I got a reply from a recruiter to setup a call later this week. I know one of the inevitable questions will be why am I looking to leave my current role.

Personally I want to leave because:

  • I have a junior role in the company and I don’t see a way of reaching a mid level here.
  • The targets for promotion are constantly moving. The managers have changed a few times over the past 4 years and so have the appraisal systems.
  • I haven’t been given any real projects since the last manager has started. Mainly whack-a-mole type security tasks. This is especially frustrating as I have worked on larger projects before then.
  • lots of senior engineers have joined, introduced a new product/application, and then left.
  • which leads to lots of firefighting and understanding how things were implemented due to the seniors poor documentation.
  • so I’m learning nothing on the job and I’m not working on anything special to talk about.

So would something like ‘looking for new opportunities’ be sufficient?

Ps. If you got this far, thanks for reading my rant. It has been locked away in my head for some time now.

  • thisisnotgoingwell@programming.dev
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    1 year ago

    Totally agree. It’s important to remember that good recruiters sell good stories, not resumes. You want your recruiter to say “wow, this kid is ambitious and well spoken. Sounds like he’s a prime candidate for this role.”

    That helps the hiring company too. It signals that they can get tenure from this potential hire and that they’ll be eager to start contributing ASAP. I’ll take an ambitious, eager professional over a grumpy, grizzled veteran any day.