Japanese Job Quitting Service Contacted by Other Job-Quitting Service

This story is hilarious. But before I share it, I should back up and explain a few things.

In Japan, it is really hard to quit your job. In America the standard amount of time needed to give before one's final day when they want to quit is two weeks. Many jobs do ask for up to a month, but some jobs also don't even require the two weeks. It of course does depend on your level in the company. Someone at the executive level usually needs to give at least a few months notice, as they are more difficult to replace, while people at the bottom can often leave as they choose. I remember when I worked at a supermarket part-time; when I was ready to quit after graduating university, I told them I wanted to quit and they told me to pick a day between that day and the next month. Given the chance, I picked the next day.

In Japan it's a bit different. Most businesses are perpetually under-staffed. Add to that that in Japan people are expected to help out at the entire business, not only their job. This leads to a culture where any one leaving makes everyone else's' job much harder as they have to take on more work until someone else is hired, which might be a long time. This is incidentally why it is incredibly hard to take personal days off work in Japan and on average few people use their personal days, because the peer pressure not to take them and make other people work harder is so high that it leads many people to just never take a day off.

Anyway, so quitting a job is hard. The boss might up and refuse to allow someone to quit, or they will say to ask them again in a few months, or they won't say yes or no but will just try to avoid answering. Meanwhile, as soon as other people in the office hear that someone is trying to quit, they might start bullying that person.

It might sound nightmarish—and it is.

Due to this, within the past few years there has arisen a type of business that specializes in quitting your job for you. That may sound tremendously silly, and in America or many Western countries it might be. One can imagine Monty Python doing a skit about it. But given what I just wrote above about world culture here, you might see how beneficial a business like this could be for people.

These companies handle it all. They will break the news to your boss that you want to quit, then they will handle everything else necessary to that quitting. All in all, silly as they might sound, I think this type of business is wonderful and very helpful to many people who are otherwise trapped in jobs that won't allow them to leave.

That out of the way, I thought this story was funny.

Basically, one job-quitting company was contacted by another job-quitting company about an employee who wanted to quit. Let that sink in a minute and then laugh about how absolutely ridiculous it is. The lesson is, of course, that this bad job culture is so pervasive in Japan that even in companies set up to side-step it, it exists.

Anyway, read the story here.

Hi there! David LaSpina is an American photographer and translator lost in Japan, trying to capture the beauty of this country one photo at a time and searching for the perfect haiku. He blogs here and at laspina.org. Write him on Twitter or Mastodon.


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15 comments
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Haha, that is pretty funny. I wonder if they were leaving to go to the other job quitting service or something else!

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haha that would add yet another absurd wrinkle to the story!

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Ahahahaha that's next level akwardly fun! I would never imagine that could exist, companies that try to quit your job for you! :))) Cheers! !BBH

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I saw this service in youtube and about how hard it is to quit jobs in Japan. The story is very funny though.

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(Edited)

That truly is interesting.

I never entertained the thought that a company could say no or "wait" when you put in your notice. You can see Americans smirk and walk on out, even if they were normally very professional otherwise. That is pretty terrible too that you would be bullied by our coworkers. Crazy !

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Unfortunately that doesn't really work here. Companies always call pretty much all of a person's former jobs when hiring them, and one bad thing means they lose the job. It's a pretty strict culture here. Americans do try do just up and quit like they do in the States, but, well... most Americans are limited to deadend jobs in this country for a reason. It's both interesting and frustrating, all the more so because you can't really fight the system. The bullying thing is the worst part. Because of all this, absurd stories like the one above aside, I think these job-quitting companies are a wonderful service for Japan.

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I have left the company several times and it was quite difficult. Sometimes I was finally able to quit after recruiting, interviewing, and hiring a replacement😂
If this service had been available at the time, I might have used it. I know there are pros and cons, but I think the existence of such a service is reassuring for those who want to quit their companies.

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I completely agree with you. I'm glad companies like this have started. My wife has also had a lot of trouble quitting previous jobs, so I know how hard it is.

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