On Careers

5 Reasons to Turn Down a Job Offer

By Alison Green

Posted: October 26, 2009

In this economy, it's easy to feel like you should jump at any job offer that comes along. But doing that could land you in a job that would make you miserable and could even harm you professionally. Here are five reasons to consider turning down a job offer:

[See 5 ways companies mistreat job seekers.]

1. Your gut. Unless your gut is known for paranoid overreacting, you should listen when it's setting off alarm bells. If something doesn't feel right, or you experience inexplicable dread when you imagine yourself in the job, pay attention. Your subconscious is probably picking up on danger signs.

2. The job is over your head. You do not want to bluff your way into a job for which you aren't actually qualified. If the work doesn't play to your strengths, you'll struggle and could even end up getting fired. It amazes me how many people don't realize this.

[See why little stuff matters in a job search.]

3. You have a bad feeling about the person who would be your boss. The old saying that "people leave bosses, not jobs," is right. Make sure the manager is someone you'd want to work with.

4. The salary. On one hand, if you're unemployed, any salary is better than no salary. But if you accept a salary far below what the market says you're worth, you're likely to leave as soon as something with better pay comes along. That isn't fair to the employer, and it may burn bridges that you'll wish you had in the future.

5. The culture. If the culture is very formal and you go crazy when you're not in a relaxed environment, or if it's an aggressive, combative environment and you are more low-key and reserved, this probably isn't going to be a happy home for you.

You're going to be spending a large chunk of your waking life at this job. Be honest with yourself about whether you're going to thrive there.

Alison Green is the author of Managing to Change the World: The Nonprofit Leader's Guide to Getting Results. She is chief of staff for the Marijuana Policy Project, a nonprofit lobbying organization, where she oversees day-to-day management of the staff as well as hiring, firing, and staff development. Her writings have been published in the Washington Post, the New York Times, Maxim, and dozens of other newspapers. She blogs at Ask a Manager.

Contemplating tuning down a job

I'm unemployed and I recenlty interviewd for a job in an industry imho is a dying industry. On top of it the salary was 20% less than what I made. Of course they dangle a "but there is huge bonus potential" in front of you. I agree with the 5 signs and am going to turn it down.

MIke of PA @ Feb 24, 2010 22:22:10 PM

No bennies, low pay and high stress

I have been job hunting for a year and have no income. I've been interviewing but only had one offer last week. This was for a position that sets me back in my career to entry level and I have 14 yrs exp. in my field. The company filed bankruptcy last year I guess and they have no benefits, the pay is what I made 10 years ago...very low for the responsibilities and no bennies.

I'm feeling sick to my stomach thinking about how stressful the job seems. The would be manager seems like he micro manages...Seems like he had an irresponsible teenager that called in sick all the time and came in late. If the digital printer went down, I'd have to run the work over to another town and lug all the boxes of paper in my car to print and on a timed schedule. No chatting with other co-workers...not that I would do that, but since he explained all this on my interview, it made me already feel like he'd be cracking the whip and doesn't trust his employees.

I feel like I'd want to quit immediately after finding work, but since he doesn't like people taking time off...I'd probably get fired if I had to take time off to "interview". Plus, all the stress would show in my face if I had any interviews.

What would you do??

Karie of MN @ Feb 22, 2010 21:31:54 PM

I turned down job today

Although I'm unemployed, I turned down a job today for many of the reasons stated in the article. I knew I would leave the job as soon as a better opportunity came along. I also paid attention to ALL the red flags (including a VERY low balled salary offer....and this was before benefits were even mentioned or discussed. I even asked to see/discuss company benefits as they never brought it). After all the red flags added up to about 7-8 BEFORE the low salary offer, I knew I was turning it down. The low offer only solidified my decision. I'm okay financially for at least 13 months. I'd rather work in a positive environment and a GOOD fitting work situation (at least for me), rather than job hop. That indeed would not be fair to me or the employer.

Anon of FL @ Jan 22, 2010 17:35:38 PM

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