Why People Really Quit Their Jobs
There's a familiar rhythm to starting a new job. Weeks of interviews, careful vetting on both sides, and finally — an offer. You accept with a sense of hope. You meet your manager, your colleagues, and for a while, everything feels promising.
Then the honeymoon ends.
Your manager does something — or conspicuously fails to do something — that makes you quietly wonder: Is this really the place I signed up for? Doubt creeps in. Trust erodes. And eventually, you realize you're working for someone who simply doesn't know how to lead people.
The rest of that story is yours to finish. But for many, it ends the same way: they quit.
The research has been saying this for decades
Former Gallup CEO Jim Clifton put it plainly: the single biggest decision a company makes isn't strategy or product — it's who they name manager. Name the wrong person, and nothing fixes it. Not compensation, not perks, not a ping-pong table in the break room.
The reasons employees leave tend to cluster around the same themes: feeling like the company values profits over people, disliking their direct supervisor, seeing no path for growth, feeling their skills are wasted, and believing top talent isn't hired or kept. What ties all of these together? Managers have direct influence over every single one.
Four words explain it all
People are not valued.
When employees aren't respected as professionals — or as human beings — disengagement can begin within weeks. When obstacles aren't cleared, voices aren't heard, and individual growth isn't supported, something quietly shuts off. Employees check out mentally and emotionally long before they update their résumés.
And once they're gone from the neck up, you've already lost them. The formal resignation is just paperwork.
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