Cheers =)
On the surface I have a cushty job. I've been wfh since March 2020, and since the company was acquired in 2021 I fell between the cracks, I basically do what I like, and nobody cares. I'm currently doing my own thing in the morning and evening and working about 4-5 hours in between, but not achieving anything. I don't believe in the (new) company's goals and I don't feel I'm using my talents in a useful way. So it's not great for my mental health, but gee, I'm going to miss the freedom unless I get really lucky.
I've never felt that way about a job before, like despair. But it made it less of a decision and more of an eventuality.
Developing application for internal use. I'm employed with part-time contract (60%).
I'm burning out. I have to do everything. From project management, devops, gathering requirement, testing, customer support, documentation, instruct,... All you can think of doing as a team of at least 2-3 people, I'm doing it solo. This is not the way, I can feel it. The people don't open issues, don't communicate. I have to keep nagging, asking to give me feedback and test. Keep asking: test and give me a feedback. And then, when they need a feature to be usable, something breaks or don't work the way they thought should work (That's why damn it I asked to test and give me feedback). The thing that made me go crazy was when I asked to test a feature in the development version, so that when they feel ok, I would deploy it in production. I got answered: I can't be bothered to have two URLs and test on different version than the production version. I mean, what am I supposed to do?
I should at least be paid more. Looking for another company with an actual Software Engineer team, with an actual Project Manager and actual person/system that test the requirements/specification. With a member who spend most of his time to documenting and giving support. Thinking about quitting.
- The company made a big push for RTO 4-5 days per week the past few months and I live about 2 hours drive away in rush hour. It's not required for me yet but will be if I ever shift clients.
- It's becoming increasingly clear that they only promote/give good raises to employees willing to work an extra 10-20 hours per week on internal projects outside of their 40-45 hour/week client work, and I haven't been willing to do that, I have too much going on outside of work hours.
- I'm getting a little burned out of my current client and project. I could have my company transition me to a new client and project (and thus probably require me to go to the office a lot more), or I could just find a new job for more money and be in the same boat that way.
- My spouse desperately wants to quit her almost six figure job (like yesterday, she doesn't want to wait) and make a big push to become a full-time writer (for probably about 10% of the pay, after expenses, at least to start. hopefully will make almost as much money as she is now in 2-3 years), and we determined what all she's paying right now, and currently it would require almost a full extra paycheck (>$3k/month) for me to cover everything she's been paying for right now, between half the mortgage, student loans, medical prescriptions, credit card payments, etc.
By both of us giving up on luxuries, going out to eat, subscriptions, and me cutting down on my own loan repayments and investments I can probably free up an extra $1200/month without too much problems, but getting the other half of it will require cuts I'm not sure I really want to make if at all possible (not maxing out 401k when I'm already way behind for my age, for example).
So I should probably try to get paid an extra $30-40k+ more if possible, which almost certainly won't happen at my current job.
Not saying it'll be super easy, as there's all the layoffs going right now. But I don't get paid anywhere close to SV wages right now, so I'm thinking I might still be able to work a bit cheaper than those laid off and yet still get that much of a bump, as long as I look outside of my region.
I've been at my current job for 18 months so far, btw.
It wasn't one major thing but several things leading up to a critical mass. During the process, found myself collecting and going back to some key pieces of writing that helped think through the decision. You might find these useful, collected all of them here: https://www.leadingsapiens.com/essential-career-change-frame...
As for why, the three main reasons are the commute, the punitive atmosphere created by management and the outdated tech practices. For an example of that last one, I got a lot of praise for generating a root keypair and using that to sign certs for our internal services. Apparently they had been trying to do something like this for upwards of a year but couldn't figure it out.
This year I plan to join a large corp with good engineering standards. I am going to grind leetcode and system design if I can double my salary. If I fail at grinding leetcode I'm just going to apply everywhere and make move to a better corp.
Reasons: Understaffed. Things constantly breaking, which I have no power to fix because of a legacy system. New features over reliability. Poor team communication. People on different pages. Lack of care about quality as long as it works.
Last few months I've started taking on small amounts of work and considering looking for full-time employment again in a few months.
No regrets - my health has improved.
I caught enough of the money printer where I don't have to work but also doing nothing triggers my existential angst more than actually feeling like I'm working toward something.
My issue is that I'm kind of in a Catch-22, or at least what I perceive to be one, with my career.
I just keep making excuses as to why I cannot quit, and I have succumbed to my own insecurities too much to make an actionable changes in my life including my career.
I sometimes wish I would just get fired or laid-off, so I have no choice but to be forced to find something new.
I believe it is subpar tech by modern standards
Also I wish there was more programming / SE
I've only had one job that I quit "for cause". It looked like the best job I ever had, and would have been, except that my boss was a psychopath. It wasn't a close call, and I was seriously interviewing within three months of starting.
Except for unusual cases, all jobs are about the same. Any given job might be a bad fit for you personally.
Limited advice: If you're working with or for someone evil, leave ASAP. As for discretionary quits, keep in mind that your new job could be a lot worse, and you won't know until it's too late.