensive full-time workers and replace them with cheaper part-time staff (who somehow end up working the same hours). Being laid-off doesn't send the same red-flags to HR, whereas terminated has a very specific meaning to managers and HR - no connotations, terminated is negative.
                – HorusKol
                Feb 26 '16 at 21:58












              • 1




                It is a pretty terrible attitude to think a layoff somehow means you are at fault. Sometimes your whole department is eliminated, sometimes, you just don't have seniority and sometimes, the company went under. I have seen many outstanding employees get caught in a layoff even when employees considered to be poor got to stay.
                – HLGEM
                Feb 25 '16 at 22:48










              • laid off != terminated/fired
                – HorusKol
                Feb 25 '16 at 22:49






              • 1




                it does sound brutal, but nethertheless there is that taint attached to it sometimes
                – Kilisi
                Feb 26 '16 at 6:31






              • 1




                @HorusKol I suppose "terminated" has negative connotations, but whether you are laid off without cause, or fired with cause, your employer has terminated the working relationship.
                – mcknz
                Feb 26 '16 at 14:42






              • 1




                @mcknz - and sometimes companies choose to lay off expensive full-time workers and replace them with cheaper part-time staff (who somehow end up working the same hours). Being laid-off doesn't send the same red-flags to HR, whereas terminated has a very specific meaning to managers and HR - no connotations, terminated is negative.
                – HorusKol
                Feb 26 '16 at 21:58







              1




              1




              It is a pretty terrible attitude to think a layoff somehow means you are at fault. Sometimes your whole department is eliminated, sometimes, you just don't have seniority and sometimes, the company went under. I have seen many outstanding employees get caught in a layoff even when employees considered to be poor got to stay.
              – HLGEM
              Feb 25 '16 at 22:48




              It is a pretty terrible attitude to think a layoff somehow means you are at fault. Sometimes your whole department is eliminated, sometimes, you just don't have seniority and sometimes, the company went under. I have seen many outstanding employees get caught in a layoff even when employees considered to be poor got to stay.
              – HLGEM
              Feb 25 '16 at 22:48












              laid off != terminated/fired
              – HorusKol
              Feb 25 '16 at 22:49




              laid off != terminated/fired
              – HorusKol
              Feb 25 '16 at 22:49




              1




              1




              it does sound brutal, but nethertheless there is that taint attached to it sometimes
              – Kilisi
              Feb 26 '16 at 6:31




              it does sound brutal, but nethertheless there is that taint attached to it sometimes
              – Kilisi
              Feb 26 '16 at 6:31




              1




              1




              @HorusKol I suppose "terminated" has negative connotations, but whether you are laid off without cause, or fired with cause, your employer has terminated the working relationship.
              – mcknz
              Feb 26 '16 at 14:42




              @HorusKol I suppose "terminated" has negative connotations, but whether you are laid off without cause, or fired with cause, your employer has terminated the working relationship.
              – mcknz
              Feb 26 '16 at 14:42




              1




              1




              @mcknz - and sometimes companies choose to lay off expensive full-time workers and replace them with cheaper part-time staff (who somehow end up working the same hours). Being laid-off doesn't send the same red-flags to HR, whereas terminated has a very specific meaning to managers and HR - no connotations, terminated is negative.
              – HorusKol
              Feb 26 '16 at 21:58




              @mcknz - and sometimes companies choose to lay off expensive full-time workers and replace them with cheaper part-time staff (who somehow end up working the same hours). Being laid-off doesn't send the same red-flags to HR, whereas terminated has a very specific meaning to managers and HR - no connotations, terminated is negative.
              – HorusKol
              Feb 26 '16 at 21:58










              up vote
              0
              down vote













              You are right about being worried. Why should they hire someone with a little doubt on, instead of someone with clear background? Therefore you must have some evidence that they are giving you a workload more than you can carry.



              For example, the fact that you resigned but not laid off is a strong plus. You should show the work hours to clarify that it was an unusual situation. But don't hand over those papers as soon as you hear the question though, show them if they want to know more about it persistently.



              Some companies likes to dig in, some just asks and continues. It's best to put it in a few words and continue, since everyone have an unpleasant reason to leave his/her job anyway.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                0
                down vote













                You are right about being worried. Why should they hire someone with a little doubt on, instead of someone with clear background? Therefore you must have some evidence that they are giving you a workload more than you can carry.



                For example, the fact that you resigned but not laid off is a strong plus. You should show the work hours to clarify that it was an unusual situation. But don't hand over those papers as soon as you hear the question though, show them if they want to know more about it persistently.



                Some companies likes to dig in, some just asks and continues. It's best to put it in a few words and continue, since everyone have an unpleasant reason to leave his/her job anyway.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote









                  You are right about being worried. Why should they hire someone with a little doubt on, instead of someone with clear background? Therefore you must have some evidence that they are giving you a workload more than you can carry.



                  For example, the fact that you resigned but not laid off is a strong plus. You should show the work hours to clarify that it was an unusual situation. But don't hand over those papers as soon as you hear the question though, show them if they want to know more about it persistently.



                  Some companies likes to dig in, some just asks and continues. It's best to put it in a few words and continue, since everyone have an unpleasant reason to leave his/her job anyway.






                  share|improve this answer












                  You are right about being worried. Why should they hire someone with a little doubt on, instead of someone with clear background? Therefore you must have some evidence that they are giving you a workload more than you can carry.



                  For example, the fact that you resigned but not laid off is a strong plus. You should show the work hours to clarify that it was an unusual situation. But don't hand over those papers as soon as you hear the question though, show them if they want to know more about it persistently.



                  Some companies likes to dig in, some just asks and continues. It's best to put it in a few words and continue, since everyone have an unpleasant reason to leave his/her job anyway.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Aug 24 '16 at 13:01









                  Necati Hakan Erdogan

                  36029




                  36029






















                       

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