Current:Home > NewsJapanese employees can hire this company to quit for them -MarketEdge
Japanese employees can hire this company to quit for them
View
Date:2025-04-27 20:44:13
For workers who dream of quitting but dread the thought of having to confront their boss, Japanese company Exit offers a solution: It will resign on their behalf.
The six-year-old company fills a niche exclusive to Japan's unique labor market, where job-hopping is much less common than in other developed nations and overt social conflict is frowned upon.
"When you try to quit, they give you a guilt trip," Exit co-founder Toshiyuki Niino told Al Jazeera.
"It seems like if you quit or you don't complete it, it's like a sin," he told the news outlet. "It's like you made some sort of bad mistake."
Niino started the company in 2017 with his childhood friend in order to relieve people of the "soul-crushing hassle" of quitting, he told the The Japan Times.
Exit's resignation services costs about $144 (20,000 yen) today, down from about $450 (50,000 yen) five years ago, according to media reports.
Exit did not immediately respond to a request for comment from CBS MoneyWatch.
- With #Quittok, Gen Zers are "loud quitting" their jobs
- Job-hopping doesn't pay what it used to
As for how the service works, the procedure, outlined in a Financial Times article, is simple. On a designated day, Exit will call a worker's boss to say that the employee is handing in their two weeks' notice and will no longer be taking phone calls or emails. Most Japanese workers have enough paid leave saved up to cover the two-week period, the FT said, although some take the time off unpaid to prepare for new work.
The company seems to have struck a chord with some discontented employees in Japan. Some 10,000 workers, mostly male, inquire about Exit's services every year, Niino told Al Jazeera, although not everyone ultimately signs up. The service has spawned several competitors, the FT and NPR reported.
Companies aren't thrilled
Japan is famous for its grueling work culture, even creating a word — "karoshi" — for death from overwork. Until fairly recently, it was common for Japanese workers to spend their entire career at a single company. Some unhappy employees contacted Exit because the idea of quitting made them so stressed they even considered suicide, according to the FT.
Perhaps not surprisingly, employers aren't thrilled with the service.
One manager on the receiving end of a quitting notice from Exit described his feelings to Al Jazeera as something akin to a hostage situation. The manager, Koji Takahashi, said he was so disturbed by the third-party resignation notice on behalf of a recent employee that he visited the young man's family to verify what had happened.
"I told them that I would accept the resignation as he wished, but would like him to contact me first to confirm his safety," he said.
Takahashi added that the interaction left him with a bad taste in his mouth. An employee who subcontracts the resignation process, he told the news outlet, is "an unfortunate personality who sees work as nothing more than a means to get money."
- In:
- Japan
veryGood! (122)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- 'We will never forget': South Carolina Mother, 3-year-old twin girls killed in collision
- Trump backers try again to recall Wisconsin GOP Assembly speaker as first effort stalls
- Civil rights icon Malcolm X gets a day of recognition in Nebraska, where he was born in 1925
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- I'm a Realtor. NAR settlement may not be as good for home buyers and sellers as they think.
- Women's Sweet 16: Reseeding has South Carolina still No. 1, but UConn is closing in
- ‘My dad, he needed help': Woman says her dead father deserved more from Nevada police
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Beyoncé called out country music at CMAs. With 'Act II,' she's doing it again.
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Truck driver convicted of vehicular homicide for 2022 crash that killed 5 in Colorado
- Kenan Thompson calls for 'accountability' after 'Quiet on Set' doc: 'Investigate more'
- This is how reporters documented 1,000 deaths after police force that isn’t supposed to be fatal
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- GOP-backed bill proposing harsher sentences to combat crime sent to Kentucky’s governor
- California law enforcement agencies have hindered transparency efforts in use-of-force cases
- Love Is Blind's Brittany Mills Reveals the Contestant She Dated Aside From Kenneth Gorham
Recommendation
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
How to get rid of eye bags, according to dermatologists
In 'Godzilla x Kong,' monsters team up while the giant ape gets a sidekick
Trump backers try again to recall Wisconsin GOP Assembly speaker as first effort stalls
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
How to get rid of eye bags, according to dermatologists
SportsCenter anchor John Anderson to leave ESPN this spring
US changes how it categorizes people by race and ethnicity. It’s the first revision in 27 years