
Handling Interviews After Being a Fall Guy? 140
bheer asks: "Salon's Since You Asked column is carrying an interesting question right now — what do you say in interviews after getting fired as a fall guy at your last job? Cary Tennis, who writes the column, admits he may not be the best person for this sort of question. So I thought I'd ask others what they thought about this. Software developers are sometimes able to get away blaming the business requirements/analysis process, but anyone with any experience in this business probably has had nightmares about being the fall guy and may even have a strategy or two up their sleeve. How would deal with being in such a crummy position?"
a "novel" idea. (Score:5, Funny)
I dunno, writing a book seems to have worked out for George Tenet.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
1) bitch that you were the fall guy and that it wasn't your fault, etc.
2) Say your employment was terminated as a business separation that was for the companies good, even though you were not the actual issue.
3) Quit before you're fired.
-nB
resumé laundering (Score:3, Insightful)
(Posting anon for should-be-obvious reasons)
Not quite the same situation, but I faced a similar dilemma when I got fired not too long ago. They said it was for violating a company policy; I say it was a minor verbal-warning-level infraction, and the real reason was I'd been interviewed on local TV as a "gay rights advocate" and the good-ole-boy management didn't want a known homo on staff. Answering the "why did you leave?" question in subsequent interviews was tricky, because neither version would endea
Re:a "novel" idea. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:a "novel" idea. (Score:4, Interesting)
So were cool why we aren't hiring you here....
"It was time for a change"
How long is it going to be before you want a change here?
"I left because of politics"
Then you really won't like this job.
"I am ready for something new"
Then why you applying for pretty much the same job here?
"I need to grow professionally"
And when you do, you are welcome to reapply. Thank You.
I'm sure this is just geek bravado...but with this attitude, I know I'm not going to hire you. I've hired several people that have been fired in the past. I've also given recommendations for folks I've had to ask to leave. Sometimes a job just doesn't work out. When someone asks about it, you put as much of a positive spin on things as possible and move to the next question. Hell, I've asked these sorts of questions and dug in because I want the real dirt and seeing how this person handled it is an insight to their character.
I can safely say I have been fired once. When asked about it, I told my future boss that if he ever tried to put his hands on my ass, I'd punch him too. And then we laughed about it. Some reason, knocking out an employer seemed to be something he didn't see as a bad thing. Actually said that even though he wasn't going to touch me, I might still want to beat the shit out of him at some point. Probably the best job I've EVER had.
Unfortunately, I've moved up several times since then, still at the same employment while my old boss is running some school in Alabama or something. I'll have to post this anonymously because its better for me to give the information about alleged beat downs personally than have it show up in google where it is a little harder to explain.
(As a side note, sadly, the bad boss was brought up on child porn charges a few months after this...he was a dirty creepy freak when I worked for him, but I *REALLY* didn't believe he was more than just a run of the mill sleaze...at the same time, I've never met anyone that set me on edge like that whenever he'd try to get any of us interns alone...I've never hit anyone that didn't physically attack me before or after that day).
Re: (Score:2)
Finding landmines. (Score:5, Interesting)
The more detailed and impersonal explanations about shortcomings or roadblocks to advancement that existed in a previous workplace typically pointed to a better candidate. Why? Analysing frustrations or failures without integrating personal emotions exhibits political IQ... hugely important in mid to large size companies. Being able to provide detailed explanations about the causes of frustrations or failures demonstrates scope of vision... a massive indicator of an employee's ability to deal with compromise/problem solving in the workplace through an understanding of the pressures and demands that shape production across multiple interrelated divisions.
You might be amazed at the number of job candidates who look great on paper but boil their lack of advancement or success at a prior job down to interpersonal conflicts with management etc... I know I was amazed.
The more wholistic awareness a candidate displays in answering this question, the more secure a prospective employer can be in the candidate's ability to preserve and improve the corporate culture.
Regards.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Never get hostile like this in an interview if you hope to get the job (though if the question makes you not want to work there, then I guess get hostile). Answer reasonable questions, and why you left your previous job is a reasonable question since it c
Re: (Score:2)
I've been there.
I've had manager change priorities of projects 20 times in a day. This was a regular occurance.
I also ahve had a manager give a list of 10 tasks I need to do. Great, when asked for priorities 5 of them were number 1, the other 5 number 2(as was the boss, ba dum bup).
So I picked a number 1 priority I could do quickly. a day later it was done, and when I told the boss she yelled at me for doing the wrong one.
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe he misspoke, but since there were other equally qualified candidates who had reasonable reasons for leaving their previous jobs, we went with one of them. Inc
Re: (Score:2)
It's good to remember, If (not when, IF) a potential new employer does actually call a reference, it's generally a very cursory check. Did Mr. X work as [title] between [date] and [date]?
Most companies won't do more than confirm or deny even if asked (to avoid lawsuits).
Finally, as a fall guy, that means there were managers over you who would be willing to say nearly anything to a reference checker to make sure the actual facts behind the fall don't get dragged out in a lawsuit. Their best bet is to bac
Re: (Score:2)
Here's what I did (Score:3, Funny)
I've been on fire with Sally Field, gone fast with a girl named Bo, but somehow they just don't end up as mine.
It's a death defyin' life I lead, I take my chances.
Re: (Score:2)
Hmm... After the whole dyin' for a livin' part, I'm not sure you're gonna need that next job anyway...
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Here's what you do. (Score:5, Insightful)
a) Don't bad-mouth the old company.
b) If they ask be vague but not misleading, tell them you had a disagreement with Management.
c) Always keep in mind that the old company can't tell them much (if anything) about why you left the company.
Definitely (Score:5, Insightful)
If you were the fall guy then something obviously went wrong at your last company. Coming up with some *generalized* insight about the failures in *processes* @ the last company you worked for without attributing blame (use non-accusatory language) or personalizing the situation will let your potential employer see you as a bigger picture type candidate.
Use your experience @ your last company as a platform from which to inquire into practices at the new employer. You have a very real interest in not ending up in a situation like your prior one, and *quality* employers appreciate candidates with insightful and even difficult questions about company standards and practices.
Corporations use rebranding all the time. Rebrand 'fall guy' before you go much further in the process even when thinking things over inside your own head. How you approach the issue internally will subtley change the way other people approach the issue.
Regards.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Me being a jerk aside, I think you just helped out my professional life AND my personal life.
Re: (Score:1)
plus
>> Use your experience @ your last company as a platform from which to inquire into practices at the new employer.
equals
"So, are you a psycho bitch from hell like my last girlfriend?"
Re: (Score:2)
My GF doesn't seem the least bit bothered about me occasionally talking shit about my old girlfriend. After all, she must have been a psycho bitch to let a wonderful guy like me walk away, right?
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Exactly. The old company can say very little about "why" you were let go. In fact, most companies will only provide the following regarding your employment (for legal reasons): length of time at position, position title, and salary. That's it.
Why did you leave your previous position? "The direction the firm did not align with my career objectives."
If they ask you to elaborate, speak more abo
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, you can sue the old company, if you find out that what they said was what led to you not getting hired. Once again, in reality, not alot of places are going to inform you that because your old boss bad mouthed you, you didn't get hired. In fact, an interviewer who hears that you shot smack/coded like a mon
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
This is like it's illegal to fire someone for being black, ie. complete crap. You can be fired for being any race because there's rarely a time that an excuse can't be found to get rid of you.
Same with this, your old company can say pretty much whatever they want, no one is going to call them on it. Shouldn't and can't are very different things that are not related.
um, no (Score:3, Informative)
Some companies wlil say glowing things about someone they really liked who left by ch
Re: (Score:2)
> will only confirm stated dates of employment, title, maybe salary.
As a rule, yes. As a requirement, no. They are free to speak any truth about your employment that they wish, and many employers offer much more information, depending on the unwritten rule that no one will inform the person interviewing exactly what was said.
If the poster is being made a fall guy by one or two not-too-senior people, it may be a safe
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
If you were fired because you were stealing office supplies, then they can say they fired you for stealing office supplies, and you shouldn't have any right to get back on them for that. That is not slander, that is truth. And if America has gone bad enough that you can sue someone for saying the truth, then I really, really pity you.
Re: (Score:2)
Case in point: my current position (which is great) came to me via a recruiter. Said recruiter lied to me about the terms of the offer; the offer I accepted is not what I'm getting. Said recruiter said that I would be receiving a packet in the mail from my future employer with all of the details in writing, which was never sent (nor did my current employer know anything about it when asked.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Of course, getting you to commit before all terms were confirmed is pretty sleazy, but probably not lawsuit worthy. At the very least, I'd bring it up to the employer so that they didn't use this recruiter again.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Did you sign anything like an employment contract with your current employer or is that the "something in writing" that never came? If you signed a contract, then you get to be offered what is written in the contract and nothing else is promised. If you didn't sign a contract, you are free to leave right now and get yourself anot
Re: (Score:2)
Basically without filing a lawsuit, my only option is to quit.
Re: (Score:2)
Then why don't you? Instead of whining that you're not getting what you think you deserve, why don't you quit and find another job who'll give you what you're worth?
Re: (Score:2)
It must be nice to be able to afford to just throw away a job like that. Most of us work for a living.
That being said, I fully plan on finding another job if my current one doesn't take steps to bring my compensation to within the range I was promised. I'd li
I've got news for you... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Saying that is pretty much code for "I'm unemployable." If I'm interviewing somebody and they're telling me that they left their last job over a disagreement with Management, I'm thinking, "OK, so if we disagree when you're working here, you're either going to quit or I'm going to have to fire you."
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
So if management wants to put you into a soul crushing, career limiting, dead end job for which you are way over qualified, you'll just suck it up? What if you're asked to do something legal but morally reprehensible?
I worked with someone a few years ago who was way
Re: (Score:2)
That's a specific complaint--one that most interviewers will be sympathetic to--not a nebulous "disagreement with management".
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
On the other hand, if somebody just said that they had a disagreement and left it at t
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
What is this? (Score:3, Funny)
Cross-site duping vulnerability (Score:3, Insightful)
Become an entrepreneur. (Score:4, Funny)
I don't know what else to say than ... "do your best" ... OK, get ALL the evidence in your favor...you have to black mail them.....I don't recommend it ..but...this is corporate...horseshit....I'm insane...don't listen to me...son't sue me...pleeeeese....yah! I can't spell either....
Re:Become an entrepreneur. (Score:5, Funny)
Take care, buddy.
Re: (Score:1, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Take care, buddy.
Re: (Score:2)
You must not come here often.
keep it short and concise (Score:4, Funny)
"While in my previous job I might have fallen from a tall building, or I might have rolled a brand new car. But it was because I was the unknown stuntman that made Redford such a star."
Leave it at that. And call Lee Majors for a reference.
Re: (Score:2)
Just a few questions? (Score:4, Insightful)
Look at it from the other side... (Score:4, Insightful)
a) Yeah, I guess that could actually have happened.
b) You're so dense and arrogant that you still don't have the slightest idea why they fired you.
I mean, it sucks and I certainly feel sorry for you if a) is really true but I predict difficulties trying to convince anyone of that.
Re: (Score:2)
Look at it from the interviewer's side. You sit down in his office and say "I was fired because all my old co-workers were incompetent and dishonest and I took the blame for it, and there's nothing I could have done."
Right. Anyone can get into a bad situation. My last place of employment lied to get people to work there (red flag: no in-person interview? Run away.) The VP of IT sent out frequent abusive emails to the entire division. The servers were a mess and we weren't allowed to patch. The morale was deep in the crapper. So, to the "Why do you _want to leave_ where you're at" question, the answer was "The job I'm at isn't as advertised, and I know that (this place) has a very different culture". Had the ans
Salon got it right (Score:5, Insightful)
That's how things are done. It was just business.
Just try to explain the machinations of the world without being overly emotional, blaming your former colleagues, or talking bad about your former employer. Don't seem like somebody whose got a chip on their shoulder and the whole world's against them.
We all want our lives to be meaningful and make sense. We all want justice in the cosmic sense, rather than witnessing scapegoating. However, for most people, the workplace is not the place to find meaning or justice. In an interview, you have to pass yourself off as someone who isn't emotionally attached to their work. Someone who could be layed off without erasing the HR database. Someone who could fire other people and not lose sleep. Someone who just comes in reliably, gets their shit done, and doesn't engage in politics. Just do what you need to do to get through the interview, and don't worry about afterwards right now. The best way to find another job is to have a job in the first place.
Just make stuff up (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, so kinda like dating?
Re: (Score:2)
Now I am off to save Bigfoot from the Fembots.
I just went through this (Score:5, Insightful)
I secretly reported the boss to the board while starting my job search. As several projects were coming to a close anyway, I used that as my major "talking point" for leaving: development on major projects is coming to an end and things will go into a "maintenance phase" for the forseeable future; I'm ready for a new challenge; I'll continue to assist my current employer as a contract employee until they are up to speed on things; etc.
With additional pressure on the boss because of a fixed election, more blame was heaped on me (not regarding the election, but still...), until I found my job posted on CareerBuilder with nary a mention of my performance or the boss' displeasure with me.
I began interviewing regularly and didn't lie. The fact is that when I told my former employer that I was moving on because of the perceived problems, I agreed to be available to assist with the transition. When I went into interviews, I kept things positive and mentioned that I might need some flex time in the first week or so of employment in the event that my former employer needed help. The fact that I was up front about things, while keeping the whole whistle-blower/fall-guy thing out of it made me more attractive to folks. In the end I had multiple job offers and was able to take my pick without having a single day of unemployment. And I got out before the former employer really made things bad for me.
I realize that an after-the-fact interview will be different, but it bears repeating that you should say the nicest things you can about your former employer no matter how you feel about them. Hell, I lied and said I was sorry to go, but by projecting that positive attitude I think it really helped me make a smoother transition and has gotten me in with a place that seems to genuinely care about its employees. *crossed fingers*
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
I said nice things about the company, not the boss. I can be thankful that discussion of the former boss never came up in any of the interviews I had!
Get some letters of reference. (Score:4, Informative)
I just went through "Interview Training" and one thing the managers complained about is that they can not find any previous employers willing to give any kind of reference beyond name and dates of employment. It appears everyone is worried about lawsuits.
They stressed that letters of reference are somewhat valuable as a replacement, so make sure you snag some of those before you take the fall.
-no sigWhen do you learn more?? (Score:1)
This is why... (Score:3, Insightful)
It is better to leave when you see it coming, than wait for the disaster to happen and be blamed for it afterward.
Granted, it might be difficult, but usually, you have a few months before a problem turns into a reality. I have left jobs in the past because of unethical behavior on the employer's part, but believe me, it was for the better. Not only did I get a better paying job with better benefits, I no longer got that sinking feeling when management asked me to do what I felt was wrong.
Re: (Score:2)
when you see others you work for getting screwed, no matter how much you like your job, get out.
Anyone that says they were fired and did not expect it or see it coming is either blind, went to work high daily (yes those exist!), or incredibly handicapped.
I left a lucrative corperate job because I saw 6 people get screwed in other departments, and I saw they were making their way to our department. I interviewed for 2 weeks and h
Re: (Score:2)
I saw downsizing coming at one small orginization 350 people. Pointed it out to the other programmers. Withing a week almost all of them had left. When I was the last one on a project, I left.
They deserved it to.
From #7165902 (Score:2, Funny)
I tried the honesty route, and it backfired:
Re: (Score:2)
As a Contract Employee (Score:2)
A. My contract was over.
Q. Why did you leave Nortel?
A. My contract was over.
Q. Why did you leave IBM?
A. It sucked.
Re: (Score:2)
I always would stop them. "I'm a contractor, contracts end. Maybe someday I'll be a good enough contractor to have never ending contracts like SAP, but right now I just get things done."
Seems harsh in text, but when I said most people just laughed, apologized for going into 'interview mode' told what they wanted, I told them how long."
Having glowing business references is nice, as is finding out yout
Your co-workers will know. (Score:2)
Hmm...maybe it's advantageous to try to become a fall guy...
Been through a few of these... (Score:4, Insightful)
I've never gotten in a situation where I've had to flat out admit being fired.
Another thing to keep in mind, which has already been pointed out, is that legally, most companies won't admit anything other than employment. The last one I got walked from wouldn't say anything to prospective employers about me other than "He worked here from Aug 2001 to April of 2003."
They are scared of lawsuits, especially since they cannot verify who is asking, truly. For all they know, you have a friend in a company who is trolling. As unlikely as that may be, it generally works in your favor.
Part of my company now specialized in staffing and head-hunting. One of the many lessons I've learned about that is that generally (at least for the hundreds of positions I've seen filled in the last three years) prospective employers are far mor interested in references rather than previous employer statements. Which strikes me as odd, simply because I've never given a reference that I hadn't pre-qualified and generally only gave friends. The biggest complaint I've received on my references was that they "weren't high enough" in the org chart, which was from a Senior VP at Symantec, so take that with a grain of salt. Make a few manager/director/VP friends that you can count on, and references are a slam dunk. I've interviewed lots of people, been witness to hundreds, if not thousands of others, and I've yet to hear a bad reference call.
For the life of me I can't remember where I read it, although I think it was a link on careerbuilder.com, that talked about this subject, finding a new job after getting canned. One of the things that interested me the most was a statistic that around 70% of all firings have nothing to do with performance. (Disclaimer, I can't remember the exact figure, but it was around 70%, okay?). And that's my experience, as well. Both as a boss and as an employee. I've been fired for doing my job (2 times, when the employer was hoping that either the project I was working on would fail, or when my employer set me up to fail), but it has never been my ability. I've also fired people, but it was purely about non-ability issues (abusing company resources, etc.)
I think that my experience has been that when you can't manage your manager (work together with them, put up with them personally, etc.) its past time to get out. For better or worse, if your manager dislikes or hates you, or acts in ways you can't stomach, its time to polish off the resume and start again. The sooner the better.
Bill
Make a sound bite... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you have a long explanation when they think of that question, they'll simply hear crickets.
You need a sound bite. Something like:
Ya know it was a good project that I enjoyed working on. I got along well with the team members. But when the project failed, they needed to downsize project staff. I had stuck my neck out to try and make sure the project succeeded,
You changed a negative firing into a positive: "I work hard to make projects succeed." Now when they think, "Well they got fired at the last job;" their brain will respond..."They will stick their neck out to make our project succeed!"
They have no idea (Score:3, Insightful)
It sounds like you have every opportunity to be (mostly) honest. The previous company wouldn't provide the necessary training and resources for your projects to succeed, and they didn't know how to do project management (you weren't in a position to fix that) so you're looking for a new opportunity where you can accomplish goals with the support of management. There's nothing wrong with that.
How I've Handled It (Score:3, Insightful)
References. References don't need to be your former boss. They can also be peers, customers, or vendors. Think about people who know that you've really done the things on your list of things you do well, and see if they will serve as a reference. A reference doesn't have to know everything about you, they just need to be able to back up and verify at least one story that you tell during the interview. When you provide your reference list, include a brief one-sentence summary of the story this reference can verify.
Take the high road. Point to what you do well, and leave it at that. Alternatively, if pressed, you can tell your prospective employer the truth, but try to stay positive. Let them know that you stayed up front and honest through your communications, and tried very hard to escalate things to management before it got out of hand, but they weren't in the mood to listen.
Confidence and honesty (Score:5, Insightful)
This can bite you in one of two ways:
All this poor sod knows is that he didn't get an interview. But really, he is now never welcome to work at my wife's firm, and "the grapevine" now knows what he is doing, so he will probably have difficulties finding work elsewhere. It's a small world out there.
The correct strategy is to take a cold, hard assessment of what happened. Be objective and dispassionate. List out the mistakes you made and what you've learned from them and how you won't repeat them in the future. List out what you feel you did right as well.
Distill all that into a concise story. We're talking about 30 seconds to a minute. Be honest, but put a dispassionate spin on it and keep your sense of humor.
Recite it in front of a mirror a few times and then test it on a friend. Ask him if he'd honestly hire you after hearing that, or if not, why not.
Keep revising until you've got a story that is truthful, but paints you in the best possible light. In terms of learning from your mistakes, accepting your former employer's mistakes and realizing that it was just business, and keeping your confidence about you.
Everyone is human, and we all eff up from time to time. How you pick yourself back up again says volumes about your character. Honest self-assessment and attempts at self improvement are good. Lying, blame shifting, and deceiving are bad.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Plenty of employers will refuse to answer even that question for fear of liability.
Backchannel research can and does happen. My wife was looking at a resume of a guy who claimed to have been laid off from a large firm that had just done a large, public round of layoffs. As it turns out, he was not laid off; he was fired for cause.
Re: (Score:2)
True. All I was trying to say before was that plenty of employers will answer that question, even though they would not answer a question such as, "Why, specifically, did you fire Mr. Jones?"
I get the same thing all the time as a landlord. Tenant applies for a unit and I get a call from the landlord. I would never answer a question like, "Was Mr. Jones a good tenant?" or "Did Mr. Jones take care of the unit?" But 99% of l
Re: (Score:2)
I've always hated the "why are you leaving" question, mostly because it's always been a very complicated question for me. It usually involves a feeling of not being paid a fair market
Re: (Score:2)
It doesn't always happen, but it certainly does happen.
I ask about evictions on the application, and sometimes it comes up in conversation.
Oh, sure. They come up with all kinds of things. But it's hard to keep up the charade if you're lying. Observe:
Me: So why are you moving?
Applicant: I want
Re: (Score:2)
I actually didn't make the connection that his Mom was booting him out, but it did immediately strike me as odd that Bob isn't calling on his own. After that point, the why of it is almost immaterial.
BTW, I found it strange how many landlords either hinted or outright told me that they preferred single tenants or working couples with no children (I had one kid the last time I we
Heh (Score:2)
First of all, what those landlords said to you was illegal. Very, very bad business practice. They probably are not landlords any more. HUD probably sued them into oblivion.
At any rate, the reason that many landlords prefer not to rent to families with children is that children, as I'm sure you are aware, cause more property damage than adults. Most adults do
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
If he reported to your wife's firm that he was fired for cause, they shouldn't want to interview him anyway. So his odds are better if he lies and says he was laid off, since they might not discover the lie. He'll lose more than if he could honestly say he was laid off, but lying should still net him more interviews (with people who don't background check as well as your wife did) than saying he was fired with cause.
When I was a Fall Guy, I told them... (Score:2)
But I've been seen with Farrah.
I'm never seen with anything less than a nine, so fine.
I've been on fire with Sally Field,
Gone fast with a girl named Bo,
But somehow they just don't end up as mine.
It's a death defyin' life I lead,
I take my chances.
I die for a livin' in the movies and TV.
But the hardest thing I ever do
Is watch my leadin' ladies
Kiss some other guy while I'm bandagin' my knee.
I might fall from a tall building,
I might roll a brand new car.
'Cause I'm the unk
Two Observations (Score:2)
2) This sort of disaster happens to many people eventually. If you sense the writing on the wall, begin to feel creepy/hinky, or even
having been there recently. . . (Score:5, Insightful)
#1: If you're uncomfortable with lying - DON'T.
#2: If you were in charge; don't DENY that it was your fault. Take responsibility for what is your responsibility. Show that if mistakes were made, you have learned and moved on. It's better to show that you were in charge of a project, than to pretend you were a junior member. Taking responsibility for failures shows maturity.
#3: Don't take responsibility for things that were not your responsibility. Lots of people get put "in charge" of things; when, in reality, someone higher up in the chain can sandbag you.
#4: No project fails completely. Accentuate the positives. Highlight what you DID accomplish. Show that; despite project constraints, you came up with innovative approaches to solving issues. Be positive, and try not to make yourself look like a victim. Everyone in this industry for more than a year or two knows that projects fail from time to time. But a project is more than just "Failed" or "Succeeded". Whether you get paid may hinge on that dichotomy. But whether you did good work certainly does not.
#5: Unless you're just out of college, you've got other successes in your work history that you can talk about instead. Your last job is the most relevant. But it's not the ONLY relevant item.
Hope that helps.
I wasn't really made the scapegoat in my case. But it still sucks that I can't say that my project was a complete success, and got used, and worst of all, I have no use-case metrics to prove that my approach improved anything. But when I explained it in interviews, it was apparent that I was on the right track, and was just unlucky.
It is simple... (Score:3, Funny)
Happened to my brother-in-law (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Say you're still under NDA and change the subje (Score:2)