Resigning while being trained as a replacement for someone who is resigning [duplicate]

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  • A coworker beat me to resignation. How can I resign in a professional manner?

    7 answers



I work at a software company and I am about to resign from my job due to getting a better job offer. The only problem is I was informed today that another member of our team is leaving and he will start training me as his replacement.



To make matters worse this member who is leaving has a very specialized, but very important, role which I am completely unfamiliar with. In reality I am not a good replacement, I am essentially "all they got". Our team originally had 6 people but two of our team's senior developers left earlier this month. After myself and the other team member leaves, there will only be two team members doing the work of 6. One of these remaining team members started 2 weeks ago and is fresh out of college.



Believe it or not, management is actually not bad. All of us are not leaving due to work problems. The timing is mostly a matter of coincidence. How should I deal with my resignation? I generally like the company and I feel that being "professional" and simply giving a two weeks notice would be a huge kick in the nuts. Is there a more graceful way of resigning than a strictly business and formal approach? Also, should I even be concerned about this?



Update:
Well, I followed the advice given. I am sorry to say that my boss was visibly hurt when I gave him my resignation. He is a nice guy and I have always been a real team player (staying late to meet deadlines, volunteering to train others, being the informal team lead, etc.) So I think he was expecting me to ride this out. Anyway, me and my co-worker will be documenting everything we can about our jobs for two weeks. To end on a positive note, they will be interviewing new people next week. Hopefully it works out well.







share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Garrison Neely, yochannah, Jenny D Mar 9 '15 at 11:32


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • do you have a flexibility in your join date?
    – watercooler
    Mar 5 '15 at 5:36










  • Unfortunately no.
    – FerretWorker1013
    Mar 5 '15 at 5:41






  • 3




    That question is close but the issue here is not that someone else is resigning at the same time as me, but that I am also supposed to be this persons replacement.
    – FerretWorker1013
    Mar 5 '15 at 6:36






  • 2




    It only seems different @Ferret; it's not actually because at some point you are going I have to say "I resign". Yes, you have a slightly different situation, and so will most people, but the answers to the question and all going to be the same.
    – Ben
    Mar 5 '15 at 7:07
















up vote
6
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • A coworker beat me to resignation. How can I resign in a professional manner?

    7 answers



I work at a software company and I am about to resign from my job due to getting a better job offer. The only problem is I was informed today that another member of our team is leaving and he will start training me as his replacement.



To make matters worse this member who is leaving has a very specialized, but very important, role which I am completely unfamiliar with. In reality I am not a good replacement, I am essentially "all they got". Our team originally had 6 people but two of our team's senior developers left earlier this month. After myself and the other team member leaves, there will only be two team members doing the work of 6. One of these remaining team members started 2 weeks ago and is fresh out of college.



Believe it or not, management is actually not bad. All of us are not leaving due to work problems. The timing is mostly a matter of coincidence. How should I deal with my resignation? I generally like the company and I feel that being "professional" and simply giving a two weeks notice would be a huge kick in the nuts. Is there a more graceful way of resigning than a strictly business and formal approach? Also, should I even be concerned about this?



Update:
Well, I followed the advice given. I am sorry to say that my boss was visibly hurt when I gave him my resignation. He is a nice guy and I have always been a real team player (staying late to meet deadlines, volunteering to train others, being the informal team lead, etc.) So I think he was expecting me to ride this out. Anyway, me and my co-worker will be documenting everything we can about our jobs for two weeks. To end on a positive note, they will be interviewing new people next week. Hopefully it works out well.







share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Garrison Neely, yochannah, Jenny D Mar 9 '15 at 11:32


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • do you have a flexibility in your join date?
    – watercooler
    Mar 5 '15 at 5:36










  • Unfortunately no.
    – FerretWorker1013
    Mar 5 '15 at 5:41






  • 3




    That question is close but the issue here is not that someone else is resigning at the same time as me, but that I am also supposed to be this persons replacement.
    – FerretWorker1013
    Mar 5 '15 at 6:36






  • 2




    It only seems different @Ferret; it's not actually because at some point you are going I have to say "I resign". Yes, you have a slightly different situation, and so will most people, but the answers to the question and all going to be the same.
    – Ben
    Mar 5 '15 at 7:07












up vote
6
down vote

favorite









up vote
6
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • A coworker beat me to resignation. How can I resign in a professional manner?

    7 answers



I work at a software company and I am about to resign from my job due to getting a better job offer. The only problem is I was informed today that another member of our team is leaving and he will start training me as his replacement.



To make matters worse this member who is leaving has a very specialized, but very important, role which I am completely unfamiliar with. In reality I am not a good replacement, I am essentially "all they got". Our team originally had 6 people but two of our team's senior developers left earlier this month. After myself and the other team member leaves, there will only be two team members doing the work of 6. One of these remaining team members started 2 weeks ago and is fresh out of college.



Believe it or not, management is actually not bad. All of us are not leaving due to work problems. The timing is mostly a matter of coincidence. How should I deal with my resignation? I generally like the company and I feel that being "professional" and simply giving a two weeks notice would be a huge kick in the nuts. Is there a more graceful way of resigning than a strictly business and formal approach? Also, should I even be concerned about this?



Update:
Well, I followed the advice given. I am sorry to say that my boss was visibly hurt when I gave him my resignation. He is a nice guy and I have always been a real team player (staying late to meet deadlines, volunteering to train others, being the informal team lead, etc.) So I think he was expecting me to ride this out. Anyway, me and my co-worker will be documenting everything we can about our jobs for two weeks. To end on a positive note, they will be interviewing new people next week. Hopefully it works out well.







share|improve this question















This question already has an answer here:



  • A coworker beat me to resignation. How can I resign in a professional manner?

    7 answers



I work at a software company and I am about to resign from my job due to getting a better job offer. The only problem is I was informed today that another member of our team is leaving and he will start training me as his replacement.



To make matters worse this member who is leaving has a very specialized, but very important, role which I am completely unfamiliar with. In reality I am not a good replacement, I am essentially "all they got". Our team originally had 6 people but two of our team's senior developers left earlier this month. After myself and the other team member leaves, there will only be two team members doing the work of 6. One of these remaining team members started 2 weeks ago and is fresh out of college.



Believe it or not, management is actually not bad. All of us are not leaving due to work problems. The timing is mostly a matter of coincidence. How should I deal with my resignation? I generally like the company and I feel that being "professional" and simply giving a two weeks notice would be a huge kick in the nuts. Is there a more graceful way of resigning than a strictly business and formal approach? Also, should I even be concerned about this?



Update:
Well, I followed the advice given. I am sorry to say that my boss was visibly hurt when I gave him my resignation. He is a nice guy and I have always been a real team player (staying late to meet deadlines, volunteering to train others, being the informal team lead, etc.) So I think he was expecting me to ride this out. Anyway, me and my co-worker will be documenting everything we can about our jobs for two weeks. To end on a positive note, they will be interviewing new people next week. Hopefully it works out well.





This question already has an answer here:



  • A coworker beat me to resignation. How can I resign in a professional manner?

    7 answers









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 5 '15 at 21:49

























asked Mar 5 '15 at 5:12









FerretWorker1013

66115




66115




marked as duplicate by gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Garrison Neely, yochannah, Jenny D Mar 9 '15 at 11:32


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Garrison Neely, yochannah, Jenny D Mar 9 '15 at 11:32


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • do you have a flexibility in your join date?
    – watercooler
    Mar 5 '15 at 5:36










  • Unfortunately no.
    – FerretWorker1013
    Mar 5 '15 at 5:41






  • 3




    That question is close but the issue here is not that someone else is resigning at the same time as me, but that I am also supposed to be this persons replacement.
    – FerretWorker1013
    Mar 5 '15 at 6:36






  • 2




    It only seems different @Ferret; it's not actually because at some point you are going I have to say "I resign". Yes, you have a slightly different situation, and so will most people, but the answers to the question and all going to be the same.
    – Ben
    Mar 5 '15 at 7:07
















  • do you have a flexibility in your join date?
    – watercooler
    Mar 5 '15 at 5:36










  • Unfortunately no.
    – FerretWorker1013
    Mar 5 '15 at 5:41






  • 3




    That question is close but the issue here is not that someone else is resigning at the same time as me, but that I am also supposed to be this persons replacement.
    – FerretWorker1013
    Mar 5 '15 at 6:36






  • 2




    It only seems different @Ferret; it's not actually because at some point you are going I have to say "I resign". Yes, you have a slightly different situation, and so will most people, but the answers to the question and all going to be the same.
    – Ben
    Mar 5 '15 at 7:07















do you have a flexibility in your join date?
– watercooler
Mar 5 '15 at 5:36




do you have a flexibility in your join date?
– watercooler
Mar 5 '15 at 5:36












Unfortunately no.
– FerretWorker1013
Mar 5 '15 at 5:41




Unfortunately no.
– FerretWorker1013
Mar 5 '15 at 5:41




3




3




That question is close but the issue here is not that someone else is resigning at the same time as me, but that I am also supposed to be this persons replacement.
– FerretWorker1013
Mar 5 '15 at 6:36




That question is close but the issue here is not that someone else is resigning at the same time as me, but that I am also supposed to be this persons replacement.
– FerretWorker1013
Mar 5 '15 at 6:36




2




2




It only seems different @Ferret; it's not actually because at some point you are going I have to say "I resign". Yes, you have a slightly different situation, and so will most people, but the answers to the question and all going to be the same.
– Ben
Mar 5 '15 at 7:07




It only seems different @Ferret; it's not actually because at some point you are going I have to say "I resign". Yes, you have a slightly different situation, and so will most people, but the answers to the question and all going to be the same.
– Ben
Mar 5 '15 at 7:07










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote



accepted










Kevin's answer will be good in most situations but provided you



  • already have the signed contract from the new company

  • and could afford to go without the money from your old company if push came to shove

  • and you think your boss would value your help in transitioning

  • and the company doesn't usually walk people of the premise the moment they resign

then you can take a different approach.



Tell your boss in an informal 1 on 1 that you're planning to resign but would like to wait with your notice till "date x" so you can finish project y and help colleague z to get up to speed on topic w.



I did this and my boss appreciated the heads up. He did tell his boss in the same informal manner and I stayed at my old job and finished my projects and helped with the transition until the day before starting my new job. I got a great reference out of it, too.






share|improve this answer




















  • I had assumed once the contract is signed and it's all certain the usual thing is to immediately give in the official notice?
    – Nathan Cooper
    Mar 5 '15 at 7:52






  • 1




    @NathanCooper That depends a lot on the legislation and company culture and how early you get the new contract signed. For example, I signed with my new company more than two month before the starting date. In some places, if I had given official notice then, my old employer could have laid me off and I'd have had two month without income.
    – Sumyrda
    Mar 5 '15 at 7:59










  • ++ If the OP does find their self in your situation this is fairly sensible advice. They are not there right now however.
    – Nathan Cooper
    Mar 5 '15 at 8:05






  • 1




    Well, they only wrote that they have "an offer" - around here that can mean anything from an informal email to two copies of a pre-signed contract where they only have to sign both and send one back.
    – Sumyrda
    Mar 5 '15 at 8:24






  • 1




    @TheWanderingDevManager the intent is to let the OPs manager know NOT to train the OP on that particular topic and also to allow the OP to train others on his topics and make the planning so much easier for the manager while deferring the bureaucratic hoops to the last two weeks of the OPs employment.
    – Sumyrda
    Mar 5 '15 at 10:32

















up vote
5
down vote













No, you should not be concerned. You are resigning because you got a better job. You write that "management is not that bad" but they have a staffing problem. You don't have a problem.



Just do the usual. Turn in your resignation and let them figure it out.






share|improve this answer




















  • Yes, as I put in a comment on Sumydra's answer, you can't add any value here if you don't know the other worker's knowledge, so just proceed as if it was just you leaving, nothing else to be done here.
    – The Wandering Dev Manager
    Mar 5 '15 at 10:01


















up vote
2
down vote













Lay down your cards: Tell your manager about your new offer. Informing them early is the first help you could do for them. You mentioned that you feel you are not the best replacement. So they could replace you with the fresher and start their training at the earliest. During your time at the current company offer help and train the replacement to the best of your knowledge.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    Proceed as usual. Giving early notice is a bad idea for a host of reasons already covered on this site.



    In your particular case: it's unclear whether your offer is solid offer yet. What would do if it fell through and you had to remain at the place you've essentially already resigned from? No. Terrible idea.
    Your notice should be enough to handle any subsequent handover, that's what it's for.



    Perhaps you could encourage your colleague to document things (or document things yourself) rather than just teach you, to make it easier for the next guy to pick up.






    share|improve this answer





























      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      5
      down vote



      accepted










      Kevin's answer will be good in most situations but provided you



      • already have the signed contract from the new company

      • and could afford to go without the money from your old company if push came to shove

      • and you think your boss would value your help in transitioning

      • and the company doesn't usually walk people of the premise the moment they resign

      then you can take a different approach.



      Tell your boss in an informal 1 on 1 that you're planning to resign but would like to wait with your notice till "date x" so you can finish project y and help colleague z to get up to speed on topic w.



      I did this and my boss appreciated the heads up. He did tell his boss in the same informal manner and I stayed at my old job and finished my projects and helped with the transition until the day before starting my new job. I got a great reference out of it, too.






      share|improve this answer




















      • I had assumed once the contract is signed and it's all certain the usual thing is to immediately give in the official notice?
        – Nathan Cooper
        Mar 5 '15 at 7:52






      • 1




        @NathanCooper That depends a lot on the legislation and company culture and how early you get the new contract signed. For example, I signed with my new company more than two month before the starting date. In some places, if I had given official notice then, my old employer could have laid me off and I'd have had two month without income.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 7:59










      • ++ If the OP does find their self in your situation this is fairly sensible advice. They are not there right now however.
        – Nathan Cooper
        Mar 5 '15 at 8:05






      • 1




        Well, they only wrote that they have "an offer" - around here that can mean anything from an informal email to two copies of a pre-signed contract where they only have to sign both and send one back.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 8:24






      • 1




        @TheWanderingDevManager the intent is to let the OPs manager know NOT to train the OP on that particular topic and also to allow the OP to train others on his topics and make the planning so much easier for the manager while deferring the bureaucratic hoops to the last two weeks of the OPs employment.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 10:32














      up vote
      5
      down vote



      accepted










      Kevin's answer will be good in most situations but provided you



      • already have the signed contract from the new company

      • and could afford to go without the money from your old company if push came to shove

      • and you think your boss would value your help in transitioning

      • and the company doesn't usually walk people of the premise the moment they resign

      then you can take a different approach.



      Tell your boss in an informal 1 on 1 that you're planning to resign but would like to wait with your notice till "date x" so you can finish project y and help colleague z to get up to speed on topic w.



      I did this and my boss appreciated the heads up. He did tell his boss in the same informal manner and I stayed at my old job and finished my projects and helped with the transition until the day before starting my new job. I got a great reference out of it, too.






      share|improve this answer




















      • I had assumed once the contract is signed and it's all certain the usual thing is to immediately give in the official notice?
        – Nathan Cooper
        Mar 5 '15 at 7:52






      • 1




        @NathanCooper That depends a lot on the legislation and company culture and how early you get the new contract signed. For example, I signed with my new company more than two month before the starting date. In some places, if I had given official notice then, my old employer could have laid me off and I'd have had two month without income.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 7:59










      • ++ If the OP does find their self in your situation this is fairly sensible advice. They are not there right now however.
        – Nathan Cooper
        Mar 5 '15 at 8:05






      • 1




        Well, they only wrote that they have "an offer" - around here that can mean anything from an informal email to two copies of a pre-signed contract where they only have to sign both and send one back.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 8:24






      • 1




        @TheWanderingDevManager the intent is to let the OPs manager know NOT to train the OP on that particular topic and also to allow the OP to train others on his topics and make the planning so much easier for the manager while deferring the bureaucratic hoops to the last two weeks of the OPs employment.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 10:32












      up vote
      5
      down vote



      accepted







      up vote
      5
      down vote



      accepted






      Kevin's answer will be good in most situations but provided you



      • already have the signed contract from the new company

      • and could afford to go without the money from your old company if push came to shove

      • and you think your boss would value your help in transitioning

      • and the company doesn't usually walk people of the premise the moment they resign

      then you can take a different approach.



      Tell your boss in an informal 1 on 1 that you're planning to resign but would like to wait with your notice till "date x" so you can finish project y and help colleague z to get up to speed on topic w.



      I did this and my boss appreciated the heads up. He did tell his boss in the same informal manner and I stayed at my old job and finished my projects and helped with the transition until the day before starting my new job. I got a great reference out of it, too.






      share|improve this answer












      Kevin's answer will be good in most situations but provided you



      • already have the signed contract from the new company

      • and could afford to go without the money from your old company if push came to shove

      • and you think your boss would value your help in transitioning

      • and the company doesn't usually walk people of the premise the moment they resign

      then you can take a different approach.



      Tell your boss in an informal 1 on 1 that you're planning to resign but would like to wait with your notice till "date x" so you can finish project y and help colleague z to get up to speed on topic w.



      I did this and my boss appreciated the heads up. He did tell his boss in the same informal manner and I stayed at my old job and finished my projects and helped with the transition until the day before starting my new job. I got a great reference out of it, too.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Mar 5 '15 at 7:02









      Sumyrda

      395610




      395610











      • I had assumed once the contract is signed and it's all certain the usual thing is to immediately give in the official notice?
        – Nathan Cooper
        Mar 5 '15 at 7:52






      • 1




        @NathanCooper That depends a lot on the legislation and company culture and how early you get the new contract signed. For example, I signed with my new company more than two month before the starting date. In some places, if I had given official notice then, my old employer could have laid me off and I'd have had two month without income.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 7:59










      • ++ If the OP does find their self in your situation this is fairly sensible advice. They are not there right now however.
        – Nathan Cooper
        Mar 5 '15 at 8:05






      • 1




        Well, they only wrote that they have "an offer" - around here that can mean anything from an informal email to two copies of a pre-signed contract where they only have to sign both and send one back.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 8:24






      • 1




        @TheWanderingDevManager the intent is to let the OPs manager know NOT to train the OP on that particular topic and also to allow the OP to train others on his topics and make the planning so much easier for the manager while deferring the bureaucratic hoops to the last two weeks of the OPs employment.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 10:32
















      • I had assumed once the contract is signed and it's all certain the usual thing is to immediately give in the official notice?
        – Nathan Cooper
        Mar 5 '15 at 7:52






      • 1




        @NathanCooper That depends a lot on the legislation and company culture and how early you get the new contract signed. For example, I signed with my new company more than two month before the starting date. In some places, if I had given official notice then, my old employer could have laid me off and I'd have had two month without income.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 7:59










      • ++ If the OP does find their self in your situation this is fairly sensible advice. They are not there right now however.
        – Nathan Cooper
        Mar 5 '15 at 8:05






      • 1




        Well, they only wrote that they have "an offer" - around here that can mean anything from an informal email to two copies of a pre-signed contract where they only have to sign both and send one back.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 8:24






      • 1




        @TheWanderingDevManager the intent is to let the OPs manager know NOT to train the OP on that particular topic and also to allow the OP to train others on his topics and make the planning so much easier for the manager while deferring the bureaucratic hoops to the last two weeks of the OPs employment.
        – Sumyrda
        Mar 5 '15 at 10:32















      I had assumed once the contract is signed and it's all certain the usual thing is to immediately give in the official notice?
      – Nathan Cooper
      Mar 5 '15 at 7:52




      I had assumed once the contract is signed and it's all certain the usual thing is to immediately give in the official notice?
      – Nathan Cooper
      Mar 5 '15 at 7:52




      1




      1




      @NathanCooper That depends a lot on the legislation and company culture and how early you get the new contract signed. For example, I signed with my new company more than two month before the starting date. In some places, if I had given official notice then, my old employer could have laid me off and I'd have had two month without income.
      – Sumyrda
      Mar 5 '15 at 7:59




      @NathanCooper That depends a lot on the legislation and company culture and how early you get the new contract signed. For example, I signed with my new company more than two month before the starting date. In some places, if I had given official notice then, my old employer could have laid me off and I'd have had two month without income.
      – Sumyrda
      Mar 5 '15 at 7:59












      ++ If the OP does find their self in your situation this is fairly sensible advice. They are not there right now however.
      – Nathan Cooper
      Mar 5 '15 at 8:05




      ++ If the OP does find their self in your situation this is fairly sensible advice. They are not there right now however.
      – Nathan Cooper
      Mar 5 '15 at 8:05




      1




      1




      Well, they only wrote that they have "an offer" - around here that can mean anything from an informal email to two copies of a pre-signed contract where they only have to sign both and send one back.
      – Sumyrda
      Mar 5 '15 at 8:24




      Well, they only wrote that they have "an offer" - around here that can mean anything from an informal email to two copies of a pre-signed contract where they only have to sign both and send one back.
      – Sumyrda
      Mar 5 '15 at 8:24




      1




      1




      @TheWanderingDevManager the intent is to let the OPs manager know NOT to train the OP on that particular topic and also to allow the OP to train others on his topics and make the planning so much easier for the manager while deferring the bureaucratic hoops to the last two weeks of the OPs employment.
      – Sumyrda
      Mar 5 '15 at 10:32




      @TheWanderingDevManager the intent is to let the OPs manager know NOT to train the OP on that particular topic and also to allow the OP to train others on his topics and make the planning so much easier for the manager while deferring the bureaucratic hoops to the last two weeks of the OPs employment.
      – Sumyrda
      Mar 5 '15 at 10:32












      up vote
      5
      down vote













      No, you should not be concerned. You are resigning because you got a better job. You write that "management is not that bad" but they have a staffing problem. You don't have a problem.



      Just do the usual. Turn in your resignation and let them figure it out.






      share|improve this answer




















      • Yes, as I put in a comment on Sumydra's answer, you can't add any value here if you don't know the other worker's knowledge, so just proceed as if it was just you leaving, nothing else to be done here.
        – The Wandering Dev Manager
        Mar 5 '15 at 10:01















      up vote
      5
      down vote













      No, you should not be concerned. You are resigning because you got a better job. You write that "management is not that bad" but they have a staffing problem. You don't have a problem.



      Just do the usual. Turn in your resignation and let them figure it out.






      share|improve this answer




















      • Yes, as I put in a comment on Sumydra's answer, you can't add any value here if you don't know the other worker's knowledge, so just proceed as if it was just you leaving, nothing else to be done here.
        – The Wandering Dev Manager
        Mar 5 '15 at 10:01













      up vote
      5
      down vote










      up vote
      5
      down vote









      No, you should not be concerned. You are resigning because you got a better job. You write that "management is not that bad" but they have a staffing problem. You don't have a problem.



      Just do the usual. Turn in your resignation and let them figure it out.






      share|improve this answer












      No, you should not be concerned. You are resigning because you got a better job. You write that "management is not that bad" but they have a staffing problem. You don't have a problem.



      Just do the usual. Turn in your resignation and let them figure it out.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Mar 5 '15 at 6:37









      kevin cline

      15.6k43861




      15.6k43861











      • Yes, as I put in a comment on Sumydra's answer, you can't add any value here if you don't know the other worker's knowledge, so just proceed as if it was just you leaving, nothing else to be done here.
        – The Wandering Dev Manager
        Mar 5 '15 at 10:01

















      • Yes, as I put in a comment on Sumydra's answer, you can't add any value here if you don't know the other worker's knowledge, so just proceed as if it was just you leaving, nothing else to be done here.
        – The Wandering Dev Manager
        Mar 5 '15 at 10:01
















      Yes, as I put in a comment on Sumydra's answer, you can't add any value here if you don't know the other worker's knowledge, so just proceed as if it was just you leaving, nothing else to be done here.
      – The Wandering Dev Manager
      Mar 5 '15 at 10:01





      Yes, as I put in a comment on Sumydra's answer, you can't add any value here if you don't know the other worker's knowledge, so just proceed as if it was just you leaving, nothing else to be done here.
      – The Wandering Dev Manager
      Mar 5 '15 at 10:01











      up vote
      2
      down vote













      Lay down your cards: Tell your manager about your new offer. Informing them early is the first help you could do for them. You mentioned that you feel you are not the best replacement. So they could replace you with the fresher and start their training at the earliest. During your time at the current company offer help and train the replacement to the best of your knowledge.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        2
        down vote













        Lay down your cards: Tell your manager about your new offer. Informing them early is the first help you could do for them. You mentioned that you feel you are not the best replacement. So they could replace you with the fresher and start their training at the earliest. During your time at the current company offer help and train the replacement to the best of your knowledge.






        share|improve this answer






















          up vote
          2
          down vote










          up vote
          2
          down vote









          Lay down your cards: Tell your manager about your new offer. Informing them early is the first help you could do for them. You mentioned that you feel you are not the best replacement. So they could replace you with the fresher and start their training at the earliest. During your time at the current company offer help and train the replacement to the best of your knowledge.






          share|improve this answer












          Lay down your cards: Tell your manager about your new offer. Informing them early is the first help you could do for them. You mentioned that you feel you are not the best replacement. So they could replace you with the fresher and start their training at the earliest. During your time at the current company offer help and train the replacement to the best of your knowledge.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 5 '15 at 6:46









          watercooler

          2,34911022




          2,34911022




















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              Proceed as usual. Giving early notice is a bad idea for a host of reasons already covered on this site.



              In your particular case: it's unclear whether your offer is solid offer yet. What would do if it fell through and you had to remain at the place you've essentially already resigned from? No. Terrible idea.
              Your notice should be enough to handle any subsequent handover, that's what it's for.



              Perhaps you could encourage your colleague to document things (or document things yourself) rather than just teach you, to make it easier for the next guy to pick up.






              share|improve this answer


























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                Proceed as usual. Giving early notice is a bad idea for a host of reasons already covered on this site.



                In your particular case: it's unclear whether your offer is solid offer yet. What would do if it fell through and you had to remain at the place you've essentially already resigned from? No. Terrible idea.
                Your notice should be enough to handle any subsequent handover, that's what it's for.



                Perhaps you could encourage your colleague to document things (or document things yourself) rather than just teach you, to make it easier for the next guy to pick up.






                share|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  Proceed as usual. Giving early notice is a bad idea for a host of reasons already covered on this site.



                  In your particular case: it's unclear whether your offer is solid offer yet. What would do if it fell through and you had to remain at the place you've essentially already resigned from? No. Terrible idea.
                  Your notice should be enough to handle any subsequent handover, that's what it's for.



                  Perhaps you could encourage your colleague to document things (or document things yourself) rather than just teach you, to make it easier for the next guy to pick up.






                  share|improve this answer














                  Proceed as usual. Giving early notice is a bad idea for a host of reasons already covered on this site.



                  In your particular case: it's unclear whether your offer is solid offer yet. What would do if it fell through and you had to remain at the place you've essentially already resigned from? No. Terrible idea.
                  Your notice should be enough to handle any subsequent handover, that's what it's for.



                  Perhaps you could encourage your colleague to document things (or document things yourself) rather than just teach you, to make it easier for the next guy to pick up.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Mar 5 '15 at 9:04

























                  answered Mar 5 '15 at 7:50









                  Nathan Cooper

                  2,48941422




                  2,48941422












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