by workerdee on 4/27/15, 6:22 PM with 21 comments
by yetanotheracc on 4/27/15, 9:03 PM
CASE #1
Context: Full-time job as a web developer in Eastern Europe
My boss was explaining something to me. When he left the room to answer a phone call, I quickly left the office and never communicated with the company again.
Outcome: I avoided being dragged down by work requests from that company, which would have kept me near the previous salary range for longer. I moved on to work as a freelancer for Western clients.
—
CASE #2
Context: Four and five-figure remote freelance jobs
On five occasions, ceased all communications with freelance clients: deleted the project from my computer, blacklisted their email addresses. In some cases I communicated the fact to the client.
Outcome: Nothing much. Moved on to greener pastures.
—
CASE #3
Context: Lead developer at a startup without traction running out of funding
Took a week off, at the end of which I made a broad email blacklist, encompassing the entire company (including many keywords, should they attempt to contact me from a different address), changed my phone number.
Outcome: Losing contact with a very well-connected person. Not having to participate in the death throes of a company I did not have any stake in.
—
CASE #4 (unsuccessful)
Context: Lead developer at a startup
Left suddenly for several months, after which the company took me back and doubled my pay. The exact same scenario happened again one year later.
Outcome: Getting caught in a golden cage. I became something of a prima donna, but with with the company expanding the development team, this will not last. I will probably leave on good terms for a change.
by lscore720 on 4/27/15, 8:39 PM
My philosophy is that a good person never burns bridges, it's irrational. But sometimes it happens.
by nailer on 4/27/15, 7:41 PM
Oh and someone in the last 8 years I said that I think exploiting security holes in someone else's box isn't curiosity, it's vandalism. Sorry rtm, I haven't changed my opinion on that one, but I still think you should fund us in the next batch. :-)
by angersock on 4/27/15, 6:49 PM
Quit a job after finding out a coworker had been fired, and that the entire review process (which I'd been pushing for for a while) was being done as a pretext to that. A few more minutes of thinking showed me that the only difference between two weeks' and walking then were that I'd be two weeks of sad down the road. So, I walked, after a cooldown moment in the bathroom.
Couple years later I met up with that exec again, and we got on just fine. Both acknowledged it was a shitty thing on both sides, and otherwise just went our separate ways. We were both polite about it.
Unintentionally?
My last startup dissolved after running out of boostrap funds and communication failures between my cofounder and I. It sucked, it hurt, and it was hell coordinating anything during the winddown. I was too ashamed and scared to talk to him about things really productively, and I suspect he may have felt similarly. I occasionally check up on him through a mutual acquaintance, but we don't talk and probably never will. :(
~
Basically, the notion of "burning bridges" is kinda silly. There are a few people I could list that, were they on fire, I wouldn't piss on to put out, but overall anybody that I've written off (or who has written off me) invariably seems to show up again, eventually.
Do what seems right, be reasonable about it, and don't be surprised if you meet that person again.
For what it's worth, there isn't a secret ledger that'll haunt you--in most industries.
by 0xdeadbeefbabe on 4/27/15, 6:46 PM
by thoughaway on 4/29/15, 1:47 AM
I also left a one star review, created a mock twitter account, and berated the staff of a local, crooked towing company run by former police officers.
At a financial company, I reported my co-worker to the authorities due to a sensitive new project, his erratic behavior, and his public history of financial crimes somehow unknown to my superiors/HR.
At another job, I told my boss I hated my job just about every week for a few months (in so many words). Then I quit. Maybe that should have burned a bridge but he seemed happy that I basically was giving him a heads up, and I also delivered the project I was on before leaving.
by znpy on 4/28/15, 10:43 PM
Informed this guy I was not going to work any further with him, took another job on and simply ignored his emails/texts/whatever.
Blocked him from calling me (Android blacklist).
I just saw him one or two times, to collect the remaining payments.
I've been pretty formal when talking him, and whenever he asked "I'm doing things" was my reply.
by theaccordance on 4/27/15, 10:30 PM
As far as the outcome, it's always been the same: short-term loss of revenue, but in every case it's cleared way for more fruitful projects.
by vonnik on 4/27/15, 7:39 PM