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On paper, Maddie Machado had what a lot of people would consider a dream job. In September 2021, she started working as a recruiter for Meta, the social media company formerly known as Facebook.

But a few weeks into it, her excitement turned to dread. She’d heard of Big Tech’s problem with workplace diversity and, as a Black and Hispanic woman, felt Meta’s promises to improve weren’t actually happening around her. She felt micromanaged in her day-to-day and that her creativity was being stifled. (Meta declined to comment.)

Machado, 32, felt her new job wasn’t what she was told it would be.

It’s an incredibly common feeling. Some 72% of jobseekers say they’ve started a new job and felt a sense of surprise or regret that the role or company was very different from what they were led to believe, according to a January survey of more than 2,500 millennial and Gen Z jobseekers conducted by The Muse.

New-job regrets are disruptive for workers and employers alike. Roughly 20% of jobseekers say they would quit within a month if their new job isn’t what they expected, and another 41% would give a new job just two to six months before quitting.

Why it’s harder to figure out if you’ll like a new job

The Muse CEO and founder Kathryn Minshew refers to this feeling as a “shift shock,” which isn’t new but could be even more widespread during the Great Resignation.

For one, it’s harder for candidates to gauge a company’s culture if they can’t visit the office for interviews, or if those offices are cleared out of everyone working from home. After joining a company, people will tolerate so-so jobs if they like their coworkers or boss, Machado adds, but that’s harder to get a feel for when you’re starting a new position remotely.

Plus, the pandemic prompted jobseekers to demand more of their employer — accountability around workplace diversity, pay, flexibility and mental health to name a few — and companies are having to play catch-up.

Without the perks of a fun campus, social coworkers or a resonant company mission, Machado says, “you have to think, do I actually like this job? If I have to look at this screen by myself eight hours a day with no one else around me, is it enough?”

A lot of people are saying no.

Workers are standing up for what they want, and quitting if they don’t get it

Machado quit her job in February, without a new one lined up, after about six months with Meta.

She says today’s strong job market, plus having about a decade of work experience, gave her the confidence to put in her notice: “At this point of my career, especially in this economy where it’s definitely a candidate’s market, I just knew I didn’t have to stay there.” She adds it was “the most stressful but relieving experience I’ve had in my career.”

Attitudes around leaving a bad job, even after a short period of time, are changing.

“People are explaining: There were key differences in the opportunity than I was signing up for,’” Minshew says. “Culturally we’re accepting that this is a completely reasonable explanation. And when things are accepted, they become more common.”

The old advice of staying in a bad job for at least a year, even if you don’t like it, “are not the rules we play by anymore.”

Source: CNBC

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