‘I tell the truth, Bob doesn't get the job’: Credit-stealing coworker Bob rides colleague’s $10M company turnaround success for a decade, then a reference call exposed his lies, costing him his dream job

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  • He took credit for a key company initiative. Nearly 10 years later it cost him a job.

    "Karma is sometimes real. It isn't always efficient"
  • I'll need to be a bit vague. Around 10 years ago I was brought in to revive a failed company. 50 employees were
  • reduced (before I showed up) to 3 to try to restructure it. It specializes in very custom small batch parts that require high precision.
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  • "Bob" was an employee I soon hired. Over 2 years I led a complete restructuring. Cut out unnecessary steps. Invested in tech. Eventually we grew to $10M
  • in revenue and more with a general goal of $100k of profit per employee going to the parent organization. It was successful for years.
  • Bob was okay. He had a few skills. He wasn't great and to maintain our goals he needed to go. I warned Bob that he had 2
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  • months to find a new job. That I would give him a good review for what he was good at but not for what he was bad at. He would
  • need to maintain a good output of what he was good at or we'd have to let him go right away but
  • would be flexible for interviews etc. To Bob's credit we saw no decrease in effort (although.... low bar).
  • He finds a job at a company we partnered with. Didn't use me as a reference. Good for Bob.
  • Years later I fly out to visit the partner. To my surprise Bob greets me with my main contact "Charlie".
  • Happy enough to see Bob we shake hands, catch up quickly.
  • "Charlie" then goes on to say how lucky I was to have had Bob because of all the transformative things he did. Really "got us out
  • of a mess". Which of course was all the things I did and Bob was not good at.
  • Charlie added a small "well, aguyonthehill helped".
  • I was shocked. Angry.
  • I said nothing other than a "well I'm glad Bob found a good fit."
  • Years pass. I bump into Bob occasionally. It's performative.
  • I leave the company, On to my next adventure. The company does okay in my absence. Co id and other events knock the entire
  • industry around but I left the company in good hands and it does okay. I remain friends with the new general manager that I hired.
  • Bob loses his job. Surprised he kept it as long as he did. He applies to my former company for a prestigious role.
  • The GM calls me to ask about Bob. They didn't overlap. Asks about Bob's claims of all the transformative things they did. Is ready to hire them. I tell the truth.
  • Bob doesn't get the job. Karma is sometimes real. It isn't always efficient.

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