HR advised colleague not to notify department he is leaving
up vote
10
down vote
favorite
An engineering colleague of mine has been planning on leaving for the last several months and is leaving in about a months time. Over this period, the engineering department has not been aware of this as HR advised him not to notify engineering.
We are both graduate engineers but he has been there a few months longer than I have. I am aware of this as the colleague told me privately several months ago.
Training for tools we use are expensive, and engineering has not had the funds to send some of us on training, and this colleague was one selected to be funded for training as engineering planned to put him on the next major project.
As this colleague is supposed to be on the next major project (which he will leave before it starts), he annoyingly got me booted of going on a trip as it was deemed 'it would be more valuable to the company if he went'.
Finally, I managed to wrangle myself a decent work area in the company, and now they are saying they are upgrading him in the next couple weeks by swapping our workstations because he will be on a major project.
As you can see, someone who is leaving without notifying engineering has taken a training place (costing several thousand), got me booted from a valuable trip and now is trying to take my work area - and I have been keeping my silence for this guy while simultaneously getting burned for it.
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
colleagues leaving
|
show 4 more comments
up vote
10
down vote
favorite
An engineering colleague of mine has been planning on leaving for the last several months and is leaving in about a months time. Over this period, the engineering department has not been aware of this as HR advised him not to notify engineering.
We are both graduate engineers but he has been there a few months longer than I have. I am aware of this as the colleague told me privately several months ago.
Training for tools we use are expensive, and engineering has not had the funds to send some of us on training, and this colleague was one selected to be funded for training as engineering planned to put him on the next major project.
As this colleague is supposed to be on the next major project (which he will leave before it starts), he annoyingly got me booted of going on a trip as it was deemed 'it would be more valuable to the company if he went'.
Finally, I managed to wrangle myself a decent work area in the company, and now they are saying they are upgrading him in the next couple weeks by swapping our workstations because he will be on a major project.
As you can see, someone who is leaving without notifying engineering has taken a training place (costing several thousand), got me booted from a valuable trip and now is trying to take my work area - and I have been keeping my silence for this guy while simultaneously getting burned for it.
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
colleagues leaving
5
Have you checked whether your colleague still intends to leave?
– Patricia Shanahan
5 hours ago
5
Why in the world they would tell your colleague not to give notice? Are they axing the department?
– Victor S
5 hours ago
4
He was told not to tell anyone, he told you privately, and now you want to squeal on him? Presumably your manager already knows, so it would be silly to tell him.
– Joe Strazzere
5 hours ago
Thanks for all the feedback. I will stay silent. Yes, I never intended to say anything, as I have for months - just querying due to its negative impact on me.
– sidA30
4 hours ago
3
Has HR known for 7 months? What is the standard notice period at your company?
– sf02
4 hours ago
|
show 4 more comments
up vote
10
down vote
favorite
up vote
10
down vote
favorite
An engineering colleague of mine has been planning on leaving for the last several months and is leaving in about a months time. Over this period, the engineering department has not been aware of this as HR advised him not to notify engineering.
We are both graduate engineers but he has been there a few months longer than I have. I am aware of this as the colleague told me privately several months ago.
Training for tools we use are expensive, and engineering has not had the funds to send some of us on training, and this colleague was one selected to be funded for training as engineering planned to put him on the next major project.
As this colleague is supposed to be on the next major project (which he will leave before it starts), he annoyingly got me booted of going on a trip as it was deemed 'it would be more valuable to the company if he went'.
Finally, I managed to wrangle myself a decent work area in the company, and now they are saying they are upgrading him in the next couple weeks by swapping our workstations because he will be on a major project.
As you can see, someone who is leaving without notifying engineering has taken a training place (costing several thousand), got me booted from a valuable trip and now is trying to take my work area - and I have been keeping my silence for this guy while simultaneously getting burned for it.
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
colleagues leaving
An engineering colleague of mine has been planning on leaving for the last several months and is leaving in about a months time. Over this period, the engineering department has not been aware of this as HR advised him not to notify engineering.
We are both graduate engineers but he has been there a few months longer than I have. I am aware of this as the colleague told me privately several months ago.
Training for tools we use are expensive, and engineering has not had the funds to send some of us on training, and this colleague was one selected to be funded for training as engineering planned to put him on the next major project.
As this colleague is supposed to be on the next major project (which he will leave before it starts), he annoyingly got me booted of going on a trip as it was deemed 'it would be more valuable to the company if he went'.
Finally, I managed to wrangle myself a decent work area in the company, and now they are saying they are upgrading him in the next couple weeks by swapping our workstations because he will be on a major project.
As you can see, someone who is leaving without notifying engineering has taken a training place (costing several thousand), got me booted from a valuable trip and now is trying to take my work area - and I have been keeping my silence for this guy while simultaneously getting burned for it.
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
colleagues leaving
colleagues leaving
edited 5 hours ago
DarkCygnus
32.9k1463143
32.9k1463143
asked 5 hours ago
sidA30
1676
1676
5
Have you checked whether your colleague still intends to leave?
– Patricia Shanahan
5 hours ago
5
Why in the world they would tell your colleague not to give notice? Are they axing the department?
– Victor S
5 hours ago
4
He was told not to tell anyone, he told you privately, and now you want to squeal on him? Presumably your manager already knows, so it would be silly to tell him.
– Joe Strazzere
5 hours ago
Thanks for all the feedback. I will stay silent. Yes, I never intended to say anything, as I have for months - just querying due to its negative impact on me.
– sidA30
4 hours ago
3
Has HR known for 7 months? What is the standard notice period at your company?
– sf02
4 hours ago
|
show 4 more comments
5
Have you checked whether your colleague still intends to leave?
– Patricia Shanahan
5 hours ago
5
Why in the world they would tell your colleague not to give notice? Are they axing the department?
– Victor S
5 hours ago
4
He was told not to tell anyone, he told you privately, and now you want to squeal on him? Presumably your manager already knows, so it would be silly to tell him.
– Joe Strazzere
5 hours ago
Thanks for all the feedback. I will stay silent. Yes, I never intended to say anything, as I have for months - just querying due to its negative impact on me.
– sidA30
4 hours ago
3
Has HR known for 7 months? What is the standard notice period at your company?
– sf02
4 hours ago
5
5
Have you checked whether your colleague still intends to leave?
– Patricia Shanahan
5 hours ago
Have you checked whether your colleague still intends to leave?
– Patricia Shanahan
5 hours ago
5
5
Why in the world they would tell your colleague not to give notice? Are they axing the department?
– Victor S
5 hours ago
Why in the world they would tell your colleague not to give notice? Are they axing the department?
– Victor S
5 hours ago
4
4
He was told not to tell anyone, he told you privately, and now you want to squeal on him? Presumably your manager already knows, so it would be silly to tell him.
– Joe Strazzere
5 hours ago
He was told not to tell anyone, he told you privately, and now you want to squeal on him? Presumably your manager already knows, so it would be silly to tell him.
– Joe Strazzere
5 hours ago
Thanks for all the feedback. I will stay silent. Yes, I never intended to say anything, as I have for months - just querying due to its negative impact on me.
– sidA30
4 hours ago
Thanks for all the feedback. I will stay silent. Yes, I never intended to say anything, as I have for months - just querying due to its negative impact on me.
– sidA30
4 hours ago
3
3
Has HR known for 7 months? What is the standard notice period at your company?
– sf02
4 hours ago
Has HR known for 7 months? What is the standard notice period at your company?
– sf02
4 hours ago
|
show 4 more comments
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
up vote
20
down vote
Have you considered that he is getting all these goodies as a way to try to convince him to stay? From people who know very well he intends to leave? Sharing information you were told in confidence is never going to look good on you.
If your own HR department knows of his plans and has not told any of the people who make decisions, then your company is very unusual. Chances are, the decision makers have been quietly told, but the rest of engineering has not. This allows for a handover process that is controlled by the decision makers, and not by individuals thinking "I'm not going to any trouble for that coworker, who is leaving, it's not worth it."
If you tell a manager or other decision maker who already knows, you'll look like someone who can't keep a confidence and wants to meddle or challenge decisions. If you tell someone who doesn't know, you may find some of their anger over it lands on you. Either way, it is unlikely to help you.
In a very small company, quietly going to someone who needs to know something and telling them may be helpful (though not always in a way you expect.) But in a place large enough to have HR, it probably won't. I would advise you to stay in your lane and work well, so that when they are wondering who can take the place of this departing engineer - who should be on the big project, who should get the good work area, who should get the training - you naturally come to mind. You have information others don't: you can get value from a spurt of hard work until this person leaves.
4
Good answer. It would be exceedingly unlikely that HR would know, and not bother to tell the manager. Squealing to the manager would be unwise.
– Joe Strazzere
4 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
13
down vote
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
Well, with all due respect, I think you should mind your own business. This thing is something between this colleague and HR... it would be wise to stay out of matters that do not involve you.
If HR suggested this to your colleague then there should be a reason why, but again, is not something you should be interfering with.
By revealing such thing you would not only be meddling with other's affairs (and perhaps affect your colleague negatively), but could also backfire on you.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Until your coworker gives his official notice, then he is not officially leaving. Lots of things can change over the course of months. Your coworker could stay on for years, especially if he is now getting a big project. Trying to rat him out, could easily backfire, and all he has to do is deny having any plans to leave.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I think it's important to keep the promise to your colleague to not reveal something they told you in confidence. But given that your relationship is strong enough to where your colleague is willing to confide you, I recommend talking to him directly about what's going. Going to the manager about this will paint you as a rat to your whole company and hurt your working relationship with your colleague. No good can come of this.
I similarly had a colleague confide in me that he had plans of leaving and was waiting for a final job offer to come through (He already gave a verbal commitment). When my colleague committed to projects I knew he wouldn't be around for, I didn't say anything publicly, but I chatted with him one-on-one about it. My colleague told me until the final job offer comes through, he needed to make sure management didn't get the idea he was going to leave. Hence, he committed to projects in the future. I agreed with him that's absolutely the right call.
add a comment |
up vote
-4
down vote
IMHO, in case you notify your manager, it may seem as jealousy.
That being said, i don`t see any issue you dropping that in unofficial conversation, in case you communicate off work.
Being a bit intoxicated can give you reasonable doubt of your intentions ;)
add a comment |
StackExchange.ready(function () {
$("#show-editor-button input, #show-editor-button button").click(function () {
var showEditor = function() {
$("#show-editor-button").hide();
$("#post-form").removeClass("dno");
StackExchange.editor.finallyInit();
};
var useFancy = $(this).data('confirm-use-fancy');
if(useFancy == 'True') {
var popupTitle = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-title');
var popupBody = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-body');
var popupAccept = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-accept-button');
$(this).loadPopup({
url: '/post/self-answer-popup',
loaded: function(popup) {
var pTitle = $(popup).find('h2');
var pBody = $(popup).find('.popup-body');
var pSubmit = $(popup).find('.popup-submit');
pTitle.text(popupTitle);
pBody.html(popupBody);
pSubmit.val(popupAccept).click(showEditor);
}
})
} else{
var confirmText = $(this).data('confirm-text');
if (confirmText ? confirm(confirmText) : true) {
showEditor();
}
}
});
});
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
20
down vote
Have you considered that he is getting all these goodies as a way to try to convince him to stay? From people who know very well he intends to leave? Sharing information you were told in confidence is never going to look good on you.
If your own HR department knows of his plans and has not told any of the people who make decisions, then your company is very unusual. Chances are, the decision makers have been quietly told, but the rest of engineering has not. This allows for a handover process that is controlled by the decision makers, and not by individuals thinking "I'm not going to any trouble for that coworker, who is leaving, it's not worth it."
If you tell a manager or other decision maker who already knows, you'll look like someone who can't keep a confidence and wants to meddle or challenge decisions. If you tell someone who doesn't know, you may find some of their anger over it lands on you. Either way, it is unlikely to help you.
In a very small company, quietly going to someone who needs to know something and telling them may be helpful (though not always in a way you expect.) But in a place large enough to have HR, it probably won't. I would advise you to stay in your lane and work well, so that when they are wondering who can take the place of this departing engineer - who should be on the big project, who should get the good work area, who should get the training - you naturally come to mind. You have information others don't: you can get value from a spurt of hard work until this person leaves.
4
Good answer. It would be exceedingly unlikely that HR would know, and not bother to tell the manager. Squealing to the manager would be unwise.
– Joe Strazzere
4 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
20
down vote
Have you considered that he is getting all these goodies as a way to try to convince him to stay? From people who know very well he intends to leave? Sharing information you were told in confidence is never going to look good on you.
If your own HR department knows of his plans and has not told any of the people who make decisions, then your company is very unusual. Chances are, the decision makers have been quietly told, but the rest of engineering has not. This allows for a handover process that is controlled by the decision makers, and not by individuals thinking "I'm not going to any trouble for that coworker, who is leaving, it's not worth it."
If you tell a manager or other decision maker who already knows, you'll look like someone who can't keep a confidence and wants to meddle or challenge decisions. If you tell someone who doesn't know, you may find some of their anger over it lands on you. Either way, it is unlikely to help you.
In a very small company, quietly going to someone who needs to know something and telling them may be helpful (though not always in a way you expect.) But in a place large enough to have HR, it probably won't. I would advise you to stay in your lane and work well, so that when they are wondering who can take the place of this departing engineer - who should be on the big project, who should get the good work area, who should get the training - you naturally come to mind. You have information others don't: you can get value from a spurt of hard work until this person leaves.
4
Good answer. It would be exceedingly unlikely that HR would know, and not bother to tell the manager. Squealing to the manager would be unwise.
– Joe Strazzere
4 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
20
down vote
up vote
20
down vote
Have you considered that he is getting all these goodies as a way to try to convince him to stay? From people who know very well he intends to leave? Sharing information you were told in confidence is never going to look good on you.
If your own HR department knows of his plans and has not told any of the people who make decisions, then your company is very unusual. Chances are, the decision makers have been quietly told, but the rest of engineering has not. This allows for a handover process that is controlled by the decision makers, and not by individuals thinking "I'm not going to any trouble for that coworker, who is leaving, it's not worth it."
If you tell a manager or other decision maker who already knows, you'll look like someone who can't keep a confidence and wants to meddle or challenge decisions. If you tell someone who doesn't know, you may find some of their anger over it lands on you. Either way, it is unlikely to help you.
In a very small company, quietly going to someone who needs to know something and telling them may be helpful (though not always in a way you expect.) But in a place large enough to have HR, it probably won't. I would advise you to stay in your lane and work well, so that when they are wondering who can take the place of this departing engineer - who should be on the big project, who should get the good work area, who should get the training - you naturally come to mind. You have information others don't: you can get value from a spurt of hard work until this person leaves.
Have you considered that he is getting all these goodies as a way to try to convince him to stay? From people who know very well he intends to leave? Sharing information you were told in confidence is never going to look good on you.
If your own HR department knows of his plans and has not told any of the people who make decisions, then your company is very unusual. Chances are, the decision makers have been quietly told, but the rest of engineering has not. This allows for a handover process that is controlled by the decision makers, and not by individuals thinking "I'm not going to any trouble for that coworker, who is leaving, it's not worth it."
If you tell a manager or other decision maker who already knows, you'll look like someone who can't keep a confidence and wants to meddle or challenge decisions. If you tell someone who doesn't know, you may find some of their anger over it lands on you. Either way, it is unlikely to help you.
In a very small company, quietly going to someone who needs to know something and telling them may be helpful (though not always in a way you expect.) But in a place large enough to have HR, it probably won't. I would advise you to stay in your lane and work well, so that when they are wondering who can take the place of this departing engineer - who should be on the big project, who should get the good work area, who should get the training - you naturally come to mind. You have information others don't: you can get value from a spurt of hard work until this person leaves.
answered 4 hours ago
Kate Gregory
107k40234338
107k40234338
4
Good answer. It would be exceedingly unlikely that HR would know, and not bother to tell the manager. Squealing to the manager would be unwise.
– Joe Strazzere
4 hours ago
add a comment |
4
Good answer. It would be exceedingly unlikely that HR would know, and not bother to tell the manager. Squealing to the manager would be unwise.
– Joe Strazzere
4 hours ago
4
4
Good answer. It would be exceedingly unlikely that HR would know, and not bother to tell the manager. Squealing to the manager would be unwise.
– Joe Strazzere
4 hours ago
Good answer. It would be exceedingly unlikely that HR would know, and not bother to tell the manager. Squealing to the manager would be unwise.
– Joe Strazzere
4 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
13
down vote
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
Well, with all due respect, I think you should mind your own business. This thing is something between this colleague and HR... it would be wise to stay out of matters that do not involve you.
If HR suggested this to your colleague then there should be a reason why, but again, is not something you should be interfering with.
By revealing such thing you would not only be meddling with other's affairs (and perhaps affect your colleague negatively), but could also backfire on you.
add a comment |
up vote
13
down vote
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
Well, with all due respect, I think you should mind your own business. This thing is something between this colleague and HR... it would be wise to stay out of matters that do not involve you.
If HR suggested this to your colleague then there should be a reason why, but again, is not something you should be interfering with.
By revealing such thing you would not only be meddling with other's affairs (and perhaps affect your colleague negatively), but could also backfire on you.
add a comment |
up vote
13
down vote
up vote
13
down vote
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
Well, with all due respect, I think you should mind your own business. This thing is something between this colleague and HR... it would be wise to stay out of matters that do not involve you.
If HR suggested this to your colleague then there should be a reason why, but again, is not something you should be interfering with.
By revealing such thing you would not only be meddling with other's affairs (and perhaps affect your colleague negatively), but could also backfire on you.
Should I hold my silence, or should I notify our manager?
Well, with all due respect, I think you should mind your own business. This thing is something between this colleague and HR... it would be wise to stay out of matters that do not involve you.
If HR suggested this to your colleague then there should be a reason why, but again, is not something you should be interfering with.
By revealing such thing you would not only be meddling with other's affairs (and perhaps affect your colleague negatively), but could also backfire on you.
answered 5 hours ago
DarkCygnus
32.9k1463143
32.9k1463143
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Until your coworker gives his official notice, then he is not officially leaving. Lots of things can change over the course of months. Your coworker could stay on for years, especially if he is now getting a big project. Trying to rat him out, could easily backfire, and all he has to do is deny having any plans to leave.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Until your coworker gives his official notice, then he is not officially leaving. Lots of things can change over the course of months. Your coworker could stay on for years, especially if he is now getting a big project. Trying to rat him out, could easily backfire, and all he has to do is deny having any plans to leave.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
Until your coworker gives his official notice, then he is not officially leaving. Lots of things can change over the course of months. Your coworker could stay on for years, especially if he is now getting a big project. Trying to rat him out, could easily backfire, and all he has to do is deny having any plans to leave.
Until your coworker gives his official notice, then he is not officially leaving. Lots of things can change over the course of months. Your coworker could stay on for years, especially if he is now getting a big project. Trying to rat him out, could easily backfire, and all he has to do is deny having any plans to leave.
answered 5 hours ago
IDrinkandIKnowThings
44.1k1598189
44.1k1598189
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I think it's important to keep the promise to your colleague to not reveal something they told you in confidence. But given that your relationship is strong enough to where your colleague is willing to confide you, I recommend talking to him directly about what's going. Going to the manager about this will paint you as a rat to your whole company and hurt your working relationship with your colleague. No good can come of this.
I similarly had a colleague confide in me that he had plans of leaving and was waiting for a final job offer to come through (He already gave a verbal commitment). When my colleague committed to projects I knew he wouldn't be around for, I didn't say anything publicly, but I chatted with him one-on-one about it. My colleague told me until the final job offer comes through, he needed to make sure management didn't get the idea he was going to leave. Hence, he committed to projects in the future. I agreed with him that's absolutely the right call.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I think it's important to keep the promise to your colleague to not reveal something they told you in confidence. But given that your relationship is strong enough to where your colleague is willing to confide you, I recommend talking to him directly about what's going. Going to the manager about this will paint you as a rat to your whole company and hurt your working relationship with your colleague. No good can come of this.
I similarly had a colleague confide in me that he had plans of leaving and was waiting for a final job offer to come through (He already gave a verbal commitment). When my colleague committed to projects I knew he wouldn't be around for, I didn't say anything publicly, but I chatted with him one-on-one about it. My colleague told me until the final job offer comes through, he needed to make sure management didn't get the idea he was going to leave. Hence, he committed to projects in the future. I agreed with him that's absolutely the right call.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
I think it's important to keep the promise to your colleague to not reveal something they told you in confidence. But given that your relationship is strong enough to where your colleague is willing to confide you, I recommend talking to him directly about what's going. Going to the manager about this will paint you as a rat to your whole company and hurt your working relationship with your colleague. No good can come of this.
I similarly had a colleague confide in me that he had plans of leaving and was waiting for a final job offer to come through (He already gave a verbal commitment). When my colleague committed to projects I knew he wouldn't be around for, I didn't say anything publicly, but I chatted with him one-on-one about it. My colleague told me until the final job offer comes through, he needed to make sure management didn't get the idea he was going to leave. Hence, he committed to projects in the future. I agreed with him that's absolutely the right call.
I think it's important to keep the promise to your colleague to not reveal something they told you in confidence. But given that your relationship is strong enough to where your colleague is willing to confide you, I recommend talking to him directly about what's going. Going to the manager about this will paint you as a rat to your whole company and hurt your working relationship with your colleague. No good can come of this.
I similarly had a colleague confide in me that he had plans of leaving and was waiting for a final job offer to come through (He already gave a verbal commitment). When my colleague committed to projects I knew he wouldn't be around for, I didn't say anything publicly, but I chatted with him one-on-one about it. My colleague told me until the final job offer comes through, he needed to make sure management didn't get the idea he was going to leave. Hence, he committed to projects in the future. I agreed with him that's absolutely the right call.
answered 4 hours ago
jcmack
7,26011639
7,26011639
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
-4
down vote
IMHO, in case you notify your manager, it may seem as jealousy.
That being said, i don`t see any issue you dropping that in unofficial conversation, in case you communicate off work.
Being a bit intoxicated can give you reasonable doubt of your intentions ;)
add a comment |
up vote
-4
down vote
IMHO, in case you notify your manager, it may seem as jealousy.
That being said, i don`t see any issue you dropping that in unofficial conversation, in case you communicate off work.
Being a bit intoxicated can give you reasonable doubt of your intentions ;)
add a comment |
up vote
-4
down vote
up vote
-4
down vote
IMHO, in case you notify your manager, it may seem as jealousy.
That being said, i don`t see any issue you dropping that in unofficial conversation, in case you communicate off work.
Being a bit intoxicated can give you reasonable doubt of your intentions ;)
IMHO, in case you notify your manager, it may seem as jealousy.
That being said, i don`t see any issue you dropping that in unofficial conversation, in case you communicate off work.
Being a bit intoxicated can give you reasonable doubt of your intentions ;)
answered 5 hours ago
Strader
3,060525
3,060525
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to The Workplace Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.
Please pay close attention to the following guidance:
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f124599%2fhr-advised-colleague-not-to-notify-department-he-is-leaving%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
5
Have you checked whether your colleague still intends to leave?
– Patricia Shanahan
5 hours ago
5
Why in the world they would tell your colleague not to give notice? Are they axing the department?
– Victor S
5 hours ago
4
He was told not to tell anyone, he told you privately, and now you want to squeal on him? Presumably your manager already knows, so it would be silly to tell him.
– Joe Strazzere
5 hours ago
Thanks for all the feedback. I will stay silent. Yes, I never intended to say anything, as I have for months - just querying due to its negative impact on me.
– sidA30
4 hours ago
3
Has HR known for 7 months? What is the standard notice period at your company?
– sf02
4 hours ago