Training and Qualifications

Should You Move Jobs for Better Training?

Should You Move Jobs for Better Training?

This article is part of the Training and Qualifications guide.

Moving for better training is less discussed than moving for better pay โ€” but for candidates at the right career stage, it can be the more valuable decision. Here is how to evaluate it.

When moving for training makes clear sense

  • Your current employer has repeatedly promised training and repeatedly failed to deliver it
  • There is a specific qualification you need to progress and your employer will not fund it
  • A new employer offers funded training that would increase your market value significantly
  • The qualification available at the new employer would unlock a role type or salary band that is currently inaccessible to you
  • You are at an early to mid career stage where the compounding value of the qualification is highest

When the calculation is less clear

  • You are close to completing a qualification through your current employer
  • The new employer’s training commitment is vague ("great development opportunities") rather than specific
  • The role change involves other trade-offs that reduce the net benefit
  • You are late in your career where the benefit period for a new qualification is shorter

How to evaluate a training offer properly

Ask for specifics: which qualifications, what timeline, who pays, what study time is provided, and what happens to your training commitment if your line manager changes or the company is restructured.

A commitment that survives these questions is a real training offer. One that collapses under scrutiny is a recruitment pitch.

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