9 to 5
Dear Community,

Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.

If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.

Thank you.

Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.

quitting a new job?

So after a painful job search, I landed what I thought was my dream job.  I started a few weeks ago.  I actually had two job offers, and I thought I chose the 'no-brainer'. Now I loathe it.  I want to cry after each work day.  The work is profoundly boring, but also really diffucult.  There are no guidelines for what to do, but lots of pressure.  I have little control over what I do, and I spend the whole day in a state of frustration. 

The hours are much longer than I thought they'd be- I usually leave my home at 7am, and get back at 9pm.  I do not get a lunch break (we have to eat while working). My boss works even more that this.  Today, after putting in 'only' 11 hours, and she was upset with me for leaving 'early'.  I know that it's not going to get better.  I'm capable of gritting my teeth and sticking it out, but it's already taking a toll on my health.

Here's my question- Beginning tomorrow, I'm going to start applying for other jobs. Should I put this job on my resume?  I've picked up a few valuable skills during my 2 weeks, but it's still just 2 weeks.  On one hand, I'm more likely to get hired if I already have a job, but on the other hand, I don't want to seem unreliable.  Also, if I don't include this job, then I have to deal with a wide gap on my resume.


Re: quitting a new job?

  • I would call the company that offered you a job and see if they have found anyone. Just tell them the opportunity did not turn out to be the job initially stated and you are very interested in working for them. If you need to say there were mandatory 14 hour days and that will not work for your life. Assuming the other company has 8-9 hour days. 
  • I agree with PP about contacting the other position.  I would still keep looking for a job.  As far a putting the new position on your resume, I've heard you don't have to unless you've been there over six months.
    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • I had this issue.

    I was still in my 90 day trial period. I reached out to another company, which had wanted to extend an offer after I'd already accepted the other position. They got me an offer letter, and I gave notice at the other job.

    I left on really good terms, actually. The President of the company came into my office for a closed-door meeting. I was terrified, but it was actually her telling me that they were happy with the work I'd done and would take me back at any point in the future.

    Since it was 2 months of my life, and I left on good terms, I do have it on my LinkedIn profile... not sure about Resume, it might depend on the industry.  Where you've only been there 2 weeks, I wouldn't list it.  2 months shows as a gap on a resume - two weeks generally doesn't.

    imageimage
Sign In or Register to comment.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards