Office manager gets fired and replaced by new hire for 1/4 of their salary, learns his $2,500 bonus is conditional on training his replacement: 'I received nothing when I started!'

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  • A young businessman looks at a picture while packing his desk at his office.
  • "My manager is hiring someone from abroad to do my job for a quarter of my salary and wants me to train my replacement."

    So, my manager just told me that my position is being eliminated. He has decided to bring in someone from South America through a staffing agency for less
  • than a quarter of what I make, and the kicker is that he expects me to spend my last few weeks training her on every detail of the job. I have been the sole office
  • manager for this contracting company for 18 months. When I started here, things were a complete mess. No one guided me on anything, and I had to
  • build every work system from scratch by myself. During this time, I managed to collect over $300,000 in overdue invoices by following up on payments and
  • creating a new collection system - money the company had pretty much written off as lost. When he broke the news to me two weeks ago, he offered me a '$2,500
  • bonus' if I stayed on until the end of July. Of course, he made no mention of this training requirement in the initial meeting or in the follow-up email. But
  • yesterday, he casually informed me that the bonus is conditional on me fully training the new employee.
  • He has already started asking me to set up calls starting Monday to explain subcontractor payroll, client invoicing, our scheduling software, handling material
  • orders, and all our customer service protocols. To add to the audacity, he also asked if I have a 'playbook' for the job or a detailed list of my daily tasks, and
  • suggested I could find her YouTube tutorials for certain things. The whole situation feels very strange and degrading, to be asked to write a literal manual
  • for the person taking my place, especially since I received nothing when I started. Honestly, I don't know how to handle this. I want to leave on good terms and
  • not burn any bridges, but I feel it's completely unreasonable to ask me to create a step-by-step guide for someone who will replace me for pennies,
  • especially after all the value I've added to the company. Has anyone been through something like this before? What would you do in my place?
  • A young businessman looks at a picture while packing his desk at his office.
  • Significant_Taro_6... Significant Taro_6... 2h ago Give them as less as you need to still look cooperative. Standard level things but not your „special knowlege", the things you just know when you actually
  • know how to do your job right. You still give more than they had. And depends on how they act the last weeks I would not take one of their calls after walking
  • out of their bs and let them fall back to their chaos. And if you really want to go back afterwards when the cheap replacment fails (and they will fail) do it just for a big raise. But if you can afford it dont go back.
  • . Mrbromandudeguy • 1h ago Tell them the bonus is not enough and refuse to train them, then let them fire you and collect unemployment.
  • BornPhone5604 • 2h ago . You 1,000% do not train this individual. Your boss receives what they pay for and they are choosing to not pay for your services any longer. $2,000 as an exchange for replacing you is such an insult.

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