Employee hands in notice, manager demands she write 100 page technical manual in her last 10 days: 'I have spent seven years building these processes'

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  • An employee writes on a clipboard and gestures at her laptop while sitting at a table
  • Company wants a 100 page manual for an outsourced team before I leave

    I put in my notice two weeks ago after landing a senior BIM coordination role that actually pays what the market dictates. My current manager seemed fine at first but then he dropped a massive bomb during our sync yesterday. Since the department is
  • "restructuring" they arent hiring a direct replacement for me. Instead they are outsourcing my entire workflow to a firm overseas that has zero experience with our specific mechanical standards or Revit templates.
  • The kicker is that my manager expects me to spend my final ten days writing a comprehensive step by step technical manual for this new team. She specifically asked for a document that covers every single edge case and custom script I use to keep the projects
  • on track. When I told her that a hundred page manual is a project in itself and wont fit into my remaining hours while I am also closing out three active jobs she got incredibly passive aggressive. She hinted that if the "knowledge transfer" isnt satisfactory it
  • might reflect poorly on my final performance review and future employment verifications.
  • I have spent seven years building these processes and half the stuff I do is based on intuition and technical troubleshooting that you cant just write down in a pdf for someone who doesnt know the difference between a pipe and a duct. It feels like they are trying
  • to strip mine my brain for cheap labor before kicking me out the door. I offered to record a couple of screen shares and leave my basic file structures organized but that wasnt enough for her.
  • She actually told me I should stay late every night this week to "do the right thing for the team". The irony is that this same team has been understaffed for a year and they never cared about my workload until it affected their bottom line. I am seriously considering just handing in my equipment early and taking the hit on the last few days of pay just to avoid the headache.
  • Is it even worth trying to play nice at this point or should I just give them the bare minimum and let the outsourced team figure it out on their own?
  • An employee looks at a piece of paper while sitting at a table with her laptop beside her
  • Petrichrome The irony of being told to stay late for 'the team' when that team is being replaced by overseas contractors is painful. Hand in the equipment early if you can afford it. No manual you write in a week will save a team that doesn't know the difference between a pipe and a duct anyway.
  • stein63 "Stay late and do the right thing" is wild coming from a company doing the cheapest possible thing.
  • Independence Mean8774 Goodbye. I'm out. Have a nice life. Two weeks' notice is a courtesy, not a legal requirement.
  • Prestigious-Board-62 Bare minimum. Who cares if they'll give you a bad review? "May we contact your previous emplayer?" No. Ez pz.
  • Gallick Slow walk it. Offer consulting services to write it at 5x your current pay.
  • Alterception LOL. Burn that bridge with a flamethrower. It's her problem now. I'd turn in 100 pages with nothing but smiley faces on them.
  • No-Cream-2593 resign effective immediately. Here is my Key card and I wish you all the best.
  • ariegel57 I had a boss who asked for something like this, but before I even had plans to leave. I made it, monogrammed the document with my initials and locked it for editing. Provided a print to pdf version.
  • Adventurous_Can_7437 Yeah nah, i wouldn't stress that - they'll probably forget you existed 2 days after you leave anyways.

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