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Antiwork

Toxic Exit Interview Experience

I am not in the Americas or Europe. I am from a small South Asian country (IYKYK), but that is not immediately relevant to this story. This experience is from 2008, when I was 27 years old. (42M now). This is a bit of a long story, so if you want to read the part about the exit interview itself, I have made the heading for that Bold At age 26, I joined one of the largest Software development companies in my country as an Associate Software Engineer (Entry level job, because the company in which I previously worked closed down without warning. I was happy to get the job for not much of a pay rise, and they provided training for a couple of months, so I thought I would fit in. How wrong I was. The place was a cesspool of toxic behaviour and it was all about…


I am not in the Americas or Europe. I am from a small South Asian country (IYKYK), but that is not immediately relevant to this story. This experience is from 2008, when I was 27 years old. (42M now).

This is a bit of a long story, so if you want to read the part about the exit interview itself, I have made the heading for that Bold

At age 26, I joined one of the largest Software development companies in my country as an Associate Software Engineer (Entry level job, because the company in which I previously worked closed down without warning. I was happy to get the job for not much of a pay rise, and they provided training for a couple of months, so I thought I would fit in.

How wrong I was.

The place was a cesspool of toxic behaviour and it was all about who you know rather than how hard you work. I was assigned to a project and there was no real introduction to the project or any guidance other than for the immediate work at hand. At least 2 people I know had died of exhaustion and stress-related conditions there.

This is when I discovered that I was better at documentation than software engineering, and an opportunity arose at a smaller company as a member of a team of Technical Writers (For anyone curious, a Technical Writer basically writes manuals, help, and other documentation for software and hardware). I applied for that job and was given an offer that was much better than the current position (pay was about 16% higher, and the place seemed better to work in. Also, the location was so close to my house that I could walk to office).

I handed in my resignation and my notice period was 1 month, from what I remember. I had said my goodbyes to everyone I was friendly with.

The Exit interview Directly from The Bad Place

The HR team at this company was well known to be full of what I call Jackals – Sly people who do the bidding of corporate just so that they can be seen favourably. My exit interview was with one such person. The questions/statements were as follows:

Note that I was young and wasn't prepared not to answer questions like this, and the answers are not all in chronological order. It happened 16 years ago.

  1. What job are you switching to? I said Technical Writer.
  2. Why are you switching to Technical Writing? It's a girls' job. I did not call out his blatant sexism (I would have if I were older). I said that it's what I want to do and I already have said yes to the offer.
  3. Why are you leaving (company name)? We have a Technical Writing team here. I said I have a better offer.
  4. We can give you the same salary. I said it's not just about the salary. I didn't enjoy working there.
  5. In the form (There was a form to be filled before the exit interview) you have stated that you won't recommend (company name) as a good workplace to anyone. Can we get you to change your response? I stood up for myself and said no, I don't want to recommend it to anyone. I said I will start telling everyone of how toxic the work environment is over there.
  6. The guy got defensive and said It can't have been that bad. I have been here for x years and I have always been treated well etc. I said that's his experience, not mine.
  7. You can always rescind the job offer and continue to work here. We will match the salary (this was repeated several times). I said I don't want to go back on the offer that a better company has made and that I won't continue to work there even if they doubled the offer.
  8. The guy seemed to get mad at me and said Why are you so bitter? Did you have some bad experience? I said yes. That's the whole point I am leaving. This entire job is a bad experience.

Sorry about the long post, but I thought this kind of experience should be shared.

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