50 Workers Share The Moment They Realized Their Office Was A Toxic Nightmare
Interview With ExpertGoing to work can be a joyride for some: full of purpose, passion, and coffee breaks with colleagues. For others, it’s more about survival because bills won’t pay themselves (unless you’ve won the lottery or were born into a billionaire clan). But regardless of why you clock in every day, we all agree there are limits.
Sure, we can all put up with a little chaos, a noisy coworker, an occasional bad coffee machine day, or even the Monday blues. But then there are the hard no’s: things that make you question why you’re still sticking around. In today’s roundup, people open up about those very moments when they realized their job simply wasn’t worth it anymore.
These aren’t just dramatic walkouts or headline-worthy incidents. They’re real, relatable stories about what happens when a job slowly chips away at your well-being. From overbearing managers and shady company practices to constant exhaustion and feeling completely overlooked, these red flags were the final straw. If you've ever felt that uneasy twinge that something isn't quite right at work, these stories might just help you connect the dots.This post may include affiliate links.
My dad once told me, “Never work for someone who cheats on his wife. If he’s willing to do that to the one relationship that should be the most important and sacred in his life, what is he going to do to you?”
Thirty years in business. I found out, Dad was right.
“We don’t do sick days here. I come in sick and so can everyone else”. That’s not a FLEX. It can be quite dangerous. Thanks though.
When the thought of going into work on Monday spoils your mood on a Sunday.
Or when you get up on a Monday morning and spend the first 20 minutes staring at the walls trying to psyche yourself up for the day.
People often choose to leave their jobs when the environment turns toxic. Some of the most common reasons include poor leadership, micromanagement, disrespectful managers, and an overall unhealthy workplace culture.
Add in a lack of boundaries, constant favoritism, and unclear expectations and it's no surprise employees start looking for the exit. When people feel undervalued or unheard, even a decent salary can’t keep them around. Eventually, the emotional toll outweighs the paycheck, and walking away becomes the healthiest option.
Monitoring/micromanaging bathroom breaks. I was written up once for a 6 minute bathroom break and I was incredibly sick that whole week. And the restrooms were located in another department.
Call centres are notorious for this. Absolutely inhumane. I've been written up and even had to explain why I took 10 minutes during a bout of indigestion in front of others. That's the last time I work in at a job like that. My current job, as long as it's not a continuous habit, except if it's a medical issue that's been discreetly discussed with the manager, we're not monitored. If anything, I've been asked if I'm okay.
Agreed. I worked at a call center and even though we were given a 30 min break it was frowned upon. You'd get points taken away for using your break at all. Nightmare. I ended up quitting.
Load More Replies...How about the ones who try to tell you that you can only go to the bathroom at such-and-such time? Like I can schedule when I have to p**s, s**t, or puke, and do it within the same exact ten minutes—-which never allows for travel time to the bathrooms that always seem to be at the far end of the building—-during my work week. No one’s metabolism is that exact every day, ffs.
Just for a nice little contrast, I was once working at a client in the Netherlands and picked up a nasty stomach bug/food poisoning. I was horribly sick that morning, but as I was only there for a couple of days, I dragged myself into work. I took several unscheduled bathroom breaks to go and throw up. After about the third one, they decided I was better off not working that day. One of the people I was working with drove me back to my hotel in my hire car and then WALKED back to the office, in sub-zero temperatures!
Just sh*t or vom*t on managers table or in his office, to make sure he / she gets the message.
Paychecks delayed.
Poor guidance followed by punishing you for not meeting goals that were never made clear in the first place.
No support. Treated with impunity if you need support.
While employers can often contribute to a toxic environment that pushes people to leave, there are also times when they must make the difficult decision to let someone go. It’s not always about better opportunities or personal growth, sometimes, it’s about maintaining standards.
To understand the deeper reasons behind employee terminations, we spoke with Naresh Sharma, founder of OnePoint, a logistics company connecting cities across India. Backed by over 30 years of experience, Sharma runs a massive fleet with a mission to deliver reliability and cost-efficiency. “People leave when they believe their career or future will flourish elsewhere,” he says.
High turnover. When the majority of employees quit in a year or less, there’s a reason why. Usually it is terrible management.
We are family here!
Yes, toxic, crazy family that normal people would go NC with.
*Puke* I once worked at a job that did this motivational, pump up excitement exercise meeting every morning. The boss said I wasn't "enthusiastic enough". I endured only a week of that s**t. I also got sick of their false rhetoric thinking that people who sleep during the day don't work, as their meetings were held outside and people around close by complained.
Paying min wage even though they want a college diploma.
“When it’s mutual, it’s the best-case scenario,” Sharma shares. “We want people to grow. If we feel there’s not much room left for them here, and they can flourish somewhere else, we encourage that. But we also ensure that if someone shows potential, we promote them internally.”
His company strives to keep the door open to ambition and progress, but also keeps an eye on alignment. “Not everyone fits in the long run, and that’s okay. But when it comes to letting someone go, it’s never a hasty decision, it’s always evaluated carefully,” he adds.
Two that come to mind from previous work environments that I ignored for way too long:
—People gossiping about others coworkers or former coworkers behind their backs excessively. I worked one place where some of my colleagues would not stop harping about a dude who’d worked there years ago (like he left 2 years before I even started.) Move on, for Christ sake.
—Favoritism from the boss. When he/she is chummy and friendly with his/her favorites/friends on the team, but kinda chilly with you. Nope.
I think this happens in most workplaces which is why I keep to myself. I couldn't care less if they're gossiping about me. I go to work to earn a wage to support my family p, not to make friends.
I just started a new job a month ago, so I can def chime in….My new boss works 7 days a week and expects her direct reports to do the same. Holding 4 hour long meetings on Sunday. Randomly calling you via google chat.
Yikes. Absolutely no meeting ever should last 4 hours. Even working group sessions should not be 4 hours unless well advertised and highly structured with definitive sub-goals. Your boss is entirely ineffective at being a boss - which is likely why she’s working every day.
Coworkers trying to take credit for your accomplishments. Had one of those that always tried to pass off my work as their own (luckily boss knew she was pathological liar).
I've learned to never pipe up without witnesses and the boss present, and making notes of the ideas with dates.
Sometimes, though, an employer is left with no other choice. According to Sharma, the top reason for termination is consistently poor performance. “We give chances, we give feedback, and we invest time in training. But if someone continues to underperform, we have to consider what’s best for the team and the company,” he explains.
In an industry like logistics, every role counts. Delays, mismanagement, or repeated mistakes can disrupt the entire chain. “We can’t carry dead weight, not when timing and reliability are everything,” he says.
Micromanagement
Immature management
Promises.
Poor communication or none at all. Then blowing up if you didn’t read their mind and instead interpreted their vague instructions the wrong way—-meaning any way you would’ve interpreted them would be wrong. Like they’re setting you up to fail. I have worked at places where I got little to no training or help, or even attention, even though I was more than capable of doing the work, while someone else—-usually someone well connected or better looking, and often definitely not capable of doing the work—-was led by the hand and given all the help and attention possible, sometimes way more than even they were comfortable receiving. They don’t want smart, they want dumb, malleable, and eye candy.
If they are not understanding about things that happen in your personal life, like a sick child or parent, school closures, your own illness, etc, and you don't just miss a ton of work without good reason, then it's time to move on.
I'm not having a workplace make me feel guilty for being a decent father or son.
I understand that there are people who miss a lot of work and then have something major happen. That's a different situation, you shouldn't just miss days constantly because you may HAVE to miss work for something. I have worked jobs where I've never missed a day, though, and then been made to feel like i shouldn't have taken time off to be with my sick family. You can kiss my a*s at that point. That time I earned exists for this reason. You're letting me use it.
I've noticed it's a catch 22: either being a good parent, or be a good employee.
Multiple rounds of layoffs. I should be taking my own advice.
I once worked for a national company who, when they were taken over, turned redundancy into an annual event. They always had money to employ hundreds of managers, and rebrand the company with glossy new logos, expensive vehicles and fancy uniforms, but no money for the regular employees who kept the wheels turning. I was put into consultation on three separate occasions before I finally got the chop. Prior to the company being taken over it was unheard of for anyone to be made redundant. Back then they valued their employees.
Policy violations also land high on the list of reasons for dismissal. Sharma is clear: “We have strict rules, especially because of the nature of our business. If someone compromises safety, compliance, or ethics, we can’t ignore it.” From mishandling goods to risky shortcuts, he says even a small error can snowball into major consequences. “It’s not about being rigid, it’s about being responsible. There’s too much at stake to let things slide,” he states firmly.
Someone eats your lunch.
If it's a recurring thing, prepare or bring an extra meal once or twice a week. Add some Carolina Reaper sauce to the extra and leave in the fridge while keeping your meal in a small lunchbox/cooler at your desk. You'll soon find the culprit.
Nobody in the company has gotten a raise in 10 years because the owner says "we are doing bad" yet somehow can still hire more people.
Or just using the excuse that the minimum wage is increasing too rapidly, but they're still keeping staff and hiring.
Too many temps means the company doesn’t value it’s workers enough to create full time positions.
Paying temps barely above minimum wage. Promising direct hire after 90 days. Delaying that for an extra 60 days. 300 + calls waiting, for months. This was at the height of their expansion. Yes, you AOL.
Insubordination is another area Sharma doesn’t take lightly. “Harmony matters here. With so many moving parts, we need everyone on the same page,” he explains. Drivers, managers, and logistics staff all rely on one another. “But when someone flat-out refuses to follow instructions or cooperate, it creates unnecessary disruption. And that puts pressure on everyone else.” It’s not just about hierarchy, he adds, it’s about mutual respect and function.
Zero training materials with nitwits as trainers.
Or just zero training and the managers expecting you to already know everything and then treating you like an i******e when you don't.
When the assistant manager tells you that a dude touches all the female employees so don’t feel special when it happens to you.
If they are using your coworkers as spies to report on you, it’s time to leave.
I had one horrible boss who s**t talked the other employee to me, and s**t talked me to her. He was trying to make us hate each other. Basically, divide and conquer to keep us from getting together against him. Well, one day he was out of the office when both of us were working. We started talking, which is when we found out what he was doing. So we both started looking for other jobs, and quit the same day. We left our office keys in his mailbox and didn’t open the office that morning. Could not care less how much work he missed by noone being there to answer the phone. F**k him and his stupidly obvious divide and conquer strategy.
Other serious issues include damaging company property, misusing resources, or misconduct with colleagues. “One driver once used our truck to move his personal belongings,” Sharma recounts. “That might sound harmless to some, but it’s a serious breach of trust.” He emphasizes that such actions can have ripple effects: on the team, on clients, and on the company’s reputation. “We’re entrusted with people’s goods and deadlines. Any misuse reflects poorly on all of us.”
“We are family”
I find this generally means they think they are more important than your family.
I don't even know what you'd call this other than outright toxic. I had a boss who just NEEDED a man. Like incredibly smart woman, but all she could think about was landing a husband. She was seeing a guy, he broke up with her via text during working hours, she left work, drove an hour plus to his house and broke into his apartment to confront him. All while facetiming us. That was just one instance of her going crazy. If a single woman applied to our department forget it, that's competition for the men and she's not getting hired. She was a terrifying woman.
The job I had after that: I got food poisoning. Never had food poisoning in my life. I thought I was dying and was on the verge of going to the ER. When I went back to work after calling out SHE CALLED ME OUT IN FRONT OF THE ENTIRE TEAM for calling off sick. I had never called out before and it turned out it wasn't food poisoning; my direct supervisor had the stomach flu and gotten me sick. I was already thinking of looking for a new job at that point, but getting yelled at for using my own sick time had me sending the resumes like my life depended on it.
How people respond when someone can’t work due to an emergency.
Heard my *new coworkers get off the phone and nobody not one had a normal, decent thing to say.
“so and so called and said they got in a car accident” “Uuggh!” “Like.. that’s wierd” “So ur in a car accident and you call here?” She can’t get a ride?”
…. I am staring at these girls like huh? Anybody even ask if she’s okay??? wtf is wrong with ppl smh.
I don’t like or trust all my coworkers in life, sure, but… I’m gonna ask if they are okay, Im gonna be concerned a little.
Misbehavior within the team, whether verbal or physical, is also not tolerated. “We’re a unit. People need to feel safe and respected at work,” Sharma insists. “We’ve had to step in and take action when tempers flared or someone crossed a line.” His company has clear conduct guidelines and encourages reporting, but says the real key is building a culture of accountability. “We treat everyone with dignity—but we expect the same in return.”
Falsifying documents or lying during official processes is perhaps the quickest way to lose trust. “Integrity is non-negotiable,” Sharma says. “Our clients trust us with sensitive timelines and valuable goods. If someone fakes a record or manipulates data, it’s a direct hit to our credibility.” While mistakes are human, intentional deceit isn’t. “It’s hard to rebuild trust once it’s broken. So we take it very seriously,” he adds.
There are a lot of signs, but some general ones: more of the work goes out to vendors rather than staying in-house, your company doesn't backfill managerial positions, they start to change the review process, the company "culture" shifts i.e you could have sworn it felt a lot friendlier, but a lot of the people that made it that way are gone.
My last job, a co-worker (web developer) lied to our boss about my work (SQL DBA). Nothing said at the time to me. 6 months later, it showed up in my review. Not only that, but the same co-worker wrote sloppy code that allowed a hacker to get in and flood us with email spam and delete some data. She got praised for blocking the spam, but nobody thanked me for identifying the actual data hack, finding her bad code, or checking the logs of what they did.
I got a pay cut. I think they were looking for excuses to save $. Started job hunt immediately. I have a much better job now.
The company owner didn't know about the hack until I told him during the exit interview.
So many companies are underhanded with s**t like that. When an accusation is made, management SHOULD hear both sides of it, then decide where the truth lies, instead of kneejerk believing the accuser and never asking the accused. Also, once they target you for whatever reason—-usually 100% UNdeserved, like their sycophants think you’re too much competition for them, even though you’re just doing your job and not competing with them—-and start stuffing your personnel file with false negative stuff, then going against their own handbooks by skipping verbal warnings and going right to written ones, because the “warnings” are all false and they know it.
"We're like a family here." Yeah nah. In my experience, that usually means problems get swept under the rug, drama, excuses for unprofessional behaviour, etc.
“I try to give everyone a fair chance,” Sharma concludes. “I want my team to succeed. But we all have to play by the same rules.” Whether the choice to leave is made by the employee or the employer, it’s never ideal to remain in a toxic space. These posts reflect just how varied the red flags can be at work. Have you encountered any of these signs? What made you realize it was time to walk away or stay and speak up?
I hate when personal boundaries are violated and personal moments of employees are discussed.
Lots of fluffy "perks" like team-building exercises, wellness initiatives, and playing games with your Myers Briggs results instead of good pay, career progression, solid benefits, and job security. Feeling good about yourself has a long pathway to follow before it even starts to pay the bills.
Consistently promising you a promotion or a raise if you do xyz/extra work and always delaying the said promotion.
Increasing your duties and departments to help, but not increase your wages.
Turnover and undervaluing their employees’ happiness. Also - if they make excuses for the turnover without being accountable. They kept telling us that turnover was natural during growth. I recently left a job that I was at for six years and it was only until I found happiness at my new company that I realize I was gaslighted and manipulated for six years.
I didn’t work at this company but during an interview with the CFO, he told me that I was too good to work there. I took that as a red flag.
This might not be too reddish flag if it's a lower position job. If it doesn't require much qualifications, a person clearly over-qualified for the position likely is going to leave soon when they get better offer somewhere whereas the lower-qualified person likely works for them longer. I've seen this few times as a barista/café worker.
Screaming at each other, sarcasm. Raising voice and then smirking. Gaslighting.
Not giving important information or being vague in a job interview.
When the entire company strategy is focused on securing the next round of funding and not on long term growth/profitability. Any company that recently did mass layoffs.
If you feel uneasy, unnecessarily stressed, or angry/upset during the interview process.
If you feel negative feelings during the interview process, it's an indicator of how you'll feel while working for the company.
...unless the stress you feel from the interview process is par for the course because of your unmedicated severe anxiety disorder. It's not the company when you have panic attacks every time you interview. (source: me, 2019)
When you take a look around your workplace, and realize that you have worked there longer than 50% of your co-workers, it's time to go...*something* is going on.
This one may be a toss up. I have a coworker or 2 that have been working there for decades. They don't want to move up in the company. Seem content being there.
When they reward your good work with more work and constantly multiply your responsibilities, but don't raise the pay. And when you complain, they say "you're supposed to do everything that's has to be done".
Nope. Want me to do more work, pay me more.
You start calling out (or wanting to) for no good reason. This isn’t really something that management or coworker are doing but this is treatment of a larger issue.
Lack of good management period: both too much and too little.
Turnover. Especially turnover of support staff and the money makers (sales). If admin is spinning through like there's a revolving door, and sales staff have unattainable goals set by management then it clearly has issues.
Sales has to be able to meet goals without a miraculous "big sale" and admin has to be paid and treated well enough that the otherwise thankless job isn't an absolute misery. Ask me how I know (and what a jerk GM can do to demoralize a staff).
HR CEO explained: He makes them money.
Short sighted morons will continue to train and lose people as if they had the shelf life of milk. New people have to be trained by other people who are then not able to do their regular duties...
And with admins - it can be one or more persons IN the department that make it unbearable for the rest - if they are allowed to run roughshod over everyone else.
I have had more than one job where I found myself thinking, after a near-miss in morning traffic, "If I were in a car accident, I bet I wouldn't have to go in today." When a car accident looks like a better option than the workplace, it's time. (For the record, I would STILL rather be in a car accident than ever work at any of those places again!).
If you feel that way about your job, you’re working for a company that would probably fire you if you ended up being out for an extended period because of something like cancer or open heart surgery or a near-fatal accident requiring months of physical therapy. Illegal, yes. But I bet they’d try.
No one is smiling.
we're supposed to sit at our desks smiling at our email like psychopaths?
When everyone is beyond just the natural annoyance of being at work, like you can tell how mentally broken down everyone is acting.
If you work in a small company and the head of it doesn't know your name or what you do. I'm not saying they need to repeat your full bio every time they see you, but darn, remember a name, there's barely 30 people in the office. Also, when management won't even give you that free company t-shirt or pizza party - all of which are stupid toxic behavior to make it seem like they care, when they don't, but still, when that fake stuff stops, you know they don't give a rat's butt about you even the smallest bit. You're a body of cells that make up the form of a human that fills a job position, you mean nothing.
If a previously happy, high-performing area has gotten new management within the last 6-12 months & is now haemorrhaging long-term staff never move to work in that team. Sure sign of a toxic boss.
When you spend your entire Sunday feeling physically ill because tomorrow is Monday.
When people cry at their desks & management doesn't care.
Ugh. Just thinking about it is taking me back to the worst boss I ever had the misfortune to work for!!
The managers hate each other.
For entry-level jobs: "We have a very hands-off supervising style, and you'll have tons of independence and opportunity to build experience."
Code for: "We're going to throw you off the deep end. Good luck figuring everything out yourself.".
I have noticed ones who say “good stress management skills” and “self-motivated” usually translates to this is a horrid job and we will do nothing to help you with your concerns but expect you to still do a great job.
Being excluded from important projects.
Others being promoted over you.
Supervisor is rude to you or ignores you.
Hiring you without interviewing you professionally.
Now this one depends. Have they been a longtime customer you have worked with at your present company? Someone who knows you and your qualifications? If so, then they’re making the judgement call that you will be an asset to their company, and may hire you without a formal interview because they don’t need one. BUT you better deserve the job and be an exceptional employee, or things can go real sour real quick—-especially if there are other employees who can’t get past their resentment of you for getting the job they wanted.
High rate of turnover
huge discrepancy in what the owner/CEO makes versus the lowest paid employee makes
doesn't list salary in job ads, recruiters won't share it right off the bat and require an interview before discussing it
any reference to "nobody wants to work anymore"
"optional" (but really mandatory) drinks after work hours
literally asking you to do anything unpaid after work hours
"work hard play hard".
I once heard a good question to ask during a job interview is “Tell me about some of your best employees and what traits made them succeed?” I use this every time now. Really gets to the root of what your future manager expects from his employees.
Low starting pay, but "with an opportunity for fast advancement". BS. Any money not secured in salary up front might as well not exist.
Won't get down and do the dirty work. Like restaurant managers who refuse to do dishes or wait tables or serve drinks. The owner of my work will get down and grab a serving tray if we're too busy. At my last job, one manager would constantly hide in the office when we got busy.
Librarian here. We were behind in getting returned materials back onto the shelves because most of our shelvers got hit by the flu that was making the rounds of the high school. Whoever could, was asked to shelve stuff as time permitted. My usually-helpful supervisor said "I didn't get my Master's degree to be a book shelver." Never looked at her the same way after that.
Poor onboarding and training, dealing with that now.
Yep. First day on the job I was handed a pile of 4-5" thick binders to read. That was it. The totality of my onboarding. I lasted 2 weeks.
Your boss sends out urgent emails on Sunday night at midnight and when she's supposed to be on vacation. She then asks you to account for every minute of your day to help you "identify inefficiencies" while also asking you to work weekends (unpaid because you are salary) when you are a single parent of a young child.
A huge green flag is being trained by the one you replace. They know what's up so if they are the one training you you'll know it's not a bad place.
Depends on why that person is leaving... retirement, promotion, ok... I was once sacked for no good reason and then expected to train my successor during the (legal) 3 months notice they wanted me to finish. Yeah right, worked the bare minimum and left once I got a job 14 days later. They could have sued me, but in practice the courts rule in favour of the employee in such cases.
Cliques. Everyone looking stressed out.
Or certain individuals getting preferential treatment, not because they’re incredible at their jobs, but because they flatter the boss. Usually those same people s**t talk that same boss when they’re not around. If only the boss knew about that. I spent years in jobs with bosses like that, who were way too susceptible to believing that obviously fake “flattery”. When my husband and I started our own company, one of the first things I decided is to not respond to anyone trying to flatter me. I don’t play favorites, and I don’t s**t talk anyone, even to my husband. I learned what NOT to do from the shittiest bosses in the world. Same goes for my husband.
Coworkers tend to be too friendly with each other outside of work. Promotes cliques and toxicity like middle school.
If youre doing a tour and an employee tells you to run or asks if youre the next sacrifice and the manager acts like theyre joking, theyre not joking.
And i also cant believe how many times i did that and my managers never said a word to me about it.
any "jokes" during the interview process. I worked at a place as a warehouse manager and in the interview they jokingly said that 90% of my work will be chasing down orders from tardy suppliers. 90% of my work WAS chasing down orders from tardy suppliers.
My first job, my boss (man in his 50s, in charge of the multiple establishments) came into work drunk every day. Punched the 19-year-old kid in the management position. Good times.
Not being able to just call off, instead you have to call your coworkers and ask if they will cover your shift or trade shifts if you're sick. I worked in inhome Healthcare for a while and I legit couldn't call off or leave early. My car got a flat one morning and I called my boss and instead of me being able to go get my car fixed he drove his a*s over to me and picked me up then took me to work and told me I wasn't allowed to call off. I got stuck working for 72 hours straight because there was a small snowstorm and the other lady that worked there refused to come to work so I legally had to stay there the entire time. If I left i would have been charged with neglect. I made minimum wage and I felt like I was being held hostage the entire time I worked for that company.
“We’re all like family here.” But do not communicate with any previous ‘family members.’.
Being expected to work beyond what your actual role requires, especially for free.
On the flip side of "high turnover"... I worked at a place where everyone except me and a few others had been working together in some form or fashion for 15+ years. Soooo much office politics and it was impossible to fit into the culture or gain respect.
When upper management is all contractors. A sign that something went horribly wrong, and no the people running the place have little or no invested interest in the long term health of the business. And no qualms about burning out the tank and file as long as they hit their project goals.
They still ask you to do some work stuff when it's obviously out of work hours.
Lack of procedures, little to no explanations of your training plan, unable to answer what success looks like at 30/60/90/180 days.
On the flip side, too much procedure. If you can't complete routine tasks without 3 signatures, one of which from a different time zone, something is wrong.
Basically a good work place has enough structure for the workers to understand what they're doing and enough checks and balances that no one person can screw up a project royally, but not so much that it's inefficient or frustrating.
Making you take time out from your actual work to fill out a form or make a list of what you did during every hour or half hour you were there—-often with certain types of mostly b******t tasks required in that time period being included. Sometimes these forms or emails take five, ten, fifteen minutes to compose, so every hour you’re only getting 45-55 minutes to do your actual work—-and that’s not including the extra time for your supervisor to call you and go over what you just sent them. So that 45-55 minutes could turn out to be as little as 30 minutes that hour to do your actual job, because of all that unnecessary c**p. FFS, just give me my pile of work for the day, then leave me the f**k ALONE to do it. Believe me, at the end of the day, that pile of work will be done—-completely, neatly, and correctly—-and ready to be handed back to you or whoever is supposed to get it next. Interrupt me too many times for managerial horseshit, and it won’t get done at all. Your choice.
These red flags all showed when I was committed:
- My predecessor cried a little during an outside meal he treated me to at the end of training.
- A colleague was a walking radio show of grudges, gossip, and opinions, with no visible mouth filter, yet had been there over a decade.
- Workloads were undefined, seemingly expanding after any demonstration of competence, and senior people minimized concerns I brought directly.
- Talking > doing? I had 3 unnecessary meetings on my plate the moment I started, polling 6 rambling opinions for tasks that only 2 of us had to execute on. Meetings always went long.
I should have left before the pandemic hit, but am I a smart woman? Apparently, no.
Interview red flags:
- Interview runs over time. If they can’t manage their time, they’ll flambé yours.
- An interviewer has not prepped by familiarizing with submitted material the org asked for— from work samples to resumé and cover letter. My direct report knew my material during the interviews, but my predecessor indicated in his interview having not read a submitted sample. I should have known his plate was full and cracking from this alone.
- Excellent pay for the role, but limited/missing benefits. Any place that does this is not on the level.
I think if they can't tell you the basic work responsibilities of the job, it's a huge red flag. It means they are a dumpster fire with no direction, and depending on your prior experience, they may be expecting you and only you to figure it all out.
When some people get away with flouting rules, and everyone knows it.
Honestly everyone having too much fun. Fun turns unprofessional quickly and unprofessional turns toxic even faster.
If the work gets done, there's no such thing. Unless they expect you to use your own time
Interesting that no one mentioned intentional understaffing. (with the codicil that if you're not overstaffed, you are not fully staffed.)
Speaking of toxic, they've changed something in BP that makes it hostile to my Firefox setup where the page loads normally and then the styling gets thrown away and a big box about report-error.com pops up instead. I'm using my phone right now, but that's annoying and awkward, and I'm not prepared to let who knows what third party rubbish load up on my PC, so... I guess this means I'll be stepping back a bit. They really shouldn't be so dåmned agressive with pushing adverts alongside stuff lifted from Reddit, you know...
You walk in on your first day and everybody is angry and tired. They wish you the customary "Good Luck", but it's insincere, as the veterans don't expect you to last a month.
Managers or supervisors who don't learn the basics about the people who are working under them. I was once working part time, 9.30am to 2.00pm. I would get in at about 9.20am and get on with my work straight away. One morning the manager, who had been at the company for about 3 months, said he wanted to see me in his office. I went up and asked what was wrong. He said, "You get in here at twenty past nine every day and you don’t even say sorry." I said, "Why would I? I don’t start work until half past nine." He looked at me and I said, "Would you like to see a copy of my contract?" He was like, "Oh no, you're alright. I was just checking ha ha ha." I said, "That's the first time I've ever had a rollicking for being early!"
I hate brown nosers; The employees who suck up to the management in order to get preferential treatment or promotions that they are neither deserving or capable of. Always be careful what you say and do around these people.
Always be careful what you do and say around any employees. They aren't your friends and most of them will happily stab you in the back if it gets them ahead.
Load More Replies...The best bosses I've had are those who understood and remembered what it was like not to be a boss. The worst were the ones who assumed everyone thought and felt the same about the company as they did - or thought they should feel the same. I've had some who felt that the best way to impress their bosses was to belittle their staff. I've had cowards who would take the side of their fellow directors rather than their staff, even though the staff were 100% right.
Interesting that no one mentioned intentional understaffing. (with the codicil that if you're not overstaffed, you are not fully staffed.)
Speaking of toxic, they've changed something in BP that makes it hostile to my Firefox setup where the page loads normally and then the styling gets thrown away and a big box about report-error.com pops up instead. I'm using my phone right now, but that's annoying and awkward, and I'm not prepared to let who knows what third party rubbish load up on my PC, so... I guess this means I'll be stepping back a bit. They really shouldn't be so dåmned agressive with pushing adverts alongside stuff lifted from Reddit, you know...
You walk in on your first day and everybody is angry and tired. They wish you the customary "Good Luck", but it's insincere, as the veterans don't expect you to last a month.
Managers or supervisors who don't learn the basics about the people who are working under them. I was once working part time, 9.30am to 2.00pm. I would get in at about 9.20am and get on with my work straight away. One morning the manager, who had been at the company for about 3 months, said he wanted to see me in his office. I went up and asked what was wrong. He said, "You get in here at twenty past nine every day and you don’t even say sorry." I said, "Why would I? I don’t start work until half past nine." He looked at me and I said, "Would you like to see a copy of my contract?" He was like, "Oh no, you're alright. I was just checking ha ha ha." I said, "That's the first time I've ever had a rollicking for being early!"
I hate brown nosers; The employees who suck up to the management in order to get preferential treatment or promotions that they are neither deserving or capable of. Always be careful what you say and do around these people.
Always be careful what you do and say around any employees. They aren't your friends and most of them will happily stab you in the back if it gets them ahead.
Load More Replies...The best bosses I've had are those who understood and remembered what it was like not to be a boss. The worst were the ones who assumed everyone thought and felt the same about the company as they did - or thought they should feel the same. I've had some who felt that the best way to impress their bosses was to belittle their staff. I've had cowards who would take the side of their fellow directors rather than their staff, even though the staff were 100% right.
