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BEWARE COUNTER OFFER
They may beg
you to stay now, then give you the boot later.
You've been approached by another company and offered a position with
growth potential and a moderate increase in compensation. You've analyzed
and agonized over the decision to leave a good (or bad) job for what
could be a better one, and have accepted (or decided to accept the offer.
However, upon resigning, your current boss asks you to stay. This appeal
is known as a counteroffer or buyback.
In recent years, counteroffers have practically become the norm. "It's
almost like a part of the accepted divorce proceedings, and allows the
boss to save face with his boss," explains on departing Texas-based
executive of a major airline. "And it sometimes has to take its
course." But while buyback offers can be tempting, take care not
to fall into the trap for be blind-sided to your own detriment. Career
changes are tough enough as it is, and anxieties about leaving a comfortable
job, friends and location and having to reprove yourself again in an
unknown opportunity can cloud the best of logic. But just because the
new position is a little scary doesn't mean it's not a positive move.
Since buyback gestures can create confusion and buyer's remorse, you
should understand what's being cast upon you. Counteroffers are typically
made in conjunction with some form of flattery. For example:
- "You're
too valuable, and we need you."
- "You can't
desert the team/your friends and leave them hanging.."
- "We were
just about to give you a promotion/raise, and it was confidential
until now."
- "What did
they offer, why are you leaving, and what do you need to stay?"
- "Why would
you want to work for that company?"
- "The President/CEO
wants to meet with you before you make your final decision."
Counters usually
take the form of:
- More money,
- A promotion/more
responsibility,
- A modified reporting
structure,
- Promises or future
considerations,
- "Why would
you want to work for that company?"
- Disparaging remarks
about the new company or job, and/or guild trips.
Of course, since
we all prefer to think we're MVP's, it's natural to want to believe
these manipulative appeals, but beware! Accepting a counteroffer often
is the wrong choice to make. Think about it" If you were worth
"X" yesterday, why are they suddenly willing to pay you "X
+ Y" today, when you weren't expecting a raise for some time?
Also consider how you've felt when someone resigned from your staff.
The reality is that employers don't like to be "fired." Your
boss is likely concerned that he'll look bad, and that his career may
suffer. Bosses are judged by their ability to retain staff. When a contributor
quits, morale suffers. Further, your leaving might jeopardize an important
project, increase other staffers' workload or even foul up a vacation
schedule. It's never a good time for someone to quit, and it may prove
time-consuming and costly to replace you, especially considering recruitment
and relocation expenses. It's much cheaper to keep you, even at a slightly
higher salary. And it would be better to fire you later, on the company's
time frame.
"We've make counteroffers on occasion, if a good person approaches
the issue professionally," says a former senior partner of a Big
Six accounting and consulting firm. "But usually it was a stopgap
measure because we couldn't afford a defection at that point in time.
We didn't count on these people long term, and usually they'd burned
bridges two or three levels up, if not with their immediate manager.
It definitely put them in a career holding pattern."
The senior partner cites a long conference he once attended with his
boss and two subordinate managers, in which they approved a counteroffer
and raise to an employee two levels down. "Immediately after the
meeting, my boss called me and said, "We can't afford to lose him
now, but our No. 1 priority is to find a replacement, ASAP!" he
says. "And we replaced him within a few months." Another senior
executive from a major Dallas-based bank says, "If it's a real
'hitter,' I'll try to get him to stay. But to be honest, any additional
compensation is 'stealing' from his future earnings, and I'll always
question his convictions, knowing he can be bought. Further, I'll wonder
if I can really count on him [which equates to limited future opportunities].
In other words, the damage is done."
While your employer may truly consider you an asset and genuinely care
about you personally, you can be sure that your inte4rests are secondary
to your boss's career and your company's profit or survival. Thus, flattering
offers and comments are attempts to manipulate you to act in your employer's
best interests - which aren't necessarily your own. In other words,
they're not about you. Accepting a counteroffer can have numerous negative
consequences. Consider:
Where did the additional money or responsibility you'd get come from?
Was it your next raise or promotion - just given early? Will you be
limited in the future? Will you have to threaten to quit to get your
next raise? Might a (cheaper) replacement be sought out?
You've demonstrated your unhappiness (or lack of blind loyalty), and
will be perceived as having committed blackmail to gain a raise. You
won't ever be considered a team player again. Many employers will hold
a grudge at the next review period, and you may be placed at the top
of the next reduction-in-force"hit list." As one executive
who requested anonymity says, "Like an adulterous affair that's
been discovered, the broken trust is never fully recovered."
Apart from a short-term, band-aid treatment, nothing will change within
the company. After the dust settles from his upheaval, you'll be in
the same old rut. A rule of thumb among recruiters is that more than
80% of those accepting counteroffers leave, or are terminated, within
six to 12 months anyway. Half of those who do succumb reinitiate their
job searches within 90 days, recruiters say.
"The butter you up and give you more money, but nothing really
changes. In fact, they can get worse," says one insurance executive
in Utah who accepted a counteroffer. "My immediate boss was really
agitated, since his boss interceded. At raise time, he told me that
none had been budged (since I'd already gotten a raise), and that if
I wanted, I could negotiate with the president as before." This
executive, by the way, left the company within months.
To be sure, recruiters have a vested interest in candidates not accepting
counteroffers, since they can't complete their search assignments without
willing candidates. Attempted buy backs can demonstrate disrespect for
your well thought-out decision and commitment to the new company. Should
your current employer decide to eliminate your position or pass you
over for promotion, successfully countering their decision is unlikely.
Besides, you've analyzed, accepted and committed to the new company,
which has surely made plans and accommodations around you and is counting
on you.
Finally, when making your decision, look at your current job and the
new position as if you were unemployed. Which opportunity holds the
most real potential? Probably the new one or you wouldn't have accepted
it in the first place.
By
R. Gaines Baty
Reprinted from the:
National Business Employment Weekly
April 24 - April 30, 1994
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