it’s your Friday good news

It’s your Friday good news!

1.  “After being fired for being ‘negative’ — i.e., not afraid to speak up about injustice, inequality, and unethical behavior — while I was in the middle of interviewing, I wrote to you because I wasn’t sure how to explain it to the companies I was interviewing with. It turned out that it never came up in conversation so I didn’t mention it, but if somehow it does come back in the background check, I intend on being fully honest with what happened. They contacted all 3 of my references from the role I just got let go from who must have said nice things about me because they extended an offer right away. I was able to negotiate a little bit extra and happily accepted the new remote role with almost double my old salary plus amazing benefits like a fully covered platinum healthcare plan and double the PTO.

I will be a lot happier at this nonprofit with values that much more closely align with mine and work that I enjoy! I had my first day today with a very warm welcome and was presented with lots of organized support and resources. I am feeling very excited and motivated to work after taking the time between jobs to rest and recover from the stress of my old job. All in all, a very good outcome for what was an awful situation to be in.”

2.  “I spent the last 5 years at a job that more or less sucked the life out of me. My boss had a charismatic personality and a ‘say yes to everything’ attitude that masked their incompetence. They were disorganized, rarely followed through on what they said they would do, and provided no actual management or even regular feedback (among other things). I had aggressively mediocre coworkers spend most of their time doing professional development (that other people did not have the opportunity to do) and finding ways to supervise people who were not theirs to supervise. I took this entry-level position as an opportunity to gain experience in my field and because my boss assured me that they planned to change the position into one that required the advanced degree that I hold. That never happened. It ended up being a toxic environment with a high level of turnover (at least half the staff left during my final year there) and I regularly experienced anxiety attacks both on my way to work and while I was there. I could go on, but I’m so happy to say that I escaped!

I’m now working in a comparable organization, at a higher professional level, with a competent boss, and coworkers who actually want to be at work and who support each other. I know that I was not doing my best work at previous toxic job but I am so thankful they took a chance on me. I want to really encourage people to make contacts in their fields as much as possible because it was a word from one of my contacts, a friend of a friend, that convinced them to even interview me (my previous boss had apparently told them a lot of negative things about me). I knocked the interview out of the park and was offered the job the same day. Now my goal is to let my work speak for itself and to do the level of work I know (and have always known) myself capable of doing. Thank you Alison and everyone who comments and submits questions — I don’t think I could have done this without you!”

3.  “I spent years trying to change careers. I tailored my resume for NewTitle, wrote kickass cover letters, volunteered for a NewTitle networking group, etc. I did all the right things, but the field is competitive and my resume is littered with OldTitle roles. I simply wasn’t as compelling as the other candidates. In the meantime, I was burning myself out and miserable.

And then, of course, pandemic. My employer wouldn’t let us stop for one freaking second to take care of ourselves and our communities. I spent all of that first year either working or curled up in bed, alone, crying. Frequently both at once. I did not make progress in my job search.

My mental health hit a crisis point, and both my physical health and work performance were significantly suffering. I resigned without anything else lined up. I took on odd jobs and lived off of my down payment fund, and asked my network to send freelance work my way. My symptoms drastically improved, and freelance is rad! But I was still struggling and couldn’t focus on business development the way I needed to.

A friend sent me a job posting for OldTitle and I was pretty unenthused at the prospect. But the salary was good and money was running out, so I tossed “Freelance NewTitle” onto my resume and submitted it with a shrug.

Turns out, after posting the opening, they decided they needed a NewTitle instead. And my resume was such a weird mashup of OldTitle headings and NewTitle accomplishments that it piqued the hiring manager’s curiosity. It was a total and absolute fluke.

And this job is so good for me. I’m doing better than I have been for years, including pre-pandemic. The salary increase is significant. The office culture is a good match for my weirdo brain. There are also problems, and I doubt this is my forever-employer. But I am doing exactly the work I want to be doing. NewTitle is finally, officially, my title.

So for others who are reading these and thinking ‘must be nice. I’m going to rot away here forever,’ please consider what ALL of your options are. They may be less traditional or obvious to you. They are unlikely to be great in this capitalist hellscape. But options do exist, and there’s power in knowing that you are making the choice to stay, if that is indeed a choice you continue to make.”

{ 12 comments… read them below }

  1. London Lass*

    I love #3! I also have a weird and specific mix of interests and skills, which not every employer appreciates – but when you find the right match, it can be fantastic. I bet they feel very lucky to have found you as well.

  2. I Herd the Cats*

    Also thumbs up on #3. I have a weird mashup of titles and I tailor my resume for positions I’m applying to. I’ll add — go on and apply! Don’t talk yourself out of it by thinking, well, I don’t have 100% of what they’re looking for so they won’t hire me because there will be other, better candidates. Apply and if they don’t call you, you’re no worse off — but they might decide what you have on offer is what they need and something they hadn’t thought about until they saw you.

  3. The Lexus Lawyer*

    Tough to relate to OP #3 without any idea if or how new or old titles were related.

    Congrats though

    1. LW #3*

      I guess I erred on the side of being too vague, but I was a marketing generalist who now does the copywriting for a brand whose work I greatly admire, and who wants to take risks that let me be my most creative self. In my old job I rarely got to put out work I was proud of. Now just a few months in, I have several work samples that far exceed my previous portfolio.

        1. LW #3*

          Thank you! I’m so grateful to have this opportunity. If it didn’t come through I would have been okay by combining freelance with something else, slowly building up a client base. Not doing as well as I am now, but I’d be okay.

          The game changer was giving myself permission to walk away from the stable job, because that job was slowly killing me.

      1. LW #3*

        Also I recognize the amazing privilege in having savings to bridge the gap between my odd-job income and my living expenses. Not everyone gets to have that. But when it starts affecting your health the way my old job was, it is an urgent call to take some control of the situation, however you can swing it.

        In terms of how to extrapolate it to general advice: Mostly it was my cynicism keeping me stuck. I didn’t play the numbers game I needed to be. Because I wasn’t getting bites on the applications I was sending out, I didn’t believe I was ever going to be a compelling candidate. And most of the time, that was true. I wasn’t cutting through the noise of other writers.

        And let’s be real: it was total luck that I got hired the way I did. If my employer had posted the copywriter role to begin with instead of the marketing manager role the did, my resume would not have made it through the initial HR screen.

        But I would never have bothered applying to that job if I was still struggling at my former employer. I wouldn’t have the mental energy to send off the application to begin with.

  4. Maglev to Crazytown*

    Way to go, OP #1!!! I can totally relate to your situation. I was fired for the first time in a 20 years career for reporting harassment. I was terrified I would never find a job ever again, and felt horrified for interviews. Until I realized no one actually cares anymore and being fired once isn’t a permanent black mark or red flag anymore. Most people have known someone fired either for reorganizations, or for not being what the person in charge wanted once they came onboard, or things like “negativity” such as speaking out on wrongful behavior they witnessed.

    It also ended up being a plus for me, as I got out on a hostile work environment, into an absolute dream role (employer and position much sought after, benefits phenomenal). And it helped me to close a career door and open a new one in terms of switching primary career focus.

    Wishing you, and anyone going through a similar challenge, all the best in the New Year ahead!!!

  5. GingerApple*

    Ugh so much… yes! Letter 2… if you say yes… to every one… you say. no. To every one. It means nothing… so glad you got out of there… love… shoot for the stars… and live your best life!!!

  6. cncx*

    Oh OP2! Im so happy for you! I’m coming out of a similar situation and my goal is the same- to let my work speak for myself moving forward.

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