The advice sounds disloyal, maybe even cynical, until you look at the data on what actually grows a career. Workers who change jobs every two to three years out-earn lifers by margins that compound brutally over a thirty-year working life. Staying put is not safety. It is a slow-motion pay cut.
Being “always looking” does not mean perpetually unhappy. It means treating your professional life like the open market it actually is.
Internal raises do not match external offers
Most companies budget annual raises in the three to four percent range, with bumps for promotions occasionally pushing into the high single digits. Compare that to the typical pay increase from a job switch, which has hovered between ten and twenty percent for years and spiked higher during tight labor markets.
The reason is structural. Companies set internal salary bands and adjust them slowly. External hires negotiate against market rates, which move faster. A loyal employee who stays five years often earns less than a peer hired last quarter into the same role, a phenomenon HR departments quietly call salary compression. Asking for a correction rarely works because the budget for retention raises is smaller than the budget for new hires. The market pays you what the market pays. Your tenure does not change that math.
Optionality is its own form of security
Knowing you have options changes how you behave at work. You take smarter risks, decline unreasonable demands, and negotiate from a stronger position because the worst-case scenario, leaving, is something you have already mentally rehearsed. This is not bluffing. It is having a real plan B that happens to make plan A more bearable.
The corollary is that employees with no outside options tend to absorb scope creep, accept lowball raises, and stay through layoffs that should have been a signal to leave. Active job-market awareness, even passive browsing of listings every quarter, reveals what your skills are actually worth and which adjacent roles are growing. That information is valuable even when you decide to stay.
Networks decay without maintenance
Most jobs, especially the good ones, come through people who already know your work. Networks are not built when you need them. They are built in the months and years when nothing is wrong, through coffees, conference chats, and helping former colleagues without expecting anything back. Letting that infrastructure rust until layoff day is the most common professional mistake.
Always-looking does not require constant interviewing. It requires keeping your resume current, maintaining a presence on the platforms recruiters use, and saying yes to occasional conversations even when you are not actively hunting. When the moment comes, whether by choice or surprise, you will not be starting from zero.
Bottom line
Loyalty as a career strategy assumed an employer-employee bargain that no longer exists. Companies optimize ruthlessly. Workers should too. Staying open to opportunity is not betrayal, it is symmetry. The people who do this consistently earn more, recover faster from setbacks, and end up with better stories. Keep your eyes up.
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