Person Asks “What Happened At Your Work Which Caused Multiple People To All Quit At Once?”, And 30 Folks Online Deliver
There is only one right way to assemble a well-functioning mechanism - and thousands of ways to break it. The situation is exactly the same with almost any company - after all, incompetent management will always find a way to lose not only the work momentum, but also key employees - sometimes even all of them.
There are some cases when management, for one reason or another, is left with just two options - either back off or start bankruptcy proceedings. We must admit neither option is among the most pleasant, but the second one, in any case, looks much worse.
We recently told how a company's new bosses massively fired employees, hoping they would return for a lower salary - but they all refused. There is also a popular Reddit thread where people talk about a wide variety of reasons which caused mass employee quitting. Over 59.2K upvotes and around 13.5K comments prove the topic is really burning.
Bored Panda put together a curated list with the weirdest and most popular reasons why people resign en masse. Now feel free to read to the very end, watch, comment - and we do hope you'll never have to face any of the reasons listed below.
More info: Reddit
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They laid off half the company with no warning. This included a gentleman who was less than a year from retirement and had been there for 35+ years.
The company was shocked when half the remaining people abandoned ship shortly thereafter.
Off topic but this tractor is one of these you see in childrens movies, but then he would be alive... Nice face Mister Tractor!
Canceled all raises and bonuses for everyone except the CEO, his wife (financial and HR), and his son (utterly useless IT) in a year where we have record profits and brought in almost double the clients on top of announcing they aren't looking to hire more people when we were already overwhelmed.
Good part about it was when the majority of us quit they lost almost every single client shortly afterwards to their competitors and the company is now defunct.
I worked for a company like this- owner was CEO, wife was CFO, her sister was COO and one of their sons was a "senior" agent (also, just as big of an a*****e as them). Regularly made the COO cry (their sister for Gods sake!) and everyone else in the building. Had insane hours (I was a supervisor on salary and working 60-70 hrs a week with zero days off for 3 months once). I was paid very well, but when you broke down the hours vs the pay, it was MAYBE $13/hr. I broke out in massive acne on my back, had a horrible sleep schedule and was generally irritated all the time. It was hell and I was stressed. The people they managed to keep were the ones who fed them gossip and told them everything that went on, constantly. One even went and told them I HAD to be on drugs Bc they said they asked me a question and I just stared at them. I honestly don't remember this, but I could have been falling asleep due to HAVING NO GOD DAMN SLEEP. Everyone else jumped ship, and they're barely hanging on
I did landscape construction. The cheap a*s owner kept taking bigger and bigger projects while never hiring more help. We were all overwhelmed, stressed, and anxious as hell. One of our foreman quit and I followed suit a few days later. Two more guys quit the next day. He was down to three guys for the obscene amount of work he wanted to do. Of course everything gets way behind schedule but he's convinced it's not his fault at all. He went out of business less than a year later.
I was ready to up vote this one just from the title! All too common
Turned out our owner was keeping the social security money taken from our paychecks.
And yes, he was caught.
I was hired by the new owners to replace the existing manager. I was under the impression that he was moving on to another job somewhere. So after about 4 days I ask him where he's headed and if he's excited. He just looks blankly at me and says "I'm not going anywhere. I'm just training you as the assistant manager, right?". The look I gave him must have been a great tip off because he got up and walked into one of the new owners offices. After about 30 seconds they were screaming at each other, then he just storms out of the office, grabs his stuff, give me the finger, and leaves.
Over the next few days I'm trying to calm things with the employees. They're not faulting me, but now have a very bad taste in their mouths about the new ownership. Over about a 7-10 day time period my team shrank from 15 people down to 3. I hobbled along with that the best I could while we tried to hire new people, but the new owners were offering so little we had trouble finding people. After 3 months or so of that I started to get fed up and overwhelmed and when the owners started to get on me about missed deadlines I had had it. We were still only at 5 people, 2 of which were brand new and still training. They didn't allow me to refuse work or push deadlines out, they expected the same output as a 15 person team. So after my third day in a row of being berated for missing a deadline that was impossible to make, I quit.
Worked at a data-company.
The guys in the sales department f**ked around all day. They'd literally be in the parking lot drinking beer and racing RC cars. When it came to handling accounts/clients, they frequently gave away free accounts in order to "retain" customers (and make their own sales numbers look good), and somehow they got away with it.
Meanwhile, there were dozens of programmers and database nerds working tirelessly behind the scenes to integrate a bunch of complicated data and make it easy to access via the website.
Yearly holiday announcements come around, and upper management decides to send the entire sales team to Hawaii for an all-expense-paid vacation. When the furious developers asked why they were just taking the sales team, the confused CEO literally said "Well.. I mean... I guess we could ask the sales team to pick one person from each department who helped them the most this year, and take them too..."
The programmers/engineers/database people were livid, and walked out in droves.
Gee, I wonder why the company tanked.
I work in the finance department of my company. I know very well that the sales team generates revenue, while my own team is considered an overhead. Data processing is part of the cost of doing business and should be factored into the fee invoiced to the customer effectively leading to nil effect on the coffers (depending on how you look at it), but *my* wage directly eats into the company profits. BUT. My company owners know that overheads are still a part of doing business, and without my department (and other overheads, like IT) they wouldn't have a company. Anyone who doesn't get this doesn't deserve a business.
They called everyone into a major company meeting and informed us we were all (except for sales and managers) being offshored to India and the Philippines. They had a plan for us training our replacements that, strangely, didn't account for pre-schedule turnover. People started finding jobs literally the next week and the hemorrhaging never stopped.
I see this happen a lot. Companies will tie employee severance packages to their training of their offshore (cheaper) replacements.
The owner died and his idiot son took over and decided that the company didn't make him enough money and started to implement "cost cutting" measures like turning off the A/C in the building.
The company consistently outpaced competing firms and found itself emerging as one of the industry leading agencies. This was also a California tech firm, so shorts, flip flops, beers at lunch, getting high on the roof were all rather common. But we were rapidly growing, and the atmosphere/location made us a hot ticket for talent.
Anyway, CFO and CMO cashed out and the CEO decided to totally remodel the company by making it far more corporate. On top of all of this, they implemented unattainable goals and removed our work from home policy. The final straw was they removed our rather generous vacation policy and replaced it with "Unlimited Vacation" which was a facade for "you can take as much vacation as you want if we approve it."
Like 1/4th of the company quit and immediately landed at better jobs. Also profit tanked.
If it isn't broken, why on Earth would you feel the need to "fix" it?
I worked for a company that had gone through a restructure, we put so much work into salvaging our company (and jobs). After announcing the "restructure complete!" (Think GWB on an aircraft carrier deck) the CEO hired his wife as the second highest paid person in the company. She had previously been a nursing assistant and was a complete loser. She was having people with PhD and MBA degrees reporting in to her saying things like "This is what a budget looks like." and my all-time favorite "no, marketing does not necessarily mean TV commercials." Like, what the f**k? At the time she was making ten times what I was making and I was doing work she didn't even remotely understand. It was such a farce.
Half the engineering team and a huge portion of sales simply quit. She was trying to explain why not getting a bonus was, in and of itself, a bonus. The top 3 salespeople simply walked out of the meeting, cleaned their desks and left. I knew then we were screwed and quit a couple of weeks later.
I'll bet you that she was the CEO's second, much younger, wife. And that he was thinking with his eggplant.
The boss went off on a tirade on me for something that wasn’t my fault and I got him to scream “people like you are expendable pieces in this company and I can replace you tomorrow if I wanted to”.
80% of the engineers quit the next day. Simply didn’t show up. Including me.
From what I know, the entire project folded because my now ex boss couldn’t find people to replace us because no one wanted to do the kind of work he was looking for at the salary he was paying.
Oh f**king boy
I worked at Buffalo Wild Wings for a few years as a line cook. Two different stores, same f**king pay. It was the type of work where you ask for a raise and they scoff and say “yeah, me too.”
Anyways, I had been pretty dead set on quitting sooner or later, our kitchen was very small. Most people ended up closing 4-5 days a week with doubles on the weekends, while still attending school full time as it was a college town.
On SUPER BOWL F**KING SUNDAY, a useless coworker who ducked out in the bathroom most the shift finally stops showing, and in response the managerial staff delegated closing to my pal J. Dude was a f**king delight to be around, hands down the best coworker ever. J had told them that due to being a full time student, he no longer wanted to be first in last out (4pm-12am, 1am on the weekends). They basically told him to go f**k himself, and that they don’t have any more shifts for him.
Immediately, me and one other cook walked to the office and quit on the spot.
Buffalo wild wings lost 4 cooks on Super Bowl Sunday, leaving them with 7 full time students on the schedule.
It was a managerial s**t show.
Restructure of the way we're paid. What I used to do involved about 40% client interaction, 20% team/coworker interaction, and 40% paperwork and case coordination stuff. Based on what we do that means only 40% of the time is technically billable, and there are really sticky rules for what is and isn't billable. So, logically, we were being paid on a salary model. Cue management saying we can only make money for the time we have that is actually billable.
1/4th of the department quit. Two of us on the same day.
I worked at McDonald's back in high school. I was taking off for college at the end of the summer and put my 2 week notice in so I could get August off and actually enjoy it before I had to move away for school.
The Store Manager decided to just not put me on the schedule any more, which I discovered on the last weekend I was in to work. So instead of having those two weeks, I was just done. I decided, at lunch rush that day, that if they weren't going to honor the notice, I wasn't going to honor the 8 hour shift.
At about noonish, right after the breakfast crew had left, I was done. The thing was, most of the crew that day were also going off to college and saw what the manager had done. So they f**ked off with me.
In the middle of lunch rush, the store was down to the old-a*s lady who worked drive-thru, and the manager on duty. That's it.
The rest of us walked out. 2 cashiers, 3 grill workers.
I was working for a very large IT company, before the tech bubble burst we had a meeting with our "new director and the VP"
They were tired of people complaining about things that should be changed at the job and how they managed people.
So they sat around 200 of us down in our auditorium, and the director said she didn't want to hear anymore complaints on how she was running things and if we didn't like then there was the door and that there was no way we'd leave such a great job.
Well there was a mass exodus and probably close to 50 people left within 2 months.
She and the VP were "re-orged" and given 0 reports, they were gone after a round of layoffs happened shortly after.
"...and the director said she didn't want to hear anymore complaints on how she was running things and if we didn't like then there was the door and that there was no way we'd leave such a great job." Something similar happened at one of my last jobs. Things were NOT good, the staff was disgruntled, and the CEO heavily implied that they could easily fill our spots with anyone off the street. Never mind that we were essentially specialist workers in a new industry in my country. It ended as well as you would expect.
Worked in construction as part of a HSE team. The chief engineer was p***ed that the job was taking slower because of the HSE (especially safety) procedures. We had a couple lost time incidents at this point and just a week before a guy almost died, but he was still pretty p***ed about the delays so he got everyone in a room to say:
You're not here to do your jobs. You're here to do what I tell you to do.
20 people asked to quit on the spot. F**king c**t.
Using acronyms specific to your industry is confusing for others... HSE = Health, Safety, & Environmental. Good for you for getting out!!
Years ago I worked at a chain salon (my last ever I swear). There was about 14 of us plus my boss. Half of us were really good, very passionate about what we do, all booked with good clientele. Our boss was wonderful, didn’t micromanage, etc. She was a big reason that while it was a chain, it didn’t feel like one.
She got fired. The reason given was that she “cashed a check at work.” She bought product, paid for it with a check, and added an extra 40$ so she didn’t have to find an atm before she went to the bar. She had worked for the company for 5 years, had pulled 3 shops into the highest ranking ones in the district, consistently had shops exceeding their numbers, etc. And just like that, she was fired, and even worse, when I came to work the next day, we weren’t allowed to talk about it. I texted her and she told me what happened.
We didn’t quit at once exactly, but over the next four months, the top stylists, who brought in 70%~ of the revenue, left. We took our clientele’s with us and all of us went to smaller, private salons. This was several years ago now but I still keep up with them. We’ve all found our niches in hair, make way more money, and are way happier for it, including my old boss. She’s about to buy the salon she works at. If it didn’t happen, I don’t know when I would have left, to discover I prefer barbering/men’s styling over women’s. It was a blessing in disguise at the very least.
I used to work at a McDonald's, and we had a terrible manager who hated a lot of people working there. Everyone else hated him too, but no one wanted to call him out on his s**t and quit. I was the first to do it, because I requested 2 weeks off in August of that year, about 3 months in advance (my family likes to plan our summer vacations early-on). When August came around he had my schedule set up for all of August off except for those specific 2 weeks. There was no way that he could have misinterpreted my request. When I got my schedule, I stormed into the restaurant, called him out on everything, and then quit on the spot.
About 2 weeks after that, I heard from one of my work friends that 5 other people had enough and quit as well. I kind of felt good to be the first.
I don't understand, that employees from fast-food eateries why tolerate a*****e bosses even for a second? I mean it's a fast-food, doesn't matter the name, the conditions are the same in like every one of them. You'll got the same 10-12 bucks/hour flipping burgers at McD. or BK or Wendy's. They are just eateries, with the same menu for decades, not restaurants, with some possibilities of professional development.
Worked at a Wendy’s and one of the regional managers started running a store because they couldn’t/wouldn’t find new managers to replace the old ones.
Well anyways this guy practically ran the place into the ground. Before he started running the store most everyone liked working there as it was a good environment. A few months after, a couple of people quit because of him. And one day I roll in at 9 to help open the store and he comes out to my car as soon as I park (I was 15 minutes early and usually just sat in my car until 9) and tells me, “hey I need to to start early because the three openers just quit on me”.
We manage to get the store open and had a number of people from other stores help run the place until the people from the next shift came in.
A couple days later I hear the full story of what happened from a coworker. The regional manager is supposed to be at the store at 7 or so, and the openers 30 minutes later. He didn’t actually show up until 8:30. So when the openers, already pissed at being at work really early and not being on the clock, saw the regional manager roll in and knew it was gonna be an awful shift all decided that they were done with him and just quit right there.
So at least 6 people quit because of him by the time I left the place. Probably more left after me.
I once worked for a dentist who expected me to go over her schedule for the day on my cell phone while driving to work. I was also asked to work off the clock "out of the goodness of my heart." Sorry, honey. Any volunteer work I do will be for someone who deserves it.
Several years ago I worked in a mental health center. We worked primarily with kids. It was time for the center to renew their certification. Instead of keeping up with everything that needed to be done over the course of 5 years, the proper procedures were ignored.
In this couple months before recertification, administration made us sit through a ridiculous amount of training on Things that would have been covered in training such as HIPAA laws and identifying child abuse.
Then came our paperwork. Our center encouraged us to do things that aren’t exactly covered by Medicaid or approved through certification. For example taking kids to the park isn’t allowed, but guess where they instructed us to take these kids so they didn’t disturb the therapists working? I had to go back and edit 5 months worth of documents to get rid of the evidence.
The kicker was that bathrooms were supposed to have a log of when it was cleaned. An administrator perfectly forged the signatures of multiple employees. I don’t think they would have went through that trouble just for a bathroom log. What else were they forging our signatures on?
The potential risk of being charged with Medicaid fraud was too high for me. I quit as did many others.
Editing to ad: I did report them to the authorities. Shockingly they are still in business. I did what I had to to cover my a*s.
I’m the manager of a retail store and I had found out a cashier was ‘ ‘stealing’ product by scamming reward card benefits. I came up with a detailed incident report to present to this employee and I was under the assumption it was just her. After I confronted her in a reasonable manner she freaked out and got really angry and quit on the spot. She was using fake accounts instead of using a customers reward card to get herself points and redeem them for product/gift cards. So the customers weren’t getting the points they are owed which is a headache for me if they notice and complain.
The next day every other cashier called me and quit and after thinking wtf just happened I found out they were all in on it and were using this lady’s fake card on their shifts too. So I’m down four cashiers and I have one left. This same day my last remaining cashier disappeared for twenty minutes. Turns out she was in the bathroom with another employee doing the nasty. She quits because her dad is a cop and doesn’t want to find out she got fired for this and she also asked me if she should go to urgent care because she didn’t take her tampon out before they did it and she couldn’t find it. The guy also quit because he ‘didn’t care and was moving anyway’ . I was down to literally managers only.
So the first part is the mass exodus and the last part was just for ‘can you believe this s**t?’
I am sorry, but why would you be doing "it" in a work place. . .
We stopped providing free coffee, and we're so cheap that we sold our coffee maker. This was in Seattle, so a couple of people bought their own coffee makers to put in their cubes. That tripped the breakers several times so it was very disruptive since our computers would shut down. Management then said no coffee allowed in the office at all. We lost four very good engineers.
Damn, I can sorta understand now footing the bill for coffee...sorta, bit banning coffee...Shiiiiiit, I'm surprised somebody wasn't beaten to death.
Our boss had a meeting and announced new policy that all salaried employees had to work a minimum of 45 billable hours per week because of the increased project load we had. I pointed out to a few co-workers that our employment contracts specified 37.5 hours per week, and that I would be adhering to that policy. Well, about a week later I was "laid off" due to lack of projects. Ha. I was happy to go, and at least 2 others left voluntarily within the week. The job I found next was much better, and wasn't run by someone quite so clueless about how to treat people.
If they count your hours, you aren't salary, you are hourly and get time-and-a-half for those other five hours. I had a boss that tried that.
A well known colleague committed suicide and we were told by management via a brief side note in an email about stats at the end of the day. It caused a lot of upset in the office and quite a few people didn't return after this.
One of the best workers at my previous job was about to quit but actually stayed at the company because they offered him condolences when his family member passed. It's not not hard for companies to show that they care unless it's because they actually don't care and can't be bothered to fake it.
Tattoo shop owner (who lived in another state) hired some a**hole to come ‘revamp’ the shop. I had been managing for three years at this point and he just expected me to teach him how to do my job so he could replace me.
That guy had no clue how to run a shop. Plus the owner had been embezzling money for her coke habit and had blamed the longest-standing artist at the shop for lost revenue. Accused him of stealing. I did the books. No one was stealing. She was nuts.
Anyway, all the artists and I mutinied and left at the same time. F**ked them over good. With that idiot at the helm the shop didn’t last a year after we all left.
I tattooed at a awesome shop with friends and fun and then the owner up and sold it to guys who lived across the country. Our manager had been busting his ass for this shop since the day it opened and even told the owner that he would gladly buy the shop if the owner wanted to sell it. Nope sold it to guys who had never even seen the shop or knew the artists. There was a mass exodus. Now the shop is owned by a completely new owner and everything's been changed. I miss working there. The crew and friends were wonderful and we all worked well together like a fun family. I miss it.
New management. In a month, four kitchen staff quit, leaving me to be the only original kitchen staff hire from the previous manager. She completely changed the vibe of the work place. No one was happy. No one felt like talking or listening to music or being friendly. It was robotic.
I hate when that happens, it eventually leads to s**t service and a restaurant closing down - that’s my experience anyways. Seeing an awesome business go down from an inexperienced and shitty new boss is the worst.
They bought air mattresses so employees wouldn’t have to leave to go home during a classically busy season.
Mass exodus after that.
Ok. If you want your employees to come there so quickly get a nice hotel, or get more employees willing to come in early time. But even then, ain't that a little much?
company changed from 5-8 hour shifts to a 12 hour shift rotation.
edit: most of the people that quit were the ones that were on straight day shift and didn't want to or couldn't work night shifts.
School district I sometimes sub in had a BIG round of hiring. A bunch of building substitutes applied for the jobs, and only about half of them got interviews. Of the subs that got interviews (myself included), the only one who made it past the screening interview was a relative of a current employee. The rest of us subs weren't the "right fit." The real reason is that there's a substitute shortage and they don't want to lose any of us. Not a single sub (who isn't a relative) was hired for one of over a dozen teaching jobs. Many of the building subs aren't coming back next year.
ICE contacted the in-house temp service, questioning them about illegal workers. Over 20 people mysteriously disappeared at lunch time. A couple months later most of them were back, with different names.
I was a bartender at a pretty busy sports bar it was located next to a law school. The manager decided that we weren't making enough profit so he had us all counting and measuring all the alcohol for every shift got rid of our bar backs. It was all so time consuming and took forever to do all the cleaning stocking counting not to mention constant measuring of drinks when we were slammed. My counts were always exactly right I did not need to measure so I pretended in case he was spying which he always was. The last straw was when he signed us up for a reality tv show and we had to work 14 hr shift for free practically rebuilding the restaurant w cheap tacky plywood and acrylic paint while these reality show weirdos yelled at us. After 3 hrs we all flushed our mics and all of us quit. He had two cooks left that's it. He was fired bar was sold went out of business 6 mths later. So weird.
Was the reality show Bar Rescue with John Taffer?
Load More Replies...It baffles me that so much of American management is willing to waste a shitton of money on retraining people. It is insane to not want to keep your staff and harrass them instead. Why??? What on earht is gained to piss of someone over a holiday schedule. Every new person coming in slows stuff down, at first. It is such a colossal waste of time, energy and thus money.
Two times: the first one that took place was due to upper management trying to switch things up so they thought rearranging employees into different stores/locations was a good idea. Many people unhappy since they chose their stores based on locations and convenience for transportation to and from home, that and they did it just before a long weekend holiday, suddenly stores no longer had coverage. I was one of the ones switched up, only I was a manager, it was in my agreement that I refused relocation, which they voided. I had also asked for that weekend off at the start of the year as my birthday fell on it, after working 6 days a week for months I didn't feel as if it was a big deal, but I was told to cancel it as they couldn't find staff, turns out 1/3 of the whole force left. I wanted a new job before leaving but asking me to cancel the time off when I was the first one to be approved was the final straw.
Second one: new management. Changed from an awesome, fun to be around guy to someone who had no likeable characteristics whatsoever. Changed the whole vibe of the place. One by one everyone left. I didn't get along with her either but my final straw for that came when she listened in to an entire phone conversation with an elderly customer who I taught over the phone how to do online orders, because she didn't want to venture to the shopping center during Christmas, it scared her. The moment I hung up she asked me "why didn't you refuse and invite her to come in so she could use a coupon"? More concerned with money than a customers wellbeing, I couldn't stand her after that. Only one person from my original crew is still working there, she told me the manager was demoted.
Load More Replies...I was a bartender at a pretty busy sports bar it was located next to a law school. The manager decided that we weren't making enough profit so he had us all counting and measuring all the alcohol for every shift got rid of our bar backs. It was all so time consuming and took forever to do all the cleaning stocking counting not to mention constant measuring of drinks when we were slammed. My counts were always exactly right I did not need to measure so I pretended in case he was spying which he always was. The last straw was when he signed us up for a reality tv show and we had to work 14 hr shift for free practically rebuilding the restaurant w cheap tacky plywood and acrylic paint while these reality show weirdos yelled at us. After 3 hrs we all flushed our mics and all of us quit. He had two cooks left that's it. He was fired bar was sold went out of business 6 mths later. So weird.
Was the reality show Bar Rescue with John Taffer?
Load More Replies...It baffles me that so much of American management is willing to waste a shitton of money on retraining people. It is insane to not want to keep your staff and harrass them instead. Why??? What on earht is gained to piss of someone over a holiday schedule. Every new person coming in slows stuff down, at first. It is such a colossal waste of time, energy and thus money.
Two times: the first one that took place was due to upper management trying to switch things up so they thought rearranging employees into different stores/locations was a good idea. Many people unhappy since they chose their stores based on locations and convenience for transportation to and from home, that and they did it just before a long weekend holiday, suddenly stores no longer had coverage. I was one of the ones switched up, only I was a manager, it was in my agreement that I refused relocation, which they voided. I had also asked for that weekend off at the start of the year as my birthday fell on it, after working 6 days a week for months I didn't feel as if it was a big deal, but I was told to cancel it as they couldn't find staff, turns out 1/3 of the whole force left. I wanted a new job before leaving but asking me to cancel the time off when I was the first one to be approved was the final straw.
Second one: new management. Changed from an awesome, fun to be around guy to someone who had no likeable characteristics whatsoever. Changed the whole vibe of the place. One by one everyone left. I didn't get along with her either but my final straw for that came when she listened in to an entire phone conversation with an elderly customer who I taught over the phone how to do online orders, because she didn't want to venture to the shopping center during Christmas, it scared her. The moment I hung up she asked me "why didn't you refuse and invite her to come in so she could use a coupon"? More concerned with money than a customers wellbeing, I couldn't stand her after that. Only one person from my original crew is still working there, she told me the manager was demoted.
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