8 Signs It's Time to Look for a New Job
Can't find your desk? Look for the door.
December 19, 2007 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - Short of being handed your walking papers, there are often telltale signs that it's time to look for a new job. You haven't been promoted since the Clinton administration. The most exciting assignments are routinely handed to your peers or underlings. Your desk keeps moving farther and farther from where the action is.
But some indicators are less obvious, such as subtle shifts in an IT organization's structure that can result in career stagnation. A variety of career experts, headhunters, recruiters, CIOs and IT staffers shared their takes on when it's time to move on.
1. Your role has become marginalized.
If you're being bypassed for promotions or interesting assignments, or they're consistently being offered instead to IT workers in subordinate positions, "that would be an obvious sign," says Robert Rosen, CIO at the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases in Bethesda, Md., and a past president of Share, an IBM user group in Chicago.
- Google's Next Moves
- 8 Sizzling Technologies
- 8 Hottest IT Skills
- 8 Ways to Boost Your Career
- Personal Tech 2008
- 8 Juicy Predictions
- 8 Hot-Button Issues to Watch
2. You've stopped growing.
"If you're not learning every day, if you're not doing new things, and if you're not improving" it's time to move on, says Sara Garrison, senior vice president of product and solutions development at Sabre Holdings Corp. in Southlake, Texas.
Red lights should be flashing if you've effectively been in the same role for two or three years and haven't taken on any significant new challenges during that time, says Umesh Ramakrishnan, vice chairman of CTPartners, an executive recruiting firm in New York.
3. You're missing from the big picture.
Most CIOs assemble a road map of where they intend to take their organizations over the next 12 to 60 months, including the top IT/business projects they plan to work on, notes Joe Trentacosta, CIO at the Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative Inc. in Hughesville, Md. So, if there are a lot of upcoming projects that don't include your area of expertise or in which you figure to play a minor role at best, "that's a warning sign," he says.
Further, if you've been relegated to a commodity-type IT function that offers little value to the organization or can easily be outsourced, "it's time to move on to a new opportunity," says Hans Keller, chief technology officer at the National Aquarium in Baltimore.
4. You're being excluded.
If you're a CIO or other senior IT manager, the warning signs can include not being asked to participate in new business decisions or being excluded from formal or informal executive committee meetings, says Craig Urrizola, CIO at Saladino's Inc., a Fresno, Calif.-based food distributor.
The view is equally bleak if you're an IT staffer whose input on new projects is no longer requested or is sought out on just a limited basis.
careers
Additional Resources



White Papers & Webcasts
Chiquita selects Workday's fresh approach to Human Capital Management
A fresh approach to meet IT and HR objectives.
Usability Is Everything
Download this short video! Provided by Workday.
Supporting Employees Anytime, Anywhere
Download this White Paper Now!
The Value of Real SaaS at Workday
Download this short video! Provided by Workday
Natural User Interface for Enterprise Applications
Download this Complimentary White Paper! Provided by Workday.
SaaS at Flextronics, Inc.
Download this short Video! Provided by Workday.
A Truly Global HCM System
Download this Complimentary White Paper! Provided by Workday.
Data in Action: Making the Planet Smarter
Register Now
Craft a Strategy to Lower Your Total Cost of Ownership
Download this Complimentary White Paper! Provided by Workday.

