Lessons Learned from the Worst 6 Months of My Career

February 25, 2009

In the last few years I have shared many triumphs and positive things, but now I am going to pull from a chapter in my life that was dark to pull out lessons learned and expose the story about this company I worked for.

Early-mid 2006 was the worst 6 months of my professional life, but it didn’t start that way.

How It All Started

The owner was excited, seemingly honest and downright cheerful and optimistic to work with me. He landed his first website job building an e-commerce store and needed someone to develop it. Sure, I wasn’t entirely equipped for the job but I took it on. He took the risk for a very tiny sum of money and we worked on it together day and night for about 400 hours to get it done.

During this time, he yelled and swore at me for losing a few hours of data entry. I should have heeded that warning and not continued working with him, knowing that it would happen again in the future. But none-the-less, I liked the work I was doing so I continued onward.

How I Got Stuck in the Job

I really liked the guy, trusted him and we continued to take on more website jobs. I definitely saw an anger issue in him through this time, but hey – who doesn’t have problems? I enjoyed the work, but figured I could not get another job doing website design in the area because it is a small area and I didn’t have any kind of name for myself. I continued to work and try to get better at my job. Meanwhile, I was not making enough to pay rent and going into debt ($10/hour job, even though I had finished 4-years of schooling at $28k/year).

The Tyrannical Man Shows his Colors

I was happy with the location, but became more and more unhappy with my job as the outbursts of anger and rage moved from me, to the other workers (also hired for dirt cheap) who were yelled at (including profanities) until forced to quit. One of the workers shared with me how he became so depressed that it spread to the relationship with his wife. He finally got a job elsewhere, took it and got the heck out of there. I didn’t blame him, but for the time I was stuck for the aforementioned reasons.

Learning to Listen to Grievances and Anger

After my co-workers quit from the job because of the owner’s raging outbursts, I was the only one left. Why was I still there? Because I thought that by staying there it would making me stronger. It did. By hearing a list of grievances against me each day for a few months, I learned to tell truth from a lie and not get upset. This was a great skill to learn. It isn’t that I wasn’t listening to him, it was just that I didn’t agree with what he was doing to me or how he ran his business. Even so, I sincerely checked myself to see if I really was a screw up, because his shredding comments got through to the deep parts of me. This guy once wrote out an 8 page summary of grievances against me, at one point even mentioning that I was"poisoning the well".

“Crazy”, I thought. “I couldn’t be such a horrible person as this man describes me to be”. After a few months of realizing that I was truly well-intended (hard to do when words are so harsh) and knowing full-well that I was trying hard as I could (given the circumstances) – I knew it was time to leave.

How I Got Out

I put my resume on Monster.com and within a week was hired at in agency in Minneapolis, MN. The new job was a great move, a wonderfully refreshing experience filled with positive reinforcements and triumphs. Really, you can’t get much more of a “high”, after such a low. People always wondered why I was so happy and working so hard. I have testimonials to prove it.

Positive Outcome In the Midst of Working for a Nagging and Angry Boss

Through the hard times you have the potential to grow in the midst of it, and this experience was no exception.

For all those caught in a destructive working relationship with your employer I just want to give a few words of advice:

  1. Try to honestly seek out if the bad things they are saying about you are true.
  2. Sort out truth from a lie, and use it as leverage to be a better person. No one will be more honest about your weaknesses than someone who is violently angry at you, even though any grievances will be amplified beyond truth.
  3. Keep your head up, learn to deal with it and then get a new job. It will be a great one.

Final Note

Regardless of how difficult this was for me to write about such a deeply negative experience. It is hopefully worth it for you, my readers to learn from and certainly my personal health to finally get this out there.

Keep it real, yall.

18 comments

#1. Dan NEdelko on February 25, 2009

Great article Marc,

I know how you feel I went through a similar experience last year and I can relate. Thanks for sharing.

#2. Matt Curry on February 25, 2009

I had a job like this once. Whenever anyone would quit we’d all go to lunch and call it a parole party, because it felt like they were getting out of jail.

I finally just walked in and quit one morning. I had nothing else lined up, an 8 month old daughter at home and a mortgage to pay. My wife wasn’t too happy when I called to tell her. Was the right decision though…wish I had done it months earlier.

#3. Jason Leveille on February 25, 2009

Thanks for sharing your story Marc. It takes a strong person to find the good in such a negative experience. It shows a real commitment to this work that you didn’t go find a job elsewhere washing dishes. One lesson I’m sure you’re intimately familiar with now is that anyone looking to bargain shop for developers isn’t someone you want to work for.

#4. Robotoverlord on February 25, 2009

Thanks for sharing – I think I have a few of these horror stories myself. Right now I work at a killer agency that is small and doesn’t necessarily understand the web 100% but they’re appreciative and are definitely making progress. From time to time we are even able to rescue other designers/developers from abusive situations.
To everyone out there that works for a jerk – get away before it breaks you.

#5. Marc Grabanski on February 25, 2009

Thanks all for your supportive comments!

I’m surprised at how many fellow developers can relate to my story.

#6. Mike Branski on February 25, 2009

“No one will be more honest about your weaknesses than someone who is violently angry at you, even though any grievances will be amplified beyond truth.”

You’re spot-on with that remark. Definitely know what it’s like to be in a situation similar to yours. And man, the day I walked out of there, it was a breath of fresh air. I felt infinitely better taking that step, no matter how scary it was to quit.

Small note: typo in the last sentence under The Tyrannical Man Shows his Colors: “…but for the time I was stuck there for the…”

#7. DocJohnson on February 25, 2009

Thanks for the post, it is appreciated.

#8. Dave Dash on February 25, 2009

I like the bad stories… probably because I can usually relate in some way or another. I remember having a really good client who wouldn’t pay me what I wanted, but I ended up taking the work probably for similar reasons.

Learning when to get out is a good skill. Learning to sift truth from lies… or … really signal from noise is a great skill.

Working full time, of course, it’s easy to refuse work… I just hope if I ever go independent again that I learn when to take work and when to refuse it.

#9. Andrew Collins on February 25, 2009

Your entry reminded me of a great book, which I advise most people to read: Emotional Vampires: Dealing with People Who Drain You Dry.

#10. Sébastien Lachance on February 26, 2009

That’s exactly what I needed to read today! Great post!

#11. Eduardo Luttner on February 26, 2009

Great story, this happens everywhere, and you had a happy ending by just keeping your integrity.

This is an example more people should follow

eduardo

#12. Web Development on February 26, 2009

It is really great you got the guts to break out. Always remember to dedicate 1 hr per day for yourself and your own business. Start something online for your long term plans.. Congrats

#13. naveenj on February 27, 2009

Great Article!
Way to go Mike….
Hope your ex-boss read this too… lol

#14. Jojo Siao on March 04, 2009

Your story reminds me of another story ( a blog post) that programmers have to have faith and be realistic at all times.

“Retain faith that you will prevail in the end, regardless of difficulties. And confront the most brutal facts of your current reality; whatever they might be.” — Admiral James Stockdale

just in case, if you want to know the link, here it is:
http://gregmoreno.ca/2009/01/22/have-faith-and-be-realistic/

#15. Ben on September 15, 2009

Wow, what an experience, but at least you will better appreciate a “good” job now. I agree with Web Development as well, definitely make sure to always devote some time to your own ventures each day.

#16. Matt J on February 02, 2010

Thanks for the post…turning negative into positive.

#17. Bob from E-Commerce Web Design on June 29, 2010

Great post. Sounds very similar to what happened to me. My first customer for my web design company seemed a nice guy, promised me great business leads for the future. Finished the website then he pretended he never asked for it and refused to pay up. But I turned it into a positive and put it down to a good learning experience! Always get T&Cs signed, lots in writing etc.

#18. Sharon_Miller@Curriculum Vitae Australia on August 26, 2010

No one should have to tolerate such poor behavioural standards from a boss or colleague. I can understand that sometimes people feel trapped, as though they have limited options if they leave, but it is always worth making a fresh start if the atmosphere in your workplace becomes toxic and starts to interfere with your general enjoyment for what you do…and your life beyond work.

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