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Why rage quitting is more than bad for morale, and how to mitigate angry staff walkouts.

rage quitting BLOG

When the going gets tough, the tough get going.

For business leaders in 2023, it’s vital to remember that if you’re facing staff walkouts it’s already too late to put in place toxic workplace mitigation strategies – that HR ship has sailed.

The magic behind effective staff retention lies in knowing the signs that your workforce is slipping into dysfunction, and making efforts to mitigate any disenfranchisement way ahead of the tipping point from working productively – and happily – to rage quitting, rage applying and rage walkouts.

What is rage quitting? 

As per BetterUp:

 “Rage quitting is exactly what the name implies: becoming so angry or frustrated that you abandon a situation entirely, leaving before resolution.

In the workplace, this usually involves quitting your job at the last minute without giving the customary two weeks’ notice. But it can also manifest through smaller outbursts, such as storming out of a meeting due to frustration or walking away from a conversation with a condescending colleague”.

So, in theory to Rage Quit is to finally let out what was once held in – a building up of frustrations, anger and stress, that then leads to a rapid exit 

Rage quitting, and rage applying, in the post-COVID era. 

To say that rage quitting has gone through something of a renaissance would be trivialising how effective it’s been for employees looking for a better workplace deal in the post-COVID world. 

Rage quitting is, in effect, leverage, and has been repackaged as “rage applying” where workers, sick to death of poor conditions or a slow-moving and ineffective management system know full well they aren’t going to really quit, but make a show of quitting to leverage better conditions, pay or benefits by applying to new jobs on a whim. 

If they don’t get those concessions from their current employer, they have a new job waiting, often with better pay, benefits, perks and conditions.

This has been a remarkably effective employee strategy, especially in niche industries where specific talent is in high demand. Indeed, this has in some cases helped “Gen Z and millennials land $30,000 raises”.

So what can you do to stave off rage quitting?

Utilise empathy, honesty, and communicativeness.

Tech to the semi-rescue. 

Wellness and mental health prioritisation.

A quick, responsive process is what you need to attract and engage the best talent.

At Rectec we help organisations to find the best Applicant Tracking System or best Recruitment CRM to suit your needs, accompanied by our unique complementary technology marketplace, to help you build the perfect recruitment tech stack for your business.

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