Accepting a new offer is the fun part. How you leave your current job is the part people remember. Industries are smaller than they look, references get called years later, and a manager you part with on good terms can become a customer, a referral, or a future boss. Resigning well is not about being nice. It is about protecting your own interests.
Tell your manager first, in person
Your direct manager should hear it from you before anyone else, and ideally face to face or on a call, not in a forwarded email. Nothing sours a departure faster than a boss learning you are leaving from a colleague or a calendar invite titled 'exit interview'. Keep the conversation short and forward-looking: you have accepted a new role, your last day is X, and you want to make the handover smooth.
Give proper notice and mean it
Two weeks is the common minimum in many markets, but check your contract, as notice periods vary widely by country and seniority. Whatever you commit to, honour it. Offering a clean notice period and then mentally checking out on day one undoes the goodwill. If you can flex a few extra days to finish something critical, that is the kind of thing references remember.
Write a short, neutral resignation letter
Keep the written letter boring on purpose. State that you are resigning, give your last working day, and thank them. That is it. The letter becomes part of your file, so it is not the place for grievances or a detailed account of why you are leaving.
- State the role you are resigning from and your final date
- Offer to help with the transition
- Thank them in one genuine line
- Resist the urge to explain everything
Make the handover easy
The single most generous thing you can do is leave your work in a state someone else can pick up. Document your active projects, where things live, and who to contact for what. A tidy handover doc is what turns 'they left us in a mess' into 'we were sorry to see them go'.
The reference you get is shaped less by your best month and more by your last two weeks. People remember how you ended.
Stay graceful, even if you are leaving for cause
Maybe you are leaving because the job was bad. The exit interview is tempting, but a measured tone serves you better than a parting broadside. Give constructive, specific feedback if asked, skip the personal attacks, and do not vent to the wider team on your way out. You can be honest without being scorched-earth.
Keep the door open
Connect with the colleagues worth keeping before your access is cut. A short, warm message to your manager and close teammates keeps the relationship alive past your last day. Those are the people who will vouch for you, and the ones a tool like Postulit cannot replace, because your network is built one good exit at a time.
Resigning gracefully costs you a little patience now and pays off for years. Leave the way you would want someone to leave you.