Counteroffers are common, and complicated. While you’ll often read that people who accept them leave within a year, the reality is more nuanced. Many lawyers use a resignation to prompt a conversation about pay, conditions, workload or progression they didn’t feel comfortable raising earlier.
The key is clarity. Make a deliberate decision that aligns with your goals, not a reactive one.
1) Pause First: Why Were You Looking?
Before you assess the counteroffer, revisit your original “why.”
Ask yourself:
- Work-life balance: Has workload or flexibility been a pain point?
- Progression and recognition: Do you feel valued and set up to grow?
- Culture and leadership: Are these energising you or draining you?
- Remuneration: Was pay the only driver, or just the easiest to talk about?
If these issues existed before, a pay rise alone won’t fix them.
2) The Money Mirage
A bigger salary is attractive but look beyond the headline number.
Consider:
- Scope creep: Will higher pay bring unsustainable expectations?
- Trade-offs: Could the increase be offset by reduced bonuses or benefits later?
- Root cause: Does the raise address the real reason you considered leaving?
3) Promises vs Proof
Counteroffers often arrive with praise, promises and plans.
Test them:
- Specifics: What, precisely, will change, and by when?
- Measurables: What outcomes will show the change is real?
- Documentation: Will they put it in writing with review checkpoints?
If it isn’t specific and time-bound, it’s a sentiment, not a solution.
4) The Trust Factor
Once you announce you’re leaving, perceptions shift.
Potential implications:
- Heightened scrutiny: Pressure to “prove” loyalty and performance.
- Succession planning: Quiet contingency plans may already be in motion.
- Leverage lost: Future negotiations can feel different after a resignation.
5) Reputation & Relationships
Law is a small world. How you handle a counteroffer matters.
Think about:
- Market signals: Will accepting send mixed messages to your network?
- Recruiter rapport: Repeatedly accepting counters can erode trust.
- Brand equity: Professional, timely communication preserves relationships.
6) A Simple Decision Framework
Use this quick triage before deciding:
- Purpose: Will staying move you closer to your 12–24 month goals?
- Proof: Are the changes concrete, documented and time-bound?
- Energy: Will this choice increase your day-to-day energy and satisfaction?
If you can’t say “yes” to at least two, think carefully before staying.
7) If You Decide to Stay: Do It Well
- Get it in writing: role scope, reporting lines, pay, benefits, KPIs, timelines.
- Set checkpoints: 30/60/90-day reviews to track progress.
- Align expectations: Clarify workload, resourcing and promotion criteria.
- Protect future options: Keep networks warm and your CV current.
8) If You Decide to Go: Exit with Class
- Be clear and courteous: Thank them, confirm your decision and timeline.
- Control the narrative: Agree a professional internal and client comms plan.
- Hand over cleanly: Leave strong documentation and close files properly.
9)For Hiring Managers & Firms
If you’re making counteroffers:
- Diagnose first: Understand the real reasons behind the resignation.
- Act substantively: Address scope, support, flexibility and development, not just pay.
- Move fast and formally: Put clear changes and timelines in writing.
- Retain with intent: Follow through at 30/60/90 days to rebuild trust.
How Elias Recruitment Helps – Confidentially
For candidates: Market intel, salary benchmarks, and a clear view of your options so you can decide with confidence—now or later.
For clients: Honest diagnostics, retention advice, and access to pre-screened talent when a genuine move is the right outcome.
Ready to talk it through—without pressure? Elias Recruitment offers confidential guidance to help you choose the path that serves your long-term success.