Boomerang job offers bring workers back for less money

Boomerang job offers bring workers back for less money

Boomerang job offers bring workers back for less money

After 15 years helping his company generate hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue, Jay — not his real name — left his job as a copywriter for a private tech firm in 2023. But a year later, his old department head called.

“She seemed a little sheepish at first, but finally admitted that things weren’t going great,” Jay said. She was hoping he would return in some way that worked for him, and made it clear she’d already okayed the move with the company’s finance department.

They settled on a month-long project, and the company asked for his rate. “I’m terrible at asking for money or knowing my value,” Jay said, so he settled on a simple method. “I thought it most logical to add up my former salary plus benefits, etc., divide that by 12, and make that the number I gave back to them.”

Days of radio silence followed. At last, a curt email arrived. “We don’t have the budget for that,” it read. “But maybe if things change down the road, we can reconnect.” No counteroffer. No negotiation.

Still, it wasn’t the last Jay heard from his old employer. Eighteen months later, another former colleague reached out, saying the business was still struggling. Would Jay come back in a training capacity, working with junior staff to improve their performance? They could offer one-third of what he used to make, paid hourly, with no benefits.

This time, Jay countered with a higher rate, yet one still below his old salary. Then that offer evaporated, too.

Stories like Jay’s are surfacing across industries. Creative professionals including writers, designers, PR staff, and marketing executives — even some public-sector staff — describe a pattern of former employers reaching out with familiar work, only at sharply reduced rates. HR workers on Reddit say they’re seeing the same thing. Call them “boomerang offers.”

Amanda Augustine, a certified career coach and resident expert at TopResume , says she’s seeing an increase in these offers, calling them “a sign of the times” and part of a larger “white-collar recession.” She notes that employers sometimes use the rise of generative AI as a license to squeeze creative roles, assuming the tools can handle the rote tasks, and that a current or former employee can be rehired just to do the “really creative part.”

In all, today’s version looks different from those that emerged in the Great Resignation era, she said. Until recently, employers often tried to coax former colleagues back with more advantageous, flexible terms. Nowadays, many offers include downgraded titles, few or no benefits, and half the money.