| |
NEVER ACCEPT A COUNTEROFFER
It's nice to be wooed, but don't
expect to stay long.
Source: The Wall Street Journal 1998.
Reprint from the National Business Employment Weekly.
By Paul Hawkinson
A tax accountant with a Chicago-based public accounting firm accepted
a top corporate position at a local manufacturer that paid $15,000
more than he currently earned. But the accountant changed his mind
after his firm's senior partner made him a counteroffer.
The partner dangled a plethora of incentives, including the promise
of a partnership in the near future. Three months later, after the
tax season ended, the accountant was fired.
A manufacturing manager with a medium-sized metal products company
in Albuquerque, N.M., accepted a new position that included a higher
salary and better benefits. But he decided to stay put after his
company agreed to match the offer and told him of great things on
the horizon. However, he wasn't told that the firm might be merging
with another. Six months after the executive decided to stay, he
was merged out of his job. Following nine months of unemployment,
he landed a lower-paying position.
Ask any executive recruiter and you'll hear dozens of heartbreaking
stores like these involving counteroffers. Unfortunately, more executives
seem to be getting and accepting them because of the inconsistent
economy. Companies are operating with reduced staffs and any defections
from the ranks create problems for those who remain. It's much easier
for employers to sweeten the pot to keep executives from deserting
than to conduct grueling and expensive searches for placements.
Mathew Henry, the 17th-century write, said, "Many a dangerous
temptation comes to us in fine gay colors that are but skin deep."
The same can be said for counteroffers, those magnetic enticements
designed to lure you back into the nest after you've decided it's
time to fly away.
But in good times, or bad, the dictum remains constant. Counteroffers
should never be accepted...EVER! Those few rare instances, where
accepting one is beneficial, occur about as frequently as being
struck by lightening.
THE RIGHT PERSPECTIVE
A counteroffer is an inducement from your current employer to get
you to stay after you've announced your intention to take another
job. It doesn't include instances when you receive an offer but
don't tell your boss, or when you tell your employer about an offer
you never intended to take in a classic "they-want-me-but-I'm-staying-with-you"
ploy.
These are merely positioning tactics that can reinforce your worth
by letting your boss know you have other options. Mention of a true
counteroffer, however, carries an actual threat to quit. Interviews
with employers who make counteroffers, and employees who accept
them, have shown that accepting a counteroffer--tempting as it may
be--is tantamount to career suicide. Consider the problem in its
proper perspective.
What really goes through a boss's mind
when someone quits:
· This couldn't be happening
at a worse time.
· He's one of my best people. If I let him quit now, it'll
wreak havoc on the morale of the department.
· I've already got one opening in my department. I don't
need another right now.
· This will probably screw up the entire vacation schedule.
· I'm working as hard as I can and I don't need to do his
work, too.
· If I lose another good employee, the company might decide
to 'lose' me too.
· My review is coming up and this will make me look bad.
· Maybe I can keep him on until I find a suitable replacement.
· We're working with a skeleton crew already. If I lose
this one, we'll all be working around the clock just to stay even.
What will the boss say to keep you in the
nest:
· I'm really shocked. I thought
you were as happy with us as we are with you. Let's discuss it
before you make your final decision.
· Aw gee. I've been meaning to tell you about the great
plans we have for you, but it's been confidential until now.
· The VP has you in mind for some exciting and expanding
responsibilities.
· Your raise was scheduled to go into effect next quarter,
but we'll make it effective immediately.
· You're going to work for who?
· How can you do this in the middle of a major project?
We were really counting on you. (They're always in the middle
of one.)
JUST A STALL TACTIC
Let's face it. When someone quits, it's a direct reflection on the
boss. Unless you're really incompetent or a destructive thorn in
his/her side, the boss might look bad for allowing you to go. It's
an implied insult to his management skills. His/her gut reaction
is to do what has to be done to keep you from leaving until he/she's
ready. That's human nature.
Unfortunately, it's also human nature to want to stay--unless your
work life is abject misery. Career change, like all ventures into
the unknown, is tough. That's why bosses know they can usually keep
you around by pressing the right buttons. Before you succumb to
a tempting counteroffer, consider these universal truths.
· Any situation is suspect if an employee
must receive an outside offer before the present employer will
suggest a raise, promotion or better working conditions.
· No matter what the company says when making it's counteroffer,
you'll always be a fidelity risk. Having once demonstrated your
lack of loyalty (for whatever reason), you will lose your status
as a team player and your place in the inner circle.
· Counteroffers are usually nothing more than stall devices
to give your employer time to replace you. Your reasons for wanting
to leave still exist. They'll just be slightly more tolerable
in the short term because of the raise, promotion or promises
made to keep you.
· Counteroffers are only made in response to a threat to
quit. Will you have to solicit an offer and threaten to quit every
time you deserve better working conditions?
· By accepting a counteroffer, you have committed the unprofessional
and unethical sin of breaking your commitment to the prospective
employer making the offer.
· Decent and well-managed companies don't make counteroffers...EVER!
Their policies are fair and equitable. They will never be subjected
to counteroffer coercion, which they perceive as blackmail.
If the urge to accept a counteroffer hits you, keep on cleaning
out your desk as you count your blessings. And, if you decide to
stay, hire a lawyer to put your newly won promises in the form of
a long-term no-cut contract.
> top > back
to career resources area
|
|