Simple, you fixed the issues and were too expensive to keep on. They didn't tell you, but they hired you for this and that was it. It's super shitty of them and that fucking sucks.
Antiwork/Work Reform
A community for those who want to end work, are curious about ending work, want to get the most out of a work-free life, want more information on anti-work ideas and want personal help with their own jobs/work-related struggles.
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Subscribers: 2.9k
Date Created: June 15, 2023
Date Updated: July 17, 2023
Library copied from reddit:
The Anti-Work Library 📚
Essential Reads
Start here! These are probably the most talked-about essays on the topic.
- The Abolition of Work by Bob Black (1985) | listen
- On the Phenomenon of Bullshit Jobs by David Graeber (2013) | listen
- In Praise of Idleness by Bertrand Russell (1932) | listen
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Ah, taste the "freedom" of at-will states.
OH SAY CANNN YOUUU SEEEE
Unfortunately, I can no longer afford the optometrist after losing my insurance. So no.
If they contact you about anything related to that job you are now a consultant at 5x your previous salary per hour at whatever minimum you choose.
I did just create an automation project that would scrape/download, clean, and load data from one of their vendor's websites. I was asked yesterday to write documentation on it so others can use it which would have been done today but...
I was also the developer for a project that reduced their accounting team's work from 1 month to 1 minute. The project would read accounting reports, download data from a snowflake warehouse, match billing items across multiple reports, and provide a summary to the accounting team. They asked be to help them because it took a month for them to go through each report. I was just finishing the project this week...
I'm a data engineer like you, I create automation scripts to parse and export data to DB. But one thing is for sure, I've never made my scripts easy for others to learn. Keep the code a bit messy but it still works perfectly, so they have no a good reason to fire me.
My CS professor preached this, he really wanted all of us to become consultants
5x is too low.
That is the way.
That's a lot of changes in four months, is it possible that you made people uncomfortable with the pace of change? Were the other workers able to effectively use the changes you implemented?
I was thinking similar. How much of this was communicated, vs just done without asking. Were there considerations like "does company want their code on GitHub?"
I presented a report after my first two weeks on the changes I recommend. They discussed this with the team, the IT guy, and the CEO. The CEO thanked me for caring enough about the organization to put this into writing. I didn't get everything I suggested but we got the important things. My plan was to get the team used to the tools I suggested before going on to other tools. All of their code wasn't on Github because they had secrets hard coded in there so I only put new projects I created on there. I taught them the importance of environment files to keep passwords from git history. I only wanted to improve the place where I worked.
Not sure what might have happened then. Sounds like you took the right approach.
FWIW as a software engineer for 20 years including some time as Principal, this is kind of like, my thing. Identifying areas of improvement, presenting a use case, and implementing based on that. Some people can get really upset if they're not involved in that process. Like, complain to the CEO upset.
If that's not the case here, then it's not. It is a bit of a red flag simply because that amount of change can be very difficult to impart in such a short time. Props for your contributions for sure.
I've worked places where fixing what's broken was actively frowned upon. Short sighted employees will confuse "why do I have to learn X" with "I'm making more work for everyone" instead of realizing "doing X will take 10 hours to learn, but save one hour a week forever".
These are not places you want to work. You're lucky to be free of them if this is the situation you were facing.
I don't believe you did anything wrong. It was a chicken shit move on the company's part. Right now it is a tough time to be in technology as there have been a lot of layoffs. I would just get my resume polished up and put yourself out there again. Sorry this happened to you!
Yep, you're the last one hired, so the first one to let go. They can only afford to have N-1 people right now.
Fwiw VSCode is an IDE.
Yeah I have no idea what that’s about. Close to 90% of my friends in a variety of senior engineering roles use VSCode as their IDE.
In a low-rev startup, dropping $1000’s per annum on Jetbrains or whatever would just be insanity.
VS is clearly an IDE, VSCode... is more arguable. For me, it's somewhere between a heavily souped up editor and an IDE. But that's just my opinion.
It really depends on who uses it, some people have it setup with enough plugins and changes to be a full-blown IDE for their programming language of choice while some just do very heavy text editing
For the JAM stack, it’s an IDE.
Maybe someone has a reason to make a mess of it. When everything is clean, it's easy to spot the mess. By doing what you did, you may very well have outed something that shouldn't ever have been seen or stepped on someone's toes.
Erase the github
If you do the right things and it doesn't pay off then the company is probably not a good fit for you, if you ask me. A company that fires you with no warning out of the blue is very likely a shit company.
I think anyone who is more interested in bettering how they do development would look at your achievements and want to hire you on the spot.
We have lots of people who think like you where I work (me included) which is why I am still there after so long. It's utopia compared to the clown show companies I worked for before.
I’m guessing this was always their plan. They knew that what they actually needed was a competent temp worker to clean up the previous employees mess. To make the gig more attractive, though, they advertised it as a permanent, full-time position. It sucks, and you’re right to be angry. I hope something breaks, causes an expensive problem, and they wish they still had you around.
In the long run, though, if they kept you on, they only would have found another way to screw you. Hopefully, your next employer won’t play these games.
Contact an employment lawyer. Yes in at-will states they can fire you, but for any legal reason. If they just fired you for "no reason" then something fishy is going on for sure.
No reason is a legal reason, unfortunately.
Damn america fucking sucks, OP just come up north bud we have maple syrup
American here, you Canadians are amazing and I hope you guys continue to make us look bad, it's good for competition and keeps our politicians sweating.
As if they were able to compare themselves and learn anything.
Was going to say this myself. Our politicians don't care. They have the power they want.
Any employer anywhere can fire you for a legal reason. Employers in at-will states can fire employees for no reason. In fact, that is the main practical distinction of at-will states in this regard, it's what "at will" means.
Even in an at-will state, an employer can still not fire you for an explicitly illegal reason, but unless they are stupid enough to tell you (it happens), good luck proving that it was for an illegal reason.
@OP, sure contact an employment lawyer, but ask if they provide a first consultation for free. I would not actually pay for a lawyer if I were you unless I were much more certain that there is a chance of success.
I won't be contacting an attorney because I don't think I have a case. They would not give a reason why I was let go, only that we have to go our separate ways and the people I can contact within the organization cannot get answers from them.
Thanks for more clarifying info.
You have it backwards. They can’t fire you for an illegal reason. These are known as protected classes. But they can fire you for any reason that’s not protected. And “no reason” isn’t protected, so it’s legal.
For the curious, the protected classes are: Race, color, religion or creed, national origin or ancestry, sex (including gender identity, pregnancy, and sexual orientation), age, or disability.
So you can’t fire someone for being black, but you can fire them because you don’t like the way they smell, because you don’t like their personality, because their favorite color is purple, or just because you feel like it. As long as you don’t say you’re firing them for one of those illegal reasons, it’ll be very hard for them to sue.
And employers know this, so they almost always list it as “no reason” to avoid any potential lawsuits from words getting twisted against them. For instance, maybe you fire someone because you don’t like the way they smell, but then they try and twist that into “you fired me because I smell like curry, and therefore you fired me for my race.” So to avoid anything potentially being used against them, they’ll simply list it as “no cause.” Unless the firing was for cause, (which basically means you fucked up while working there,) and they want to avoid paying your unemployment insurance. In those cases, they’ll build a case against you, then fire you once they have a binder full of real/imagined company policy violations to throw at you.
The only way OP would be able to sue is if they’re able to prove a pattern of behavior against a protected class from the employer. For instance, maybe a new manager gets hired, then every single black person gets fired within the next few weeks. If those workers come together, they can show a pattern of behavior that the manager is racist and fired them for being black, even though the manager didn’t explicitly state that the firing was due to racism. But that’s hard to prove and requires a lot of documentation on the employees’ part.
Thank you all for your replies. I will try to interact with you all but I'm a bit devastated right now. I just feel so blindsided knowing I was the only one from my team fired while trying to figure out why. There were only 4 of us on this team and I did what I could to make the work easier for all of us because I did like working there and with the team. I'm just sitting here going through the last few months wondering where I messed up. I've always asked for permission before I made a major change and explained my reasoning, I only worked with approval. There were some issues they wanted me to resolve but I couldn't do them immediately because their codebase was so coupled. Anything I fixed in one area broke another script so I had to decouple everything and it was a lot. My manager would routinely seek my assistance when something broke. I didn't write that code but I debugged and solved it in front of her while teaching her my thought process and how to use the IDE's debugging tools. I need a day to process.
Before I had this job I had been looking for a couple years. Applying, interviewing, getting ghosted, and wasting time and money. I really don't want to go back to that life again. Did they run a background check on me? This has happened before and the BC company mixed my records with my father who shares the same name. I'm supposed to be able to contest that. Its just speculation now. At least they're giving me a severance and won't contest unemployment. Again, thank you for the kind words.
OP you're a good person. You've given your best effort, yet you don't realize that they hired you only to fix their mess. You learn the hard way how you should never trust and 100% loyal to your employer.
I hope you can land a new job soon
Take what you can and Adapt my brother all will be well
File for unemployment, you're pretty much guaranteed to get it, and start looking. File now. Don't wait.
They just set you up perfectly for your next gig. You turned the place around, somebody thought your job was done and termed you, not knowing that work like this is never "DONE" done.
Hope you kept the doc of the suggestions you presented, and the changes you were able to effect. Best now to just move on. Someone else will love what you did.
Not cool. But certainly doesn't sound like there was anything you did to cause it. Also sounds like you'll do just fine in any environment that lacks structure and resource (which as far as I can tell is all of them).
Cold comfort I'm sure. I would want to know why, but would expect them to be not forthcoming on the reason (I don't have much faith in any business that fires people without providing a reason). One option might be to request a written reference. If they agree the content might reveal at least what they wish the publicly stated reason to be.
Good luck getting shit back on track, and in particular good luck keeping your head in the game during this unfair and challenging time.
Bro you are in IT. Least time I saw, just for an snowflake SQL admin or data engineer position they are offering from 5k to 9k monthly. You are good bro, just keep looking for remote positions.
This is unfortunately how it works now. You can be fired or let go at any time and loyalty is dead. So don't give employers your loyalty either. Don't put in too much time at work and don't get emotionally invested either. It's fine to do with that will make your life easier so you can eventually put in less hours, but you could make the company billions of dollars or save billions of hours and they will cut you just the same as if you were shit at your job with no respect.
It's possible the company itself needed to cut costs, maybe because they screwed up their budgeting. It's not necessarily because of anything you did.
Your actions, while correct and positive, shone a light on the incompetence of the wrong person(s), and someone(s) got in the CEO's ear to make that stop.
Dodged a bullet, my friend.
That's why you don't try that hard at work. It's their mess, don't clean it up for them.
It might be that someone was embarrassed by the stuff you pointed out. I had a job where I had a boss who created a hostile work environment and was emotionally abusive. All the management staff I asked for help only offered to help me make a resume for a new job. My boss was far more important than I was, and I was easier to get rid of, so they essentially forced me to quit.