Leaving a Job
Career Advancement
Changing Contracts
Workplace Transitions
Modern Employment Trends
100

To formally state that you are leaving your job, usually by writing an official letter to your manager.

Resign

100

Being moved to a higher job position or rank within the same company, usually with more money and responsibility.

Promotion

100

 A permanent job contract where an employee works the standard number of hours every week (usually 40 hours).

Full-time job

100

The process of searching for, finding, and hiring the right person to fill a vacant job position.

Recruitment

100

A labor market characterized by the prevalence of short-term contracts or freelance work, rather than permanent jobs.

Gig economy

200

To stop working completely because you have reached an older age (usually 60-65) and will now receive a pension.

Retire

200

An increase in the amount of money you earn for doing your job.

Pay rise

200

A contract where an employee works fewer hours per week than a full-time worker (e.g., 15-20 hours).

Part-time job

200

Training given to a brand-new employee during their first few weeks to introduce them to the company culture and tasks.  

Onboarding

200

A person who sells their services, skills, or writing to different employers per project, without being committed to just one.

Freelancer

300

When a company ends an employee's contract because there is no longer enough work or money to keep them.

Redundancy

300

Moving from one job to another identical rank position within the same company, but perhaps in a different department.

Lateral move

300

An arrangement where two part-time employees share the duties, hours, and pay of one single full-time position.

Job sharing

300

A specific testing period (usually 3 to 6 months) for a new employee to see if they are suitable before a permanent contract is signed.

Probation period

300

When companies outsource or move jobs to external agencies to reduce operational staff numbers.

Subcontracting

400

To dismiss an employee from their job immediately because they broke rules, behaved badly, or performed poorly.

Fire

400

The process of learning new, advanced skills to help you do your current job better or qualify for a promotion.

Upskilling

400

A contract that lasts for a specific, limited period of time, such as six months or until a project finishes.

Fixed-term contract

400

Financial money or benefits given to an employee as a package when their job is cut through redundancy.

Severance pay

400

A computer process where human workers are replaced by machines, robots, or artificial intelligence software.

Automation

500

The rate at which employees leave a company and are replaced by new workers over a year.

Labor turnover

500

A temporary period of absence from your standard job, granted for study, travel, or research, with a guarantee of returning.

Sabbatical

500

A type of employment contract where the employer is not frozen into offering any guaranteed hours of work.

Zero-hours contract

500

Re-assigning an employee to a lower rank, position, or salary level, often due to restructuring or poor performance.

Demotion

500

The psychological or physical exhaustion caused by prolonged stress or overworking in a changing job environment.

Burnout