How to behave during notice period

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I have given my notice period of 1 month in a startup company after working 4 months of an extendable contract job originally intended to be 6 months long. Now, I have another job offer at hand.



I know that it is unprofessional on my part not to work for the entire notice period, but I find working in the notice period is depressing. I find the treatment given to me is a bit different from my superior after my resignation.



How should I act during this period? Frankly, I think I should do nothing so that they can relieve me earlier.



I should mention one more thing: I was doing a 3 year experienced person role as a fresher and alone as a single person with no mentor. I developed the thing to my best, but there are too many things need to be known to finish it completely, which is my real problem.







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  • 39




    You need to get over it. Just do your job. You should act like you did during those 3 other months. Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?
    – Ramhound
    Jun 28 '12 at 15:17







  • 2




    Everyone has given you great pointers. I will only draw your attention to the fact that you only have to endure this for a few more days ( keep counting down to your release date). Remember this to make the notice period more bearable.
    – moonstar
    Jun 29 '12 at 11:19






  • 13




    suck it up and deal with it, this is the real world and you should be professional, you have what is called short-timers-syndrome, not uncommon, but not professional to act upon.
    – Jarrod Roberson
    Jun 29 '12 at 13:51







  • 2




    Are you sure you were treated well before the notice?
    – user8365
    Sep 11 '12 at 16:21






  • 2




    "Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?" ? One month is average. You can't really walk into a job and say 'oh yeah can you lower the notice period for me in case I leave you guys soon?'...
    – insidesin
    Aug 20 '15 at 13:59
















up vote
38
down vote

favorite
3












I have given my notice period of 1 month in a startup company after working 4 months of an extendable contract job originally intended to be 6 months long. Now, I have another job offer at hand.



I know that it is unprofessional on my part not to work for the entire notice period, but I find working in the notice period is depressing. I find the treatment given to me is a bit different from my superior after my resignation.



How should I act during this period? Frankly, I think I should do nothing so that they can relieve me earlier.



I should mention one more thing: I was doing a 3 year experienced person role as a fresher and alone as a single person with no mentor. I developed the thing to my best, but there are too many things need to be known to finish it completely, which is my real problem.







share|improve this question


















  • 39




    You need to get over it. Just do your job. You should act like you did during those 3 other months. Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?
    – Ramhound
    Jun 28 '12 at 15:17







  • 2




    Everyone has given you great pointers. I will only draw your attention to the fact that you only have to endure this for a few more days ( keep counting down to your release date). Remember this to make the notice period more bearable.
    – moonstar
    Jun 29 '12 at 11:19






  • 13




    suck it up and deal with it, this is the real world and you should be professional, you have what is called short-timers-syndrome, not uncommon, but not professional to act upon.
    – Jarrod Roberson
    Jun 29 '12 at 13:51







  • 2




    Are you sure you were treated well before the notice?
    – user8365
    Sep 11 '12 at 16:21






  • 2




    "Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?" ? One month is average. You can't really walk into a job and say 'oh yeah can you lower the notice period for me in case I leave you guys soon?'...
    – insidesin
    Aug 20 '15 at 13:59












up vote
38
down vote

favorite
3









up vote
38
down vote

favorite
3






3





I have given my notice period of 1 month in a startup company after working 4 months of an extendable contract job originally intended to be 6 months long. Now, I have another job offer at hand.



I know that it is unprofessional on my part not to work for the entire notice period, but I find working in the notice period is depressing. I find the treatment given to me is a bit different from my superior after my resignation.



How should I act during this period? Frankly, I think I should do nothing so that they can relieve me earlier.



I should mention one more thing: I was doing a 3 year experienced person role as a fresher and alone as a single person with no mentor. I developed the thing to my best, but there are too many things need to be known to finish it completely, which is my real problem.







share|improve this question














I have given my notice period of 1 month in a startup company after working 4 months of an extendable contract job originally intended to be 6 months long. Now, I have another job offer at hand.



I know that it is unprofessional on my part not to work for the entire notice period, but I find working in the notice period is depressing. I find the treatment given to me is a bit different from my superior after my resignation.



How should I act during this period? Frankly, I think I should do nothing so that they can relieve me earlier.



I should mention one more thing: I was doing a 3 year experienced person role as a fresher and alone as a single person with no mentor. I developed the thing to my best, but there are too many things need to be known to finish it completely, which is my real problem.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 23 '15 at 11:01









Kevin Chen

1054




1054










asked Jun 28 '12 at 9:29









jingli

1,13531430




1,13531430







  • 39




    You need to get over it. Just do your job. You should act like you did during those 3 other months. Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?
    – Ramhound
    Jun 28 '12 at 15:17







  • 2




    Everyone has given you great pointers. I will only draw your attention to the fact that you only have to endure this for a few more days ( keep counting down to your release date). Remember this to make the notice period more bearable.
    – moonstar
    Jun 29 '12 at 11:19






  • 13




    suck it up and deal with it, this is the real world and you should be professional, you have what is called short-timers-syndrome, not uncommon, but not professional to act upon.
    – Jarrod Roberson
    Jun 29 '12 at 13:51







  • 2




    Are you sure you were treated well before the notice?
    – user8365
    Sep 11 '12 at 16:21






  • 2




    "Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?" ? One month is average. You can't really walk into a job and say 'oh yeah can you lower the notice period for me in case I leave you guys soon?'...
    – insidesin
    Aug 20 '15 at 13:59












  • 39




    You need to get over it. Just do your job. You should act like you did during those 3 other months. Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?
    – Ramhound
    Jun 28 '12 at 15:17







  • 2




    Everyone has given you great pointers. I will only draw your attention to the fact that you only have to endure this for a few more days ( keep counting down to your release date). Remember this to make the notice period more bearable.
    – moonstar
    Jun 29 '12 at 11:19






  • 13




    suck it up and deal with it, this is the real world and you should be professional, you have what is called short-timers-syndrome, not uncommon, but not professional to act upon.
    – Jarrod Roberson
    Jun 29 '12 at 13:51







  • 2




    Are you sure you were treated well before the notice?
    – user8365
    Sep 11 '12 at 16:21






  • 2




    "Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?" ? One month is average. You can't really walk into a job and say 'oh yeah can you lower the notice period for me in case I leave you guys soon?'...
    – insidesin
    Aug 20 '15 at 13:59







39




39




You need to get over it. Just do your job. You should act like you did during those 3 other months. Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?
– Ramhound
Jun 28 '12 at 15:17





You need to get over it. Just do your job. You should act like you did during those 3 other months. Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?
– Ramhound
Jun 28 '12 at 15:17





2




2




Everyone has given you great pointers. I will only draw your attention to the fact that you only have to endure this for a few more days ( keep counting down to your release date). Remember this to make the notice period more bearable.
– moonstar
Jun 29 '12 at 11:19




Everyone has given you great pointers. I will only draw your attention to the fact that you only have to endure this for a few more days ( keep counting down to your release date). Remember this to make the notice period more bearable.
– moonstar
Jun 29 '12 at 11:19




13




13




suck it up and deal with it, this is the real world and you should be professional, you have what is called short-timers-syndrome, not uncommon, but not professional to act upon.
– Jarrod Roberson
Jun 29 '12 at 13:51





suck it up and deal with it, this is the real world and you should be professional, you have what is called short-timers-syndrome, not uncommon, but not professional to act upon.
– Jarrod Roberson
Jun 29 '12 at 13:51





2




2




Are you sure you were treated well before the notice?
– user8365
Sep 11 '12 at 16:21




Are you sure you were treated well before the notice?
– user8365
Sep 11 '12 at 16:21




2




2




"Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?" ? One month is average. You can't really walk into a job and say 'oh yeah can you lower the notice period for me in case I leave you guys soon?'...
– insidesin
Aug 20 '15 at 13:59




"Why did you give yourself such a long notice period?" ? One month is average. You can't really walk into a job and say 'oh yeah can you lower the notice period for me in case I leave you guys soon?'...
– insidesin
Aug 20 '15 at 13:59










8 Answers
8






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
65
down vote



accepted










You should behave exactly the same as if you weren't on your notice period.



You are still in your contract with your employer so you should behave accordingly - even if they don't.



If you feel that you cannot contribute during this period, for whatever reason, have a conversation with your boss/HR about gardening leave:




Gardening leave describes the practice where an employee leaving a job is instructed to stay away from work during the notice period, while still remaining on the payroll.







share|improve this answer


















  • 30




    I have found that I have done some of my best work during my notice period. The politics are gone, the games are over, management can't make threats... there's near zero worries. At that point, it's all about the work and nothing else.
    – Steven Evers
    Jun 28 '12 at 13:50






  • 4




    @SnOrfus: Wouldn't it be nice if work were always that smooth?
    – FrustratedWithFormsDesigner
    Jun 28 '12 at 20:43

















up vote
32
down vote













The communities in which we work throughout our lives are generally pretty small. You never know when you might come across some of the same folks you're working with now. And you can't predict if they'll be in a position to decide whether or not you get some job or some promotion.



You don't say how much time you have left on your notice period, but if it's just a couple of weeks, I'd suck it up and power through. Make sure all of your work is done, any transition stuff is prepared, etc...



Your manager is treating you differently because they're likely taking your departure personally. This happens all the time and I'd just ignore it, do your job and thinking about how great things are going to be in your new gig in a couple of weeks.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    15
    down vote













    Concentrate on leaving a good professional image of someone who contributes to the last minute and who doesn't leave a mess behind for others to clean up. That means spending some time documenting anything your replacement will need to know. This can include possibly making sure active project emails are in a separate .pst file (Outlook) fromm your normal email file so that they can be easily passed on to someone else.) Sometimes having access to the history of a project in emails is invaluable.






    share|improve this answer





























      up vote
      13
      down vote













      In addition to the other answers, make sure you mention to the new job that you're unable to start before your notice period is over.



      Unless there's a specific reason to cut short the notice period (being locked out of the necessary resources, for example, or outright abuse), then continuing to work the full duration of your notice sends a message not just to your current employer, but to future employers ("When his time here is over, he will continue to act professionally and complete his tasks"), whereas cutting your time short without good reason sends the opposite message ("If he puts in his notice, he's likely to waste time twiddling his thumbs or try to duck out early".)






      share|improve this answer





























        up vote
        9
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        I've observed teams' behaviours during the notice period. They seem to work their way through a gradual transition from "You are one of US, working to compete against THEM. We trust you, and we have your back." to "You are one of THEM. You are to be treated like any other civilian. Civilly, but not to be trusted." Eventually, it turns into "Oh, are you still here? Why haven't you gone yet, so we can get on with our lives?"



        In my experience, this process takes around two weeks, give or take. I think this is the optimal time for an employer to retain a staff member; enough time to transition the work, but not so long that people resent the person's presence.



        If you have been asked to stay longer than that, there's not much to do but put on a brave face, and deal politely and professionally with people as they work through the transition. It is only for a short time.






        share|improve this answer



























          up vote
          9
          down vote













          First of all, you should do a good job, leave on good terms, and wrap up all loose ends. Make it as easy as possible for whoever is taking over your responsibilities to pick up where you left off.



          Cutting your notice short doesn't sound appropriate in your situation. I can think of only two situations where it really would be reasonable.



          Circumstances beyond your control force you to leave earlier



          "The new company wants me to start sooner," is not an example of this. "My spouse's job relocation got pushed up and we're leaving now" or "I need to drop everything and care for a sick family member on the other side of the country" are what I'm talking about here.



          Your work situation becomes untenable



          This is more than just your supervisor not treating you as well as they did before. It's expected that things will be a little awkward and that they won't be happy you're leaving, especially after so long. But if the supervisor is verbally abusive or is "punishing" you in some way, it's reasonable to move your end date up.



          If you do decide you want out early, despite all the advice to the contrary, you really should tell your boss this up-front. Doing nothing in order to make them shorten your notice period is even more unprofessional than shortening it yourself.



          As a note for the future, a month is a lot of notice (in the US, at least). Assuming you work somewhere where you choose how much notice to give, it's worth considering the next time you're in this position. Some employers are thrilled to have long notice periods and will treat people well when they're leaving, because it results in a smoother transition. Others make your last days miserable, or even walk you out when you give notice. In your next job, pay attention to how people who leave are treated. That will help you decide how much notice to give. (This is all based on Alison Green's excellent advice at Ask a Manager.) Why you're quitting is another useful thing to consider. If you're leaving a job because you hate it, giving more notice than the two-week minimum just seems masochistic.






          share|improve this answer






















          • Not to your answer specific, but i see alot of people here talk about the notice like it is for the person to set? In my country (The Netherlands) the notice period is decided when signing the contract and that notice, counts for both sides. So to be sure you can find a new job when fired (for whatever reason) you would want that notice period atleast a month, just in case right? That said, one can always just take a vacation in his notice period, atleast that's what we do in here anyway, as else they would have to pay the free days also on the salary and they prefer you to use them beforehand
            – Viezevingertjes
            Sep 10 '12 at 8:30










          • @MrMichael, that's a good point. Notice is very different from country to country. In the US, most jobs are "at will." That means you can legally quit at any time for any reason, and your employment can legally be ended at any time for any reason. You can have a contract that stipulates a specific amount of notice, but most people don't. Two weeks is usually the expected amount of notice that it's considered professional to give when quitting a job. There are fields where more notice is expected. (Nursing is one example.)
            – Kelly Tessena Keck
            Sep 11 '12 at 15:19






          • 2




            Its important to note that in many instances people are paid twice a month. This is the reason giving a 2 week notice is typical amount of time. The basic idea is you give a standard pay period of time.
            – Ramhound
            Sep 12 '12 at 14:45











          • The OP said "I have given my notice period of 1 month ... after working for 4 months in a ... contract job of 6 months...". So, even though it sounds like 30 days is a long time for a notice, it is still leaving 1 month before the contract is up. So, if the 1 month notice is accepted, I imagine the OP might consider themself lucky.
            – Kevin Fegan
            Apr 29 '14 at 8:41


















          up vote
          6
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          Was there any explicit deliverable in the contract? If there are then focus on getting those done.



          Discuss with management what they expect to get from you during this transition time. Some expect you to keep working on the task. Others expect you to train your replacement. Others expect nothing but a clean office when you leave.



          They may be treating you differently because they don't know how to act. They might be upset you are leaving early. They might feel betrayed. Talking to them about goals for the rest of the month can help both of you.



          If they don't have specific goals it can help you relax because you know that you tried to understand their expectations, but you don't have any special obligations during the rest of the month.



          You want to be able to stay for the entire month. It keeps putting money in your pocket.



          If it gets really painful: If you have any vacation that you must take before you leave, this would be a good idea to do so.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 4




            Most places I have worked will not allow you to take vacation during the notice period. I had one try to refuse me bereavement.
            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
            Jun 28 '12 at 12:45






          • 2




            ow. I hope you went anyway.
            – Michael Durrant
            Jun 28 '12 at 13:21










          • @MichaelDurrant - Yes and even though the manager was not happy I still get a good reference from the company.
            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
            Jun 28 '12 at 13:33










          • Yup, ethics count for a lot for good managers.
            – Michael Durrant
            Jun 28 '12 at 16:10







          • 1




            At the extreme other end of what Chad described are companies who'll send you packing immediately on giving your notice. This is as counterproductive (no opportunity to transition knowledge, etc) as it is generally futile since that sort of policy will quickly become known and anyone stupid enough to do anything malicious on their last day would just do it before handing in their notice.
            – Dan Neely
            Jun 28 '12 at 20:42

















          up vote
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          Having endured this experience several times in my career (35 years), the best advice I can offer is - NEVER give more notice that you are legally obliged & sometimes I QUIT (effective immediately) is the best way to go & so immensely satisfying! Nothing like a clean break.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 8




            this doesn't seem to offer anything substantial over points made and explained in prior 7 answers that were posted almost 3 years ago
            – gnat
            Mar 30 '15 at 11:05










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          8 Answers
          8






          active

          oldest

          votes








          8 Answers
          8






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          up vote
          65
          down vote



          accepted










          You should behave exactly the same as if you weren't on your notice period.



          You are still in your contract with your employer so you should behave accordingly - even if they don't.



          If you feel that you cannot contribute during this period, for whatever reason, have a conversation with your boss/HR about gardening leave:




          Gardening leave describes the practice where an employee leaving a job is instructed to stay away from work during the notice period, while still remaining on the payroll.







          share|improve this answer


















          • 30




            I have found that I have done some of my best work during my notice period. The politics are gone, the games are over, management can't make threats... there's near zero worries. At that point, it's all about the work and nothing else.
            – Steven Evers
            Jun 28 '12 at 13:50






          • 4




            @SnOrfus: Wouldn't it be nice if work were always that smooth?
            – FrustratedWithFormsDesigner
            Jun 28 '12 at 20:43














          up vote
          65
          down vote



          accepted










          You should behave exactly the same as if you weren't on your notice period.



          You are still in your contract with your employer so you should behave accordingly - even if they don't.



          If you feel that you cannot contribute during this period, for whatever reason, have a conversation with your boss/HR about gardening leave:




          Gardening leave describes the practice where an employee leaving a job is instructed to stay away from work during the notice period, while still remaining on the payroll.







          share|improve this answer


















          • 30




            I have found that I have done some of my best work during my notice period. The politics are gone, the games are over, management can't make threats... there's near zero worries. At that point, it's all about the work and nothing else.
            – Steven Evers
            Jun 28 '12 at 13:50






          • 4




            @SnOrfus: Wouldn't it be nice if work were always that smooth?
            – FrustratedWithFormsDesigner
            Jun 28 '12 at 20:43












          up vote
          65
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          65
          down vote



          accepted






          You should behave exactly the same as if you weren't on your notice period.



          You are still in your contract with your employer so you should behave accordingly - even if they don't.



          If you feel that you cannot contribute during this period, for whatever reason, have a conversation with your boss/HR about gardening leave:




          Gardening leave describes the practice where an employee leaving a job is instructed to stay away from work during the notice period, while still remaining on the payroll.







          share|improve this answer














          You should behave exactly the same as if you weren't on your notice period.



          You are still in your contract with your employer so you should behave accordingly - even if they don't.



          If you feel that you cannot contribute during this period, for whatever reason, have a conversation with your boss/HR about gardening leave:




          Gardening leave describes the practice where an employee leaving a job is instructed to stay away from work during the notice period, while still remaining on the payroll.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Aug 23 '15 at 7:49









          Kevin Chen

          1054




          1054










          answered Jun 28 '12 at 9:34









          ChrisF

          8,56423957




          8,56423957







          • 30




            I have found that I have done some of my best work during my notice period. The politics are gone, the games are over, management can't make threats... there's near zero worries. At that point, it's all about the work and nothing else.
            – Steven Evers
            Jun 28 '12 at 13:50






          • 4




            @SnOrfus: Wouldn't it be nice if work were always that smooth?
            – FrustratedWithFormsDesigner
            Jun 28 '12 at 20:43












          • 30




            I have found that I have done some of my best work during my notice period. The politics are gone, the games are over, management can't make threats... there's near zero worries. At that point, it's all about the work and nothing else.
            – Steven Evers
            Jun 28 '12 at 13:50






          • 4




            @SnOrfus: Wouldn't it be nice if work were always that smooth?
            – FrustratedWithFormsDesigner
            Jun 28 '12 at 20:43







          30




          30




          I have found that I have done some of my best work during my notice period. The politics are gone, the games are over, management can't make threats... there's near zero worries. At that point, it's all about the work and nothing else.
          – Steven Evers
          Jun 28 '12 at 13:50




          I have found that I have done some of my best work during my notice period. The politics are gone, the games are over, management can't make threats... there's near zero worries. At that point, it's all about the work and nothing else.
          – Steven Evers
          Jun 28 '12 at 13:50




          4




          4




          @SnOrfus: Wouldn't it be nice if work were always that smooth?
          – FrustratedWithFormsDesigner
          Jun 28 '12 at 20:43




          @SnOrfus: Wouldn't it be nice if work were always that smooth?
          – FrustratedWithFormsDesigner
          Jun 28 '12 at 20:43












          up vote
          32
          down vote













          The communities in which we work throughout our lives are generally pretty small. You never know when you might come across some of the same folks you're working with now. And you can't predict if they'll be in a position to decide whether or not you get some job or some promotion.



          You don't say how much time you have left on your notice period, but if it's just a couple of weeks, I'd suck it up and power through. Make sure all of your work is done, any transition stuff is prepared, etc...



          Your manager is treating you differently because they're likely taking your departure personally. This happens all the time and I'd just ignore it, do your job and thinking about how great things are going to be in your new gig in a couple of weeks.






          share|improve this answer
























            up vote
            32
            down vote













            The communities in which we work throughout our lives are generally pretty small. You never know when you might come across some of the same folks you're working with now. And you can't predict if they'll be in a position to decide whether or not you get some job or some promotion.



            You don't say how much time you have left on your notice period, but if it's just a couple of weeks, I'd suck it up and power through. Make sure all of your work is done, any transition stuff is prepared, etc...



            Your manager is treating you differently because they're likely taking your departure personally. This happens all the time and I'd just ignore it, do your job and thinking about how great things are going to be in your new gig in a couple of weeks.






            share|improve this answer






















              up vote
              32
              down vote










              up vote
              32
              down vote









              The communities in which we work throughout our lives are generally pretty small. You never know when you might come across some of the same folks you're working with now. And you can't predict if they'll be in a position to decide whether or not you get some job or some promotion.



              You don't say how much time you have left on your notice period, but if it's just a couple of weeks, I'd suck it up and power through. Make sure all of your work is done, any transition stuff is prepared, etc...



              Your manager is treating you differently because they're likely taking your departure personally. This happens all the time and I'd just ignore it, do your job and thinking about how great things are going to be in your new gig in a couple of weeks.






              share|improve this answer












              The communities in which we work throughout our lives are generally pretty small. You never know when you might come across some of the same folks you're working with now. And you can't predict if they'll be in a position to decide whether or not you get some job or some promotion.



              You don't say how much time you have left on your notice period, but if it's just a couple of weeks, I'd suck it up and power through. Make sure all of your work is done, any transition stuff is prepared, etc...



              Your manager is treating you differently because they're likely taking your departure personally. This happens all the time and I'd just ignore it, do your job and thinking about how great things are going to be in your new gig in a couple of weeks.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Jun 28 '12 at 13:41









              Jacob G

              4,58241727




              4,58241727




















                  up vote
                  15
                  down vote













                  Concentrate on leaving a good professional image of someone who contributes to the last minute and who doesn't leave a mess behind for others to clean up. That means spending some time documenting anything your replacement will need to know. This can include possibly making sure active project emails are in a separate .pst file (Outlook) fromm your normal email file so that they can be easily passed on to someone else.) Sometimes having access to the history of a project in emails is invaluable.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    up vote
                    15
                    down vote













                    Concentrate on leaving a good professional image of someone who contributes to the last minute and who doesn't leave a mess behind for others to clean up. That means spending some time documenting anything your replacement will need to know. This can include possibly making sure active project emails are in a separate .pst file (Outlook) fromm your normal email file so that they can be easily passed on to someone else.) Sometimes having access to the history of a project in emails is invaluable.






                    share|improve this answer
























                      up vote
                      15
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      15
                      down vote









                      Concentrate on leaving a good professional image of someone who contributes to the last minute and who doesn't leave a mess behind for others to clean up. That means spending some time documenting anything your replacement will need to know. This can include possibly making sure active project emails are in a separate .pst file (Outlook) fromm your normal email file so that they can be easily passed on to someone else.) Sometimes having access to the history of a project in emails is invaluable.






                      share|improve this answer














                      Concentrate on leaving a good professional image of someone who contributes to the last minute and who doesn't leave a mess behind for others to clean up. That means spending some time documenting anything your replacement will need to know. This can include possibly making sure active project emails are in a separate .pst file (Outlook) fromm your normal email file so that they can be easily passed on to someone else.) Sometimes having access to the history of a project in emails is invaluable.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Sep 9 '12 at 6:51









                      jmort253♦

                      10.4k54376




                      10.4k54376










                      answered Jun 28 '12 at 15:23









                      HLGEM

                      133k25227489




                      133k25227489




















                          up vote
                          13
                          down vote













                          In addition to the other answers, make sure you mention to the new job that you're unable to start before your notice period is over.



                          Unless there's a specific reason to cut short the notice period (being locked out of the necessary resources, for example, or outright abuse), then continuing to work the full duration of your notice sends a message not just to your current employer, but to future employers ("When his time here is over, he will continue to act professionally and complete his tasks"), whereas cutting your time short without good reason sends the opposite message ("If he puts in his notice, he's likely to waste time twiddling his thumbs or try to duck out early".)






                          share|improve this answer


























                            up vote
                            13
                            down vote













                            In addition to the other answers, make sure you mention to the new job that you're unable to start before your notice period is over.



                            Unless there's a specific reason to cut short the notice period (being locked out of the necessary resources, for example, or outright abuse), then continuing to work the full duration of your notice sends a message not just to your current employer, but to future employers ("When his time here is over, he will continue to act professionally and complete his tasks"), whereas cutting your time short without good reason sends the opposite message ("If he puts in his notice, he's likely to waste time twiddling his thumbs or try to duck out early".)






                            share|improve this answer
























                              up vote
                              13
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              13
                              down vote









                              In addition to the other answers, make sure you mention to the new job that you're unable to start before your notice period is over.



                              Unless there's a specific reason to cut short the notice period (being locked out of the necessary resources, for example, or outright abuse), then continuing to work the full duration of your notice sends a message not just to your current employer, but to future employers ("When his time here is over, he will continue to act professionally and complete his tasks"), whereas cutting your time short without good reason sends the opposite message ("If he puts in his notice, he's likely to waste time twiddling his thumbs or try to duck out early".)






                              share|improve this answer














                              In addition to the other answers, make sure you mention to the new job that you're unable to start before your notice period is over.



                              Unless there's a specific reason to cut short the notice period (being locked out of the necessary resources, for example, or outright abuse), then continuing to work the full duration of your notice sends a message not just to your current employer, but to future employers ("When his time here is over, he will continue to act professionally and complete his tasks"), whereas cutting your time short without good reason sends the opposite message ("If he puts in his notice, he's likely to waste time twiddling his thumbs or try to duck out early".)







                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited Jun 28 '12 at 17:26

























                              answered Jun 28 '12 at 17:17









                              Adam V

                              7,95722844




                              7,95722844




















                                  up vote
                                  9
                                  down vote













                                  I've observed teams' behaviours during the notice period. They seem to work their way through a gradual transition from "You are one of US, working to compete against THEM. We trust you, and we have your back." to "You are one of THEM. You are to be treated like any other civilian. Civilly, but not to be trusted." Eventually, it turns into "Oh, are you still here? Why haven't you gone yet, so we can get on with our lives?"



                                  In my experience, this process takes around two weeks, give or take. I think this is the optimal time for an employer to retain a staff member; enough time to transition the work, but not so long that people resent the person's presence.



                                  If you have been asked to stay longer than that, there's not much to do but put on a brave face, and deal politely and professionally with people as they work through the transition. It is only for a short time.






                                  share|improve this answer
























                                    up vote
                                    9
                                    down vote













                                    I've observed teams' behaviours during the notice period. They seem to work their way through a gradual transition from "You are one of US, working to compete against THEM. We trust you, and we have your back." to "You are one of THEM. You are to be treated like any other civilian. Civilly, but not to be trusted." Eventually, it turns into "Oh, are you still here? Why haven't you gone yet, so we can get on with our lives?"



                                    In my experience, this process takes around two weeks, give or take. I think this is the optimal time for an employer to retain a staff member; enough time to transition the work, but not so long that people resent the person's presence.



                                    If you have been asked to stay longer than that, there's not much to do but put on a brave face, and deal politely and professionally with people as they work through the transition. It is only for a short time.






                                    share|improve this answer






















                                      up vote
                                      9
                                      down vote










                                      up vote
                                      9
                                      down vote









                                      I've observed teams' behaviours during the notice period. They seem to work their way through a gradual transition from "You are one of US, working to compete against THEM. We trust you, and we have your back." to "You are one of THEM. You are to be treated like any other civilian. Civilly, but not to be trusted." Eventually, it turns into "Oh, are you still here? Why haven't you gone yet, so we can get on with our lives?"



                                      In my experience, this process takes around two weeks, give or take. I think this is the optimal time for an employer to retain a staff member; enough time to transition the work, but not so long that people resent the person's presence.



                                      If you have been asked to stay longer than that, there's not much to do but put on a brave face, and deal politely and professionally with people as they work through the transition. It is only for a short time.






                                      share|improve this answer












                                      I've observed teams' behaviours during the notice period. They seem to work their way through a gradual transition from "You are one of US, working to compete against THEM. We trust you, and we have your back." to "You are one of THEM. You are to be treated like any other civilian. Civilly, but not to be trusted." Eventually, it turns into "Oh, are you still here? Why haven't you gone yet, so we can get on with our lives?"



                                      In my experience, this process takes around two weeks, give or take. I think this is the optimal time for an employer to retain a staff member; enough time to transition the work, but not so long that people resent the person's presence.



                                      If you have been asked to stay longer than that, there's not much to do but put on a brave face, and deal politely and professionally with people as they work through the transition. It is only for a short time.







                                      share|improve this answer












                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered Jun 29 '12 at 5:41









                                      Oddthinking

                                      55037




                                      55037




















                                          up vote
                                          9
                                          down vote













                                          First of all, you should do a good job, leave on good terms, and wrap up all loose ends. Make it as easy as possible for whoever is taking over your responsibilities to pick up where you left off.



                                          Cutting your notice short doesn't sound appropriate in your situation. I can think of only two situations where it really would be reasonable.



                                          Circumstances beyond your control force you to leave earlier



                                          "The new company wants me to start sooner," is not an example of this. "My spouse's job relocation got pushed up and we're leaving now" or "I need to drop everything and care for a sick family member on the other side of the country" are what I'm talking about here.



                                          Your work situation becomes untenable



                                          This is more than just your supervisor not treating you as well as they did before. It's expected that things will be a little awkward and that they won't be happy you're leaving, especially after so long. But if the supervisor is verbally abusive or is "punishing" you in some way, it's reasonable to move your end date up.



                                          If you do decide you want out early, despite all the advice to the contrary, you really should tell your boss this up-front. Doing nothing in order to make them shorten your notice period is even more unprofessional than shortening it yourself.



                                          As a note for the future, a month is a lot of notice (in the US, at least). Assuming you work somewhere where you choose how much notice to give, it's worth considering the next time you're in this position. Some employers are thrilled to have long notice periods and will treat people well when they're leaving, because it results in a smoother transition. Others make your last days miserable, or even walk you out when you give notice. In your next job, pay attention to how people who leave are treated. That will help you decide how much notice to give. (This is all based on Alison Green's excellent advice at Ask a Manager.) Why you're quitting is another useful thing to consider. If you're leaving a job because you hate it, giving more notice than the two-week minimum just seems masochistic.






                                          share|improve this answer






















                                          • Not to your answer specific, but i see alot of people here talk about the notice like it is for the person to set? In my country (The Netherlands) the notice period is decided when signing the contract and that notice, counts for both sides. So to be sure you can find a new job when fired (for whatever reason) you would want that notice period atleast a month, just in case right? That said, one can always just take a vacation in his notice period, atleast that's what we do in here anyway, as else they would have to pay the free days also on the salary and they prefer you to use them beforehand
                                            – Viezevingertjes
                                            Sep 10 '12 at 8:30










                                          • @MrMichael, that's a good point. Notice is very different from country to country. In the US, most jobs are "at will." That means you can legally quit at any time for any reason, and your employment can legally be ended at any time for any reason. You can have a contract that stipulates a specific amount of notice, but most people don't. Two weeks is usually the expected amount of notice that it's considered professional to give when quitting a job. There are fields where more notice is expected. (Nursing is one example.)
                                            – Kelly Tessena Keck
                                            Sep 11 '12 at 15:19






                                          • 2




                                            Its important to note that in many instances people are paid twice a month. This is the reason giving a 2 week notice is typical amount of time. The basic idea is you give a standard pay period of time.
                                            – Ramhound
                                            Sep 12 '12 at 14:45











                                          • The OP said "I have given my notice period of 1 month ... after working for 4 months in a ... contract job of 6 months...". So, even though it sounds like 30 days is a long time for a notice, it is still leaving 1 month before the contract is up. So, if the 1 month notice is accepted, I imagine the OP might consider themself lucky.
                                            – Kevin Fegan
                                            Apr 29 '14 at 8:41















                                          up vote
                                          9
                                          down vote













                                          First of all, you should do a good job, leave on good terms, and wrap up all loose ends. Make it as easy as possible for whoever is taking over your responsibilities to pick up where you left off.



                                          Cutting your notice short doesn't sound appropriate in your situation. I can think of only two situations where it really would be reasonable.



                                          Circumstances beyond your control force you to leave earlier



                                          "The new company wants me to start sooner," is not an example of this. "My spouse's job relocation got pushed up and we're leaving now" or "I need to drop everything and care for a sick family member on the other side of the country" are what I'm talking about here.



                                          Your work situation becomes untenable



                                          This is more than just your supervisor not treating you as well as they did before. It's expected that things will be a little awkward and that they won't be happy you're leaving, especially after so long. But if the supervisor is verbally abusive or is "punishing" you in some way, it's reasonable to move your end date up.



                                          If you do decide you want out early, despite all the advice to the contrary, you really should tell your boss this up-front. Doing nothing in order to make them shorten your notice period is even more unprofessional than shortening it yourself.



                                          As a note for the future, a month is a lot of notice (in the US, at least). Assuming you work somewhere where you choose how much notice to give, it's worth considering the next time you're in this position. Some employers are thrilled to have long notice periods and will treat people well when they're leaving, because it results in a smoother transition. Others make your last days miserable, or even walk you out when you give notice. In your next job, pay attention to how people who leave are treated. That will help you decide how much notice to give. (This is all based on Alison Green's excellent advice at Ask a Manager.) Why you're quitting is another useful thing to consider. If you're leaving a job because you hate it, giving more notice than the two-week minimum just seems masochistic.






                                          share|improve this answer






















                                          • Not to your answer specific, but i see alot of people here talk about the notice like it is for the person to set? In my country (The Netherlands) the notice period is decided when signing the contract and that notice, counts for both sides. So to be sure you can find a new job when fired (for whatever reason) you would want that notice period atleast a month, just in case right? That said, one can always just take a vacation in his notice period, atleast that's what we do in here anyway, as else they would have to pay the free days also on the salary and they prefer you to use them beforehand
                                            – Viezevingertjes
                                            Sep 10 '12 at 8:30










                                          • @MrMichael, that's a good point. Notice is very different from country to country. In the US, most jobs are "at will." That means you can legally quit at any time for any reason, and your employment can legally be ended at any time for any reason. You can have a contract that stipulates a specific amount of notice, but most people don't. Two weeks is usually the expected amount of notice that it's considered professional to give when quitting a job. There are fields where more notice is expected. (Nursing is one example.)
                                            – Kelly Tessena Keck
                                            Sep 11 '12 at 15:19






                                          • 2




                                            Its important to note that in many instances people are paid twice a month. This is the reason giving a 2 week notice is typical amount of time. The basic idea is you give a standard pay period of time.
                                            – Ramhound
                                            Sep 12 '12 at 14:45











                                          • The OP said "I have given my notice period of 1 month ... after working for 4 months in a ... contract job of 6 months...". So, even though it sounds like 30 days is a long time for a notice, it is still leaving 1 month before the contract is up. So, if the 1 month notice is accepted, I imagine the OP might consider themself lucky.
                                            – Kevin Fegan
                                            Apr 29 '14 at 8:41













                                          up vote
                                          9
                                          down vote










                                          up vote
                                          9
                                          down vote









                                          First of all, you should do a good job, leave on good terms, and wrap up all loose ends. Make it as easy as possible for whoever is taking over your responsibilities to pick up where you left off.



                                          Cutting your notice short doesn't sound appropriate in your situation. I can think of only two situations where it really would be reasonable.



                                          Circumstances beyond your control force you to leave earlier



                                          "The new company wants me to start sooner," is not an example of this. "My spouse's job relocation got pushed up and we're leaving now" or "I need to drop everything and care for a sick family member on the other side of the country" are what I'm talking about here.



                                          Your work situation becomes untenable



                                          This is more than just your supervisor not treating you as well as they did before. It's expected that things will be a little awkward and that they won't be happy you're leaving, especially after so long. But if the supervisor is verbally abusive or is "punishing" you in some way, it's reasonable to move your end date up.



                                          If you do decide you want out early, despite all the advice to the contrary, you really should tell your boss this up-front. Doing nothing in order to make them shorten your notice period is even more unprofessional than shortening it yourself.



                                          As a note for the future, a month is a lot of notice (in the US, at least). Assuming you work somewhere where you choose how much notice to give, it's worth considering the next time you're in this position. Some employers are thrilled to have long notice periods and will treat people well when they're leaving, because it results in a smoother transition. Others make your last days miserable, or even walk you out when you give notice. In your next job, pay attention to how people who leave are treated. That will help you decide how much notice to give. (This is all based on Alison Green's excellent advice at Ask a Manager.) Why you're quitting is another useful thing to consider. If you're leaving a job because you hate it, giving more notice than the two-week minimum just seems masochistic.






                                          share|improve this answer














                                          First of all, you should do a good job, leave on good terms, and wrap up all loose ends. Make it as easy as possible for whoever is taking over your responsibilities to pick up where you left off.



                                          Cutting your notice short doesn't sound appropriate in your situation. I can think of only two situations where it really would be reasonable.



                                          Circumstances beyond your control force you to leave earlier



                                          "The new company wants me to start sooner," is not an example of this. "My spouse's job relocation got pushed up and we're leaving now" or "I need to drop everything and care for a sick family member on the other side of the country" are what I'm talking about here.



                                          Your work situation becomes untenable



                                          This is more than just your supervisor not treating you as well as they did before. It's expected that things will be a little awkward and that they won't be happy you're leaving, especially after so long. But if the supervisor is verbally abusive or is "punishing" you in some way, it's reasonable to move your end date up.



                                          If you do decide you want out early, despite all the advice to the contrary, you really should tell your boss this up-front. Doing nothing in order to make them shorten your notice period is even more unprofessional than shortening it yourself.



                                          As a note for the future, a month is a lot of notice (in the US, at least). Assuming you work somewhere where you choose how much notice to give, it's worth considering the next time you're in this position. Some employers are thrilled to have long notice periods and will treat people well when they're leaving, because it results in a smoother transition. Others make your last days miserable, or even walk you out when you give notice. In your next job, pay attention to how people who leave are treated. That will help you decide how much notice to give. (This is all based on Alison Green's excellent advice at Ask a Manager.) Why you're quitting is another useful thing to consider. If you're leaving a job because you hate it, giving more notice than the two-week minimum just seems masochistic.







                                          share|improve this answer














                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer








                                          edited Sep 11 '12 at 15:22

























                                          answered Sep 7 '12 at 20:39









                                          Kelly Tessena Keck

                                          754410




                                          754410











                                          • Not to your answer specific, but i see alot of people here talk about the notice like it is for the person to set? In my country (The Netherlands) the notice period is decided when signing the contract and that notice, counts for both sides. So to be sure you can find a new job when fired (for whatever reason) you would want that notice period atleast a month, just in case right? That said, one can always just take a vacation in his notice period, atleast that's what we do in here anyway, as else they would have to pay the free days also on the salary and they prefer you to use them beforehand
                                            – Viezevingertjes
                                            Sep 10 '12 at 8:30










                                          • @MrMichael, that's a good point. Notice is very different from country to country. In the US, most jobs are "at will." That means you can legally quit at any time for any reason, and your employment can legally be ended at any time for any reason. You can have a contract that stipulates a specific amount of notice, but most people don't. Two weeks is usually the expected amount of notice that it's considered professional to give when quitting a job. There are fields where more notice is expected. (Nursing is one example.)
                                            – Kelly Tessena Keck
                                            Sep 11 '12 at 15:19






                                          • 2




                                            Its important to note that in many instances people are paid twice a month. This is the reason giving a 2 week notice is typical amount of time. The basic idea is you give a standard pay period of time.
                                            – Ramhound
                                            Sep 12 '12 at 14:45











                                          • The OP said "I have given my notice period of 1 month ... after working for 4 months in a ... contract job of 6 months...". So, even though it sounds like 30 days is a long time for a notice, it is still leaving 1 month before the contract is up. So, if the 1 month notice is accepted, I imagine the OP might consider themself lucky.
                                            – Kevin Fegan
                                            Apr 29 '14 at 8:41

















                                          • Not to your answer specific, but i see alot of people here talk about the notice like it is for the person to set? In my country (The Netherlands) the notice period is decided when signing the contract and that notice, counts for both sides. So to be sure you can find a new job when fired (for whatever reason) you would want that notice period atleast a month, just in case right? That said, one can always just take a vacation in his notice period, atleast that's what we do in here anyway, as else they would have to pay the free days also on the salary and they prefer you to use them beforehand
                                            – Viezevingertjes
                                            Sep 10 '12 at 8:30










                                          • @MrMichael, that's a good point. Notice is very different from country to country. In the US, most jobs are "at will." That means you can legally quit at any time for any reason, and your employment can legally be ended at any time for any reason. You can have a contract that stipulates a specific amount of notice, but most people don't. Two weeks is usually the expected amount of notice that it's considered professional to give when quitting a job. There are fields where more notice is expected. (Nursing is one example.)
                                            – Kelly Tessena Keck
                                            Sep 11 '12 at 15:19






                                          • 2




                                            Its important to note that in many instances people are paid twice a month. This is the reason giving a 2 week notice is typical amount of time. The basic idea is you give a standard pay period of time.
                                            – Ramhound
                                            Sep 12 '12 at 14:45











                                          • The OP said "I have given my notice period of 1 month ... after working for 4 months in a ... contract job of 6 months...". So, even though it sounds like 30 days is a long time for a notice, it is still leaving 1 month before the contract is up. So, if the 1 month notice is accepted, I imagine the OP might consider themself lucky.
                                            – Kevin Fegan
                                            Apr 29 '14 at 8:41
















                                          Not to your answer specific, but i see alot of people here talk about the notice like it is for the person to set? In my country (The Netherlands) the notice period is decided when signing the contract and that notice, counts for both sides. So to be sure you can find a new job when fired (for whatever reason) you would want that notice period atleast a month, just in case right? That said, one can always just take a vacation in his notice period, atleast that's what we do in here anyway, as else they would have to pay the free days also on the salary and they prefer you to use them beforehand
                                          – Viezevingertjes
                                          Sep 10 '12 at 8:30




                                          Not to your answer specific, but i see alot of people here talk about the notice like it is for the person to set? In my country (The Netherlands) the notice period is decided when signing the contract and that notice, counts for both sides. So to be sure you can find a new job when fired (for whatever reason) you would want that notice period atleast a month, just in case right? That said, one can always just take a vacation in his notice period, atleast that's what we do in here anyway, as else they would have to pay the free days also on the salary and they prefer you to use them beforehand
                                          – Viezevingertjes
                                          Sep 10 '12 at 8:30












                                          @MrMichael, that's a good point. Notice is very different from country to country. In the US, most jobs are "at will." That means you can legally quit at any time for any reason, and your employment can legally be ended at any time for any reason. You can have a contract that stipulates a specific amount of notice, but most people don't. Two weeks is usually the expected amount of notice that it's considered professional to give when quitting a job. There are fields where more notice is expected. (Nursing is one example.)
                                          – Kelly Tessena Keck
                                          Sep 11 '12 at 15:19




                                          @MrMichael, that's a good point. Notice is very different from country to country. In the US, most jobs are "at will." That means you can legally quit at any time for any reason, and your employment can legally be ended at any time for any reason. You can have a contract that stipulates a specific amount of notice, but most people don't. Two weeks is usually the expected amount of notice that it's considered professional to give when quitting a job. There are fields where more notice is expected. (Nursing is one example.)
                                          – Kelly Tessena Keck
                                          Sep 11 '12 at 15:19




                                          2




                                          2




                                          Its important to note that in many instances people are paid twice a month. This is the reason giving a 2 week notice is typical amount of time. The basic idea is you give a standard pay period of time.
                                          – Ramhound
                                          Sep 12 '12 at 14:45





                                          Its important to note that in many instances people are paid twice a month. This is the reason giving a 2 week notice is typical amount of time. The basic idea is you give a standard pay period of time.
                                          – Ramhound
                                          Sep 12 '12 at 14:45













                                          The OP said "I have given my notice period of 1 month ... after working for 4 months in a ... contract job of 6 months...". So, even though it sounds like 30 days is a long time for a notice, it is still leaving 1 month before the contract is up. So, if the 1 month notice is accepted, I imagine the OP might consider themself lucky.
                                          – Kevin Fegan
                                          Apr 29 '14 at 8:41





                                          The OP said "I have given my notice period of 1 month ... after working for 4 months in a ... contract job of 6 months...". So, even though it sounds like 30 days is a long time for a notice, it is still leaving 1 month before the contract is up. So, if the 1 month notice is accepted, I imagine the OP might consider themself lucky.
                                          – Kevin Fegan
                                          Apr 29 '14 at 8:41











                                          up vote
                                          6
                                          down vote













                                          Was there any explicit deliverable in the contract? If there are then focus on getting those done.



                                          Discuss with management what they expect to get from you during this transition time. Some expect you to keep working on the task. Others expect you to train your replacement. Others expect nothing but a clean office when you leave.



                                          They may be treating you differently because they don't know how to act. They might be upset you are leaving early. They might feel betrayed. Talking to them about goals for the rest of the month can help both of you.



                                          If they don't have specific goals it can help you relax because you know that you tried to understand their expectations, but you don't have any special obligations during the rest of the month.



                                          You want to be able to stay for the entire month. It keeps putting money in your pocket.



                                          If it gets really painful: If you have any vacation that you must take before you leave, this would be a good idea to do so.






                                          share|improve this answer
















                                          • 4




                                            Most places I have worked will not allow you to take vacation during the notice period. I had one try to refuse me bereavement.
                                            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 12:45






                                          • 2




                                            ow. I hope you went anyway.
                                            – Michael Durrant
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 13:21










                                          • @MichaelDurrant - Yes and even though the manager was not happy I still get a good reference from the company.
                                            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 13:33










                                          • Yup, ethics count for a lot for good managers.
                                            – Michael Durrant
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 16:10







                                          • 1




                                            At the extreme other end of what Chad described are companies who'll send you packing immediately on giving your notice. This is as counterproductive (no opportunity to transition knowledge, etc) as it is generally futile since that sort of policy will quickly become known and anyone stupid enough to do anything malicious on their last day would just do it before handing in their notice.
                                            – Dan Neely
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 20:42














                                          up vote
                                          6
                                          down vote













                                          Was there any explicit deliverable in the contract? If there are then focus on getting those done.



                                          Discuss with management what they expect to get from you during this transition time. Some expect you to keep working on the task. Others expect you to train your replacement. Others expect nothing but a clean office when you leave.



                                          They may be treating you differently because they don't know how to act. They might be upset you are leaving early. They might feel betrayed. Talking to them about goals for the rest of the month can help both of you.



                                          If they don't have specific goals it can help you relax because you know that you tried to understand their expectations, but you don't have any special obligations during the rest of the month.



                                          You want to be able to stay for the entire month. It keeps putting money in your pocket.



                                          If it gets really painful: If you have any vacation that you must take before you leave, this would be a good idea to do so.






                                          share|improve this answer
















                                          • 4




                                            Most places I have worked will not allow you to take vacation during the notice period. I had one try to refuse me bereavement.
                                            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 12:45






                                          • 2




                                            ow. I hope you went anyway.
                                            – Michael Durrant
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 13:21










                                          • @MichaelDurrant - Yes and even though the manager was not happy I still get a good reference from the company.
                                            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 13:33










                                          • Yup, ethics count for a lot for good managers.
                                            – Michael Durrant
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 16:10







                                          • 1




                                            At the extreme other end of what Chad described are companies who'll send you packing immediately on giving your notice. This is as counterproductive (no opportunity to transition knowledge, etc) as it is generally futile since that sort of policy will quickly become known and anyone stupid enough to do anything malicious on their last day would just do it before handing in their notice.
                                            – Dan Neely
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 20:42












                                          up vote
                                          6
                                          down vote










                                          up vote
                                          6
                                          down vote









                                          Was there any explicit deliverable in the contract? If there are then focus on getting those done.



                                          Discuss with management what they expect to get from you during this transition time. Some expect you to keep working on the task. Others expect you to train your replacement. Others expect nothing but a clean office when you leave.



                                          They may be treating you differently because they don't know how to act. They might be upset you are leaving early. They might feel betrayed. Talking to them about goals for the rest of the month can help both of you.



                                          If they don't have specific goals it can help you relax because you know that you tried to understand their expectations, but you don't have any special obligations during the rest of the month.



                                          You want to be able to stay for the entire month. It keeps putting money in your pocket.



                                          If it gets really painful: If you have any vacation that you must take before you leave, this would be a good idea to do so.






                                          share|improve this answer












                                          Was there any explicit deliverable in the contract? If there are then focus on getting those done.



                                          Discuss with management what they expect to get from you during this transition time. Some expect you to keep working on the task. Others expect you to train your replacement. Others expect nothing but a clean office when you leave.



                                          They may be treating you differently because they don't know how to act. They might be upset you are leaving early. They might feel betrayed. Talking to them about goals for the rest of the month can help both of you.



                                          If they don't have specific goals it can help you relax because you know that you tried to understand their expectations, but you don't have any special obligations during the rest of the month.



                                          You want to be able to stay for the entire month. It keeps putting money in your pocket.



                                          If it gets really painful: If you have any vacation that you must take before you leave, this would be a good idea to do so.







                                          share|improve this answer












                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer










                                          answered Jun 28 '12 at 11:09









                                          mhoran_psprep

                                          40.3k463144




                                          40.3k463144







                                          • 4




                                            Most places I have worked will not allow you to take vacation during the notice period. I had one try to refuse me bereavement.
                                            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 12:45






                                          • 2




                                            ow. I hope you went anyway.
                                            – Michael Durrant
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 13:21










                                          • @MichaelDurrant - Yes and even though the manager was not happy I still get a good reference from the company.
                                            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 13:33










                                          • Yup, ethics count for a lot for good managers.
                                            – Michael Durrant
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 16:10







                                          • 1




                                            At the extreme other end of what Chad described are companies who'll send you packing immediately on giving your notice. This is as counterproductive (no opportunity to transition knowledge, etc) as it is generally futile since that sort of policy will quickly become known and anyone stupid enough to do anything malicious on their last day would just do it before handing in their notice.
                                            – Dan Neely
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 20:42












                                          • 4




                                            Most places I have worked will not allow you to take vacation during the notice period. I had one try to refuse me bereavement.
                                            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 12:45






                                          • 2




                                            ow. I hope you went anyway.
                                            – Michael Durrant
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 13:21










                                          • @MichaelDurrant - Yes and even though the manager was not happy I still get a good reference from the company.
                                            – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 13:33










                                          • Yup, ethics count for a lot for good managers.
                                            – Michael Durrant
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 16:10







                                          • 1




                                            At the extreme other end of what Chad described are companies who'll send you packing immediately on giving your notice. This is as counterproductive (no opportunity to transition knowledge, etc) as it is generally futile since that sort of policy will quickly become known and anyone stupid enough to do anything malicious on their last day would just do it before handing in their notice.
                                            – Dan Neely
                                            Jun 28 '12 at 20:42







                                          4




                                          4




                                          Most places I have worked will not allow you to take vacation during the notice period. I had one try to refuse me bereavement.
                                          – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 12:45




                                          Most places I have worked will not allow you to take vacation during the notice period. I had one try to refuse me bereavement.
                                          – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 12:45




                                          2




                                          2




                                          ow. I hope you went anyway.
                                          – Michael Durrant
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 13:21




                                          ow. I hope you went anyway.
                                          – Michael Durrant
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 13:21












                                          @MichaelDurrant - Yes and even though the manager was not happy I still get a good reference from the company.
                                          – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 13:33




                                          @MichaelDurrant - Yes and even though the manager was not happy I still get a good reference from the company.
                                          – IDrinkandIKnowThings
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 13:33












                                          Yup, ethics count for a lot for good managers.
                                          – Michael Durrant
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 16:10





                                          Yup, ethics count for a lot for good managers.
                                          – Michael Durrant
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 16:10





                                          1




                                          1




                                          At the extreme other end of what Chad described are companies who'll send you packing immediately on giving your notice. This is as counterproductive (no opportunity to transition knowledge, etc) as it is generally futile since that sort of policy will quickly become known and anyone stupid enough to do anything malicious on their last day would just do it before handing in their notice.
                                          – Dan Neely
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 20:42




                                          At the extreme other end of what Chad described are companies who'll send you packing immediately on giving your notice. This is as counterproductive (no opportunity to transition knowledge, etc) as it is generally futile since that sort of policy will quickly become known and anyone stupid enough to do anything malicious on their last day would just do it before handing in their notice.
                                          – Dan Neely
                                          Jun 28 '12 at 20:42










                                          up vote
                                          -2
                                          down vote













                                          Having endured this experience several times in my career (35 years), the best advice I can offer is - NEVER give more notice that you are legally obliged & sometimes I QUIT (effective immediately) is the best way to go & so immensely satisfying! Nothing like a clean break.






                                          share|improve this answer
















                                          • 8




                                            this doesn't seem to offer anything substantial over points made and explained in prior 7 answers that were posted almost 3 years ago
                                            – gnat
                                            Mar 30 '15 at 11:05














                                          up vote
                                          -2
                                          down vote













                                          Having endured this experience several times in my career (35 years), the best advice I can offer is - NEVER give more notice that you are legally obliged & sometimes I QUIT (effective immediately) is the best way to go & so immensely satisfying! Nothing like a clean break.






                                          share|improve this answer
















                                          • 8




                                            this doesn't seem to offer anything substantial over points made and explained in prior 7 answers that were posted almost 3 years ago
                                            – gnat
                                            Mar 30 '15 at 11:05












                                          up vote
                                          -2
                                          down vote










                                          up vote
                                          -2
                                          down vote









                                          Having endured this experience several times in my career (35 years), the best advice I can offer is - NEVER give more notice that you are legally obliged & sometimes I QUIT (effective immediately) is the best way to go & so immensely satisfying! Nothing like a clean break.






                                          share|improve this answer












                                          Having endured this experience several times in my career (35 years), the best advice I can offer is - NEVER give more notice that you are legally obliged & sometimes I QUIT (effective immediately) is the best way to go & so immensely satisfying! Nothing like a clean break.







                                          share|improve this answer












                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer










                                          answered Mar 30 '15 at 9:41









                                          user33671

                                          11




                                          11







                                          • 8




                                            this doesn't seem to offer anything substantial over points made and explained in prior 7 answers that were posted almost 3 years ago
                                            – gnat
                                            Mar 30 '15 at 11:05












                                          • 8




                                            this doesn't seem to offer anything substantial over points made and explained in prior 7 answers that were posted almost 3 years ago
                                            – gnat
                                            Mar 30 '15 at 11:05







                                          8




                                          8




                                          this doesn't seem to offer anything substantial over points made and explained in prior 7 answers that were posted almost 3 years ago
                                          – gnat
                                          Mar 30 '15 at 11:05




                                          this doesn't seem to offer anything substantial over points made and explained in prior 7 answers that were posted almost 3 years ago
                                          – gnat
                                          Mar 30 '15 at 11:05












                                           

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