'I let money get in the way': Most recent job quitters have regrets or don't plan to stay in new role

Quitting isn't all it's cracked up to be.

Most of the millions of Americans who quit jobs during the Great Resignation regret the move, don't like their new position enough to stay or are searching for a new gig, according to a Harris Poll survey for USA TODAY March 18-20.

Many workers acted hastily amid a pandemic that fostered severe worker shortages, a seismic shift to remote work and widespread burnout, employment experts say.

"People will make very fast moves," says Kathryn Minshew, CEO of The Muse, an online job board and advice company that specializes in helping candidates find the best cultural fit. Then they wonder, "Did I just make a mistake?"

About 1 in 5 workers who quit during the past two years regret it, and a similar share are remorseful about starting their new job, according to Harris Poll’s nationwide survey of about 2,000 adults.

Sara Norton-Sanner of Albuquerque, New Mexico, loved her communications job at a local animal shelter. But in November, when a friend told her of an opening for a similar position at a nonprofit education group, she eagerly applied. It offered a much higher salary at a national organization with an opportunity to rise to director.

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The pandemic, including the skyrocketing inflation that strained her budget, provided a nudge. Norton-Sanner, hadn’t gotten a raise in her three years at the animal shelter.

"It made me consider – Is this what I want to do long term?" she says. "The pandemic just kind of pushed me over the edge to take a risk."

Sara Norton-Sanner, with Ari and Maggie.
Sara Norton-Sanner, with Ari and Maggie.

She accepted an offer after two Zoom interviews, just three weeks after applying. But, she says, the job didn't come close to fulfilling her hopes. Instead of writing an annual report and other publications, as she was promised, she was firing off social media posts.

Norton-Sanner says she also endured a barrage of criticism without any guidance on how to meet her manager’s expectations. And although she was told it was a 9-to-5 job, she had to take calls, or work, late at night and on weekends and Christmas Eve.

"I wish I had taken more time to research" the position and company. Norton-Sanner says. Amid the labor shortage, the nonprofit had been looking to fill the vacancy for months, and the hiring process "was a little fast."

It didn't help that she was working remotely because of COVID-19.