What Would Make a Job Move Worth It?
This article is part of the Your Next-Move Profile guide.
Changing jobs is disruptive. There is a period of adjustment, a loss of accumulated knowledge about your workplace, uncertainty about whether the new employer will deliver on what was promised, and the social cost of leaving a team you know.
For a move to be worth it, the new role needs to offer something meaningfully better — not just marginally better — on the dimensions that matter most to you.
The disruption threshold
Before you start evaluating opportunities, work out your disruption threshold: how much better does a new role need to be before the disruption is worth it?
For someone who is unhappy in their current role, the threshold is lower — almost any improvement is worth the disruption. For someone who is comfortable but open to the right opportunity, the threshold is higher — the new role needs to be clearly and substantially better across multiple dimensions.
Building your "worth it" criteria
Your "worth it" criteria are the combination of improvements that would make a move genuinely compelling. These typically involve several factors together rather than one in isolation:
- Better pay and better hours
- Clearer progression and a more stable employer
- Less travel and better culture
A new role that delivers on one priority but compromises another may not clear the threshold. A role that delivers on two or three simultaneously almost certainly does.
Optio’s wish list tool is designed to help you capture these combined criteria — so matching reflects what you actually need, not just what you would ideally prefer in isolation.