How To Resign Gracefully
(Aleem Ahmed Qureshi, Bahawalpur)
There are 10 key tips to keep
in mind if you do decide to quit your job after carefully weighing the pros and
cons of such a key decision:
1. Announce your resignation professionally
Be very professional and tactful in announcing your resignation and make sure
you go through the proper channels of command resigning to your immediate boss
first and then announcing your departure to your peers and colleagues. Do not
let word of your intention to depart filter through the grapevine before you
have announced your intentions to your boss.
2. Give sufficient notice
Consult your company's policies and procedures for the proper notice period and
make sure you give sufficient notice. If the company asks you to stay a little
longer you are under no obligation to but if you have no other pressing
priorities it may be a good idea to prolong your stay as a gesture of goodwill
to ease the transition and complete any unfinished tasks.
3. Write a letter of resignation
Always follow your verbal resignation with a written resignation letter. Make
this short, tactful, professional and to the point. Your resignation letter
should be sued as an added opportunity to maintain a positive rapport with your
old employer; it should not be sued as an opportunity to voice grievances or
vent any bad feelings you have towards the company.
4. Ask for a reference letter
You don't want to wait till you need a reference to ask for one as people you
work with leave and in time you may lose track of them and the stellar work you
did for them may be forgotten. Use your resignation time while you are still
fresh in the company's mind to ask for all the references you need so you have
them in hand when you do need them.
5. Offer to help find a replacement
One gesture of good will is to offer to help find a replacement for yourself.
This is usually very well-received as no one knows the intricacies of your job
better than you do and you are likely to have more time to devote to the task
than anyone else.
6. Do a proper hand-over
Make sure your work is well-documented, all outstanding tasks and projects are
assigned to the relevant parties and you have done all you can to ease the
transition. Make your handover documentation as informative, detailed and
polished as possible so you look good to your successor, bosses and peers well
after your departure.
7. Finish important projects
Don't leave any loose strings. Make sure all important projects are completed or
reassigned. You will be remembered positively if you have allowed for a smooth,
professional and effortless transition. If you have no immediate next job or
assignment that awaits you, offer to stay longer until that important deal or
project is closed. Even if you must rush off to your next job after the notice
period, you can choose to offer to be available by phone or email or during
weekends for a little while after your departure to ease the transition if the
company needs you.
8. Don't bad-mouth the company
Make sure you leave on good terms and do not burn any bridges. You may well end
up working with the same team in some capacity or other in the future or needing
their reference so do not take your resignation as an opportunity to bad-mouth
bosses or colleagues no matter what you really think of them.
9. Don't leave your office in a mess
Clear your office, computer and files before you depart and leave nothing
personal behind. Make sure your files are in order and your office, desk and
drawers are clean, orderly and ready to be handed over to your successor. If you
are not a very organized person by nature, make an extra effort to leave your
house in order before you depart so as to leave a positive lasting impression.
10. Do say good-bye to your colleagues
Don't leave abruptly - make sure you say your friendly goodbyes to all the
people you have shared your days with. Emphasize the positive when you bid your
farewells and do not use this as an opportunity to boast about your new pay
packet or dig up old grievances or traumas. Leave your peers your contact
details so they can choose to stay in touch with you in the future.