Coworkers spend 6 weeks competing for management position, company hires external candidate instead: 'We're trying to recalibrate'

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  • A young businesswoman smiles, holding a laptop under one arm and putting her hand in her pocket with the other, as her colleagues sit behind her out of focus
  • My company hired someone externally for a role three of us internally interviewed for and put her directly in charge of the people who applied

    Quick bit of context, been here almost four years, project management, mid- sized company, the kind of place that regularly talks about investing in its people and promoting from within. When the Senior Manager role came
  • up above our team it felt like a genuine opportunity, three of us applied, went through the full process, two rounds of interviews, presentations, the works.
  • The whole thing took about six weeks. Six weeks of preparing, of quietly recalibrating your sense of what your career here looks like, of trying to act completely normal in the office while knowing your colleagues sitting nearby are going for the same thing.
  • Then last month HR emailed to say the role had been filled and we'd each be getting individual feedback sessions. Before any of those sessions actually happened, the new hire appeared for her first day.
  • She seems perfectly fine as a person, that's almost beside the point. The point is that all three of us now report directly to someone brought in from outside while our feedback sessions still haven't happened, rescheduled twice now with no real explanation. So we're
  • sitting in team meetings with her, taking direction, giving updates, trying to recalibrate professionally, without ever having been given a proper explanation of why we weren't considered good enough for a role we've essentially been orbiting for years.
  • The atmosphere between the three of us has shifted too, nobody's said anything directly but there's a certain collective deflation that everyone can feel and nobody wants to name out loud.
  • One colleague who has been here six years and genuinely deserved the role has gone very quiet in the last few weeks. The kind of quiet that usually means someone is updating their CV.
  • Did the company have the right to do this? Absolutely. Does it sting in a way that's quite hard to articulate? Unreasonably so. Has anyone been through this and actually stayed? How long did it take to feel normal again?
  • Cheezburger Image 10627370496
  • redrosebeetle Don't stay. You know what your teammates are doing? They're looking for jobs right now. Jobs that you're qualified for. But they're going to get those jobs and you're going to be stuck in a workplace that doesn't want to advance you. You'll be left picking the leftovers.
  • Ragnarsworld Time to go. They clearly don't think you or your coworkers are good enough for the job. Or maybe the new hire is someone's father's, brother's, nephew's, cousin's, former roommate. Either way, bail as soon as you can find something better.
  • wanderlustpassion Try 4 months of interviewing for a job you have already been backfilling for years only to find out the went with an external candidate.
  • Soggy-Attempt Time to level. You've hit your ceiling with this company.
  • LastOfTheAsparagus Unfortunately this happens all the time.
  • Ok_Young 1709 It does happen a lot sadly. I've not seen it happen in my teams, which is honestly shocking considering the teams I have worked for, but it does. They don't appreciate you, so your best option is to leave.
  • PastrychefPikachu One of a few things happened. They either felt you were too valuable in your current position, and having to fill your current role was more of hassle than they wanted to deal with, or they saw something lacking in your leadership style.
  • Either way, you have two options. Accept you weren't promoted and keep going, or move on and look for another job. The choice is yours.

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