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Honestly, it's really simple: two weeks and that's it.

Been there 2 years and haven't gotten a raise/promotion? 2 weeks.

Been there 10 years and are bored/didn't get what you want? 2 weeks.

Don't fall over yourself helping the company. Chances are they are going to forget you in 3 months anyway.



In case of your death, a replacement job posting will be up before your obituary. 10 months is crazy.


Well of course an opening will be posted immediately if one dies - whats the point of waiting in that scenario ?

That doesn't justify being a jerk and quitting without making an effort to ensure that the transition is smooth for your colleagues.


Bad advice.

I hate generalities.

Last time I left a firm, there was 12 months notice (and the decision was mutual). That was the right choice for both sides.

The organization I'm working at right now, it's not uncommon to give years of notice, mostly heading for retirement.

Most tech companies are definitely two weeks, but that's far from the universe.


Something being “not uncommon” at your organization doesn’t make it good advice for anyone else.

Unless there’s a contract or an extreme circumstance that demands otherwise, 2 weeks is a courtesy and an employer should be ready for 0 days notice.


That's very... transactional. I prefer organizations with cultures which are more relational.

I spent a lot of time at work. I'd like work to be a community, for my work to be meaningful and interesting, and on the whole, that's more important than making a half a megabuck a year optimizing ad clicks.

I have a job like that, and it doesn't pay as much as FAANG, but you know something: it pays enough, and I'm happy.

I find the whole modern/California transactional culture is toxic to my psychological well-being, from divorce/relationship-hopping culture to job hopping culture to everything else. The whole world doesn't work like that, fortunately. Please don't try to force it to.

(And conversely, I'm fine with the transactional culture existing, so long as I'm not in it)




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