how to say “sorry, but I really have to pee, again” in a professional way by Alison Green on April 15, 2026 A reader writes: I have a tendency to have frequent UTI’s. They’re easily treated and not dangerous, but they make my life annoying for 1-2 days before the meds kick in. I am not in pain but I might really, really need to visit the bathroom on a very short notice and very often, at worst every 15 minutes or so. At best, I’m fine an hour after I take the first pill. There’s no way to know beforehand which way it’ll go. I’m looking for advice on dealing with the problems this causes in my work; healthwise, I am fine and am working with my doctor to prevent the UTI’s as much as possible. But it’s a feature my body has had for ~25 years, so “not having them” isn’t a super reliable plan on its own. I have taken sick days for the symptoms, but it feels excessive because I’m completely fine as long as I can take a quick break when needed. I have also tried working from home, but that still doesn’t solve this problem because I manage multiple projects and frequently lead long meetings/workshops involving several departments and outside vendors. So I can’t exactly pop out without everyone noticing, and even when remote it’s unlikely I could discreetly just vanish for a bit. There’s also no point in having the meetings without me, since I’m the one leading them and doing most of the talking. I could always reschedule; people are very understanding if someone is unwell, and a quick “sorry, but I can’t unfortunately make it today” is enough info. But rescheduling usually means having to move the meeting by several weeks or months, which disturbs everyone’s work and delays the project timeline. It also creates unnecessary extra work for me, which I’d rather avoid! Ideally, I’d want to just keep the meetings so everyone can move forward with their life and work. But during these days, my options seem to be either to (a) suck it up (and risk ending up squirming on my seat like an anxious kindergartner), (b) randomly excuse myself from the meeting without giving any reason (and risk people worrying there’s something wrong), or (c) excuse myself with some variation of “sorry, I have a condition and might need to quickly pop out for quite a few times” (and risk people thinking I’m, I dunno, sniffing cocaine? Using AI to cover my lack of knowledge? Screaming into the void in the supply closet? Having stomach problems and about to accidentally infect everyone with norovirus?). I’m getting extremely frustrated that I have to cause all this extra work for myself and others for what feels like a very silly reason. I’m not in pain or even tired, I just might need to use the bathroom a bit more often and on a shorter notice than usually. What’s your take on this? Should I just learn to deal with the frustration? Or could I ask for some kind of an accommodation? I’m not sure what exactly that would look like. Or is there perhaps some believable excuse I could casually use to pop out of meetings when needed? Or, is there some professional script for “Before we start, just a quick heads-up that I might need to go pee quite often. Nothing to worry about, everything’s fine. Now, there’s been some national changes in walrus rental prices, so let’s look into that first…” At the start of meetings, say this: “Before we start, a heads-up that I may need to step out multiple times for a quick medical thing. It’s nothing to worry about, just something I have to deal with when it comes up, and it’s flaring up today.” That’s it! You don’t owe anyone details beyond that, and this gives them all the info that matters for their purposes. You may also like:how to deal with a stomach attack in the middle of a meetingwhat should I say when people miss meetings?is there a professional way to call BS? { 97 comments }
our mediocre employee thinks we’re not promoting her because of sexism by Alison Green on April 15, 2026 A reader writes: I’m hoping for some guidance on dealing with an employee who is convinced she isn’t advancing because she’s a woman, but it’s truly due to her putting in barely adequate effort and believing that advancement comes from checking off boxes and “time served.” We’re in a creative niche industry that’s fairly evenly split between men and women, although the larger industry that we’re a part of is still very male-dominated. Our company is a small privately owned company (under 50 people), roughly evenly split, with women at all levels, including in leadership. I’m a woman in the top level of our company and am involved in deciding who is ready to be promoted to the next level. We have a list of hard skills that people need to master at each level to advance, but there are also less easily quantifiable soft skill components, which get more important as people advance (we do have a list and try to give guidance on how to develop these, but it’s impossible to say someone has “mastered” creativity or client interaction, for example). The other more senior women and I regularly try to coach younger employees on strategies for dealing with the sexism that we unfortunately still deal with outside of the company, but in 20 years, there have been very few examples I have ever seen or heard about inside of it — and the few that have come up have been addressed immediately. One employee, Mia, has been saying she earned a promotion because she “checks all the boxes” on the hard skill list and she doesn’t like doing the soft skills, so they’re not important — and because of those things, the only possible reason she’s being held back is because she’s a woman. An accurate analysis is that she adequately performs most of the hard skills for her current level but never excels at any of them, hasn’t proven any ability in the next level’s hard skills, and is terrible at all of the soft skills (she’s gotten this feedback). Her “proof” of sexism holding her back is that a male employee who was hired a few months after her (and has been amazing in almost all of the skills) has received a promotion. (We don’t necessarily have a set number of positions at each level; we generally promote when we feel people are ready and take on more work to allow for the growth.) It’s also worth noting that Mia did a different role for the first year and was almost fired from that, so technically she has been in the same role as this man for less time, but she doesn’t think that matters. Two other women who have been hired since Mia are doing really well and are more realistically likely to step up before she does, assuming they continue their current trajectories. Overall, I’m flummoxed because her take on this seems to show a remarkable lack of self-awareness on her part. Mia is still an asset in her current role, although she’s becoming toxic about the situation around other employees, so I’m not sure how much longer we’ll feel that way. Do you have any suggestions on how to convey this is a performance issue that has nothing to do with her being a woman? I’m a little worried she’ll try to file a discrimination lawsuit if she leaves (it feels unfounded, but I don’t know much about the law). You can read my answer to this letter at New York Magazine today. Head over there to read it. You may also like:my coworker blames sexism when she's just bad at her jobI promoted one employee instead of her coworker, and now my whole team is upsetam I being a brat about not getting promoted? { 135 comments }
our meetings always start with a discussion of bad things that have happened to my coworkers by Alison Green on April 15, 2026 A reader writes: I work for a medium-sized, family-owned business. We all work from home. Some of us live in the same metro area but we’re not friends. We have an office culture of sensitivity and compassion when someone is going through a difficult time. For the last few months, every staff meeting somehow functions as an open mike for stories about horrific things that have befallen us, going back to the 1970s. I can’t give examples without needing a wall of trigger warnings. All are totally unrelated to the work we are there to discuss. We often end up with two or three people needing breaks to gather themselves, or being unable to pay attention when we do get to work things. I’ve tried interjecting, gently and then firmly, to redirect to a work topic but to no avail. Generally, it begins when we’re all coming into the meeting platform. Those who arrive early/on time will chat among themselves while waiting for the start. One person, when asked how they are, will express a minor problem before segueing into a more general complaint about the state of their life, which then is taken up by others on the team as a sort of prompt. For example, Regina has a persistent cold. She talks about her snot, her cough, what the doctor said, what she thinks about what the doctor said, how expensive he was, someone will agree with her, then a third person has a similar story, and Bob’s your uncle, we’re off. It’s not on the agenda officially. Lately, however, this is becoming formalized. Recently, another colleague had a “wellness prompt” for the meeting and started telling us about a time she was nearly very badly harmed, but made a good friend. We sat there for a 90-minute trauma dump. The next week, lo! “Wellness check” is in the agenda. Nobody likes to cut off the talking because it’s rude and insensitive. I’ve done it once or twice recently, and as a result, I’m getting some frost from my direct reports. Team morale has flatlined now that every gathering is the Misery Olympics, but our bosses are not reining this in. One of them participates. Frankly, I dislike the new office culture of constant overshare, and I despair of my bosses keeping our meetings productive. Do I say something, and if so, what? Or do I acknowledge I am not a good fit for the organization anymore, and try to find another job? Good lord. You said these meetings have agendas, so what is happening to the rest of the items that are supposed to be discussed? There’s a very high chance that you’re not the only one who’s frustrated by this! In addition to being a terrible use of time, these topics are probably making a lot of people uncomfortable (and maybe worse, depending on the topic and people’s own histories with related trauma). Can you talk to whoever is in charge of running these meetings, point out they’ve been veering into topics some people are likely to find highly painful, and you’re not getting to the business that you’re there to discuss? And if that person isn’t receptive, can you go above their head to someone else who might be? If that doesn’t work, I’m curious what would happen if you started joining early in order to very deliberately direct the conversation in a non-misery direction — talk about some exciting news on your team or in your life, or a (non-tragic!) movie you just saw, or some exciting news in the lives of your cats, or really anything that is far away from a trauma dump or an extensive exploration of snot. If it’s needed to keep things on a lighter track, go ahead and monopolize the chit-chat more than you normally might feel polite about doing and then when enough people have joined that the meeting is ready to start, ideally you’d segue into work topics — “now that everyone is here, I’d love to share what my team has done on X” or “I’m hoping today to get people’s thoughts about Y” or similar. You could also try messaging whoever runs the meetings ahead of time and asking for time on the agenda to talk about Non-Traumatic Work Topic X. Try all of this before you decide you need to change jobs! And even if this doesn’t work, I’m not convinced you need to change jobs over it, unless it’s really affecting your quality of life (it might be!) or it’s symptomatic of larger issues in how the organization is run (which it also might be). You may also like:we had to share our "shadow sides" and "be more vulnerable" at a meetingsomeone is always crying in our morning meetingswe have twice-daily mandatory group therapy at work { 120 comments }
manager is freezing me out, written up for being one minute late, and more by Alison Green on April 15, 2026 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. My manager has been freezing me out since I talked to HR about her Last May, I finished my masters and in September landed a job in my field and specialty. The first few months were great with my boss, Claire. She was super nice, let me know everything that was going on in the department, I got along with my other coworker in my department, and I finally felt like I had found my job and people. I even told Claire I had a disability that I put on my application. She was very understanding and supportive. Then in January, things changed. Claire accused me of trying to do her job anytime I suggested something and said I needed to stick to the things I was hired to do and to stop acting like the smartest person in the room. I was pulled into HR about this time and was told Claire made an off-hand comment about my disability and I needed to fill out official paperwork so I would be legally protected. The final straw when Claire yelled at me for making a judgment call when another department needed something from us and I was the only one in our department there, and then asked what my problem was while giving a textbook description of my disability. I went to our department head, John, and told him everything. He told me he’d talk to her and that I should go to HR. I went to HR and everything led to a hostile work environment investigation. I did not want that. The conclusion was there was no hostile work environment and my boss and I have different communication skills. However, during it, it was discovered I had made my coworker, Maddie, feel uncomfortable. No one was written up and nothing was done. Claire, John, and I were each given a different HR class to take. I had to take one about bullying in the workplace. My boss had to take one about the Americans with Disabilities Act. Since this happened, Claire has given me the silent treatment. 95% of our communication is through email. I am no longer privy to all the happenings of our department. I find out things by accident, when I walk in on her and Maddie talking. Claire goes out of her way to be passive-aggressive and petty to me in the emails. My cubicle is right across from her office and she used to always keep her door open, but now she keeps it closed most of the time. She didn’t wish me happy birthday on my birthday, when several people in other departments brought me gifts and cards. However, Maddie’s birthday was a week later and she came in with a card for her. John gives me good feedback, as do the other departments I work with. Is there anything I can do? I’m not exactly ready to run back to HR since this is how we got here. I didn’t expect Claire’s and my relationship to be the same. I just didn’t expect this. Jobs in my field are rare. HR probably did have a legal responsibility to investigate after you reported Claire’s comments; once they’re aware of something like that, they’re legally obligated to take action, even if that’s not what you wanted. But Claire is retaliating against you for talking to HR and for the subsequent investigation, and that’s illegal. Federal law makes it very clear that it’s illegal to retaliate against an employee for making a good-faith complaint of discrimination, even if the complaint were eventually found to be baseless. I know you don’t want to go back to HR, but if you want the situation to change, that’s really the next step. You’d go back to them and explain that Claire’s behavior toward you has noticeably changed since the investigation, that you’re concerned she’s retaliating against you for making a good-faith report, and that you’re formally requesting the company’s assistance in shutting down the retaliation. If you don’t trust HR to handle this competently and think it will make things worse, this may not make sense to do; in that case, you could consider a similar conversation with John, or one with a lawyer. (I am curious about what happened between you and Maddie that led them to send you to an anti-bullying training and whether you think there was any merit to that. The answer wouldn’t change the steps that are available now, but if there were legitimate concerns about your behavior toward Maddie, that probably puts you in a less sympathetic position, although HR would have the same obligations regardless. It would make it messier, though. And also, if HR thinks Claire didn’t create a hostile work environment and this is just different communication styles, then what’s up with them making her take a class on the ADA? It doesn’t smell right.) 2. We’re written up for being one minute late I have worked for manufacturing companies for over 20 years, all in the office and a few of those years as mid-level management. I have a college degree, further education, and am salary. My current employer just implemented writing office staff up for being late. This is not a situation of being 10, 15, or 30 minutes late, nor of chronically being late. This is, “You were one minute late today.” Performance doesn’t matter, staying late or otherwise being early or on time doesn’t matter. Bad weather is not an excuse. Really, no excuse is allowed. And you can be terminated for a few instances in a year. None of these roles see clients in-person or are call center type jobs. Of all the companies I have worked for, this is the second one to implement this. I left the first in part because of it and will be leaving this one. It seems bananapants to me. Is this typical for what others see in this type of company? I get that is exists for the product floor but for salaried office staff? No, this is not typical and yes, it is bananapants. There are jobs where you really do need to be at your desk and ready to work by a specific starting time because you need to answer client calls, etc., and that can be true regardless of whether you have a degree, are salaried, and so forth. But that is not most jobs, and “writing people up” (a fairly ridiculous concept in itself) for being a minute later, regardless of context, is absurd and infantilizing. Related: ridiculously rigid attendance policy 3. My company can’t move past my conduct five years ago I have been with my construction company for 14 years, during which time I have significantly expanded my skill set and reached a senior level with a strong salary. However, my history here is complicated. Five years ago, while struggling with severe alcoholism, I had a significant professional lapse that resulted in my employer giving me an ultimatum: I had to complete rehabilitation and maintain sobriety to remain employed. I have now been sober for five years and have consistently performed as an exemplary employee. While my manager has forgiven me, it is clear that the family who owns the business has not. Despite my contributions, I am consistently passed over for public recognition and achievements, and the environment feels increasingly hostile. I am weighing whether it is better to stay and maintain my current status and salary or if it is time to cut my losses and move to a company where I can have a fresh start. I can sense that they can barely stand the sight of me; I feel like the ultimate pariah and it is very uncomfortable. I would appreciate any guidance you could offer on whether I should stay or begin looking for new opportunities. Yes, start looking! Without question. For whatever reason, they can’t get past what happened, and you’re better off going somewhere else where you can start fresh. Sometimes that happens! When people get used to seeing you a certain way, sometimes it can be really hard for them to see you differently, no matter how much you demonstrate that you’re no longer that same person. Sometimes that’s a failing on their side. Sometimes it’s because the earlier breach of trust can just never really be repaired, even when everyone hopes to. Either way, you’re better making a clean start with a company that doesn’t have that history with you. 4. Employer wants us to report all outside work, not just conflicts of interest My company likes to say they are not trying to be “Big Brother” but seem to enact policies that probe much beyond what other companies in the same industry ever do. I am very used to anti-moonlighting policies and those make sense: don’t do what we pay you to do for other people. Well, my company has a policy we’ve somewhat gotten around but they have recently been changes that makes it a bit harder. They want to know all outside work, including your hat-knitting business, working for a family business, unpaid time you may volunteer for anything that may constitute a business, how many hours per week, etc. Everyone must submit a form with “nothing to report” or report anything else and attest that they’ve covered all scenarios. My work is in technical compliance, and I would never moonlight without explicit transparency for a number of reasons. I have a part-time side hustle in a creative realm completely unrelated to this work. There is zero overlap, and I do the side work under an alias. You could never google my name and find my side project. My boss knows the general nature of the side work, and has been fine with me not reporting it. Many of us feel this policy is reaching too far into our personal lives and demanding information that doesn’t impact our jobs or our time at work. How should we handle this? Our company is shifting more and more toward Big Brother tracking and monitoring and it may be a mass exodus around here… Most likely, they’re requesting it because they’re concerned that if they leave it up to each individual employee to decide what’s relevant, someone may make the wrong call and not report something that’s actually a potential conflict of interest. They’ve decided it’s safer to ask you to report it all so that they can decide if it’s a conflict or not. Depending on the type of work you do for your company, that’s not necessarily outrageous; there are jobs where that would make sense. If you think it doesn’t make sense for your line of work, you and a group of coworkers can certainly try pushing back, explaining why you think it’s unnecessary — but all it takes to cause this kind of policy change is them having one person who decided something wasn’t relevant to report when it actually was. They may be overreaching in other areas, but this one probably isn’t worth the capital to try to fight. Related: interview with a conflict of interest professional 5. Companies promoting their businesses in comments on my LinkedIn posts I post regularly on LinkedIn and have a good following in my industry. This past week, a company liked my post and added a comment, which was a promotion for their business. I’m considering deleting it because I don’t want my posts/profile used to promote other businesses. On the other hand, it reflects on them and maybe it seems quite dramatic to delete it. What are your views? Delete it without hesitation. It’s spam! There’s nothing dramatic about deleting spam. You may also like:how should I act after reporting my boss to HR?my employer fined me $90 for being lateI was written up for having a visible thong outside of work { 283 comments }
swinging grannies, the misdirected critique, and other times you said the exact wrong thing at work by Alison Green on April 14, 2026 Last month we talked about times when you said the exact wrong thing at work, and here are 20 (!) of my favorite stories you shared. There are also many not included below but which you’ll be seeing in Mortification Week later this year. 1. The insult I once worked as an editor and I told an author that if they tried a certain method to make a certain change to their paper, it “might be worth a shit.” Shot. I meant shot. And I did not catch it before hitting send. 2. The inexplicable sneer I had a phone screening for a job many years ago. There was a particular way of doing a standard task that I used more as a freelancer than in my current job because my boss at my job thought that method was inferior to another way. So of course they asked about it, and — even though I actually disagreed with my boss! — what came out of my mouth was, “Well, we don’t do that at Current Company” in the most contemptuous tone possible. It was like I’d suddenly channeled my boss. I tried to immediately correct by saying I used the skill in freelance work and I disagreed with Current Job’s position but you will not be surprised to hear I did not get any further in that hiring process. 3. The memory I told a room full of people living with dementia that I had “the world’s worst memory.” Do I? Do I really? 4. The criticism I’m a marketing copywriter. At a job several years ago, the creative director was showing me a print mail flyer that she wanted to work with me on updating. As she was going over the changes she wanted to make to the design, I nodded in agreement and said, “Oh that sounds amazing! And good thing, this current design is awful. Who designed this?” She waited a beat before saying, “I did.” I wanted to crawl into a hole and die. 5. The poster A coworker made a poster describing the work her church’s mission group did overseas, which included some health care/education outreach activities not routinely available for women in remote areas of that country. Under the accomplishments section, the poster read: “WE TOUCHED 75 WOMEN IN THEIR HOMES!” That was over 10 years ago and I still use that phrase as a writing example where meaning has completely changed without key details. 6. The compliment My boss had a meeting with local donors and the CEO happened to be present as well. In an effort to try and give a compliment about the size of the company’s current endowment, my boss instead said to the donor, “Have you met my CEO? He’s very well-endowed.” 7. The right hand I was once being interviewed for a job by a man with one arm. I assured him before I left his office that he could count on me to be his right hand. 8. The brains One Halloween, I dressed like a zombie at work. My boss let me know that he was heading out to lunch so I responded with, “Get some brains while you’re out!” After I said it I was like oh well … I’m a zombie, never mind, but luckily he had a sense of humor. 9. The bad example I used to use the phrase “in case you get hit by a bus” as an example of why documented procedures were important. Not long after I started my current job, one of my colleagues kindly let me know that a very beloved member of another team had actually been hit by a bus, so I might want to use different wording. 10. The children’s librarian Children’s librarian: I have put my foot in my mouth many a time during storytime. Once I implied that we should appreciate how cute the kids were because we weren’t sure if they would be here next year — then tried to overexplain while parents stared at me with jaws agape. Another time I complimented the kids on their blowing skills. My dad was in the audience with my niece that day as a bonus. We were pretending to blow out candles. It might not have raised any eyebrows if I hadn’t turned bright red and started laughing maniacally. I’m usually very good at storytime. 11. The interview I work in HR and when this happened I was applying for an HR manager role and had over 10 years of experience. I was meeting with several people one after the other and when one asked me to come to her side of the desk so she could share information on her computer, I said, “Sure, you’re already harassing me so why not?” Why and how this came out of my mouth was a mystery then and still is 10 years later. 12. The microbiologist Oh man, I work in Microbiology. “I think I have gonorrhea.” Or any other number of things. Usually followed by, “I don’t have gonorrhea, I have gonorrhea.” 13. The client service I was following up with a client who hadn’t responded when I realized I ended my email with, “If you have any questions, don’t call me!” 14. The question I’m in OB-GYN. Many years ago I had a patient who was here for an abortion. I noticed she was holding some stuff in her hands, as we talked, and she seemed to be annoyed to be dealing with it. I encouraged her to set the things down on the desk. “Thanks,” she said. “I don’t know why but my husband wanted me to hold his wallet for him.” “Can’t he keep it in his pants?” I asked the patient. Who was there for a pregnancy she didn’t want. We both recognized what I’d said at the same time. Fortunately she thought it was hilarious. I hope I brought some light to her on a rough day. 15. The poor choice I walked to our print room and saw two of the accountants pulling apart a printer to find a jam. I laughed and said, “What, is the printer guy dead?” Yes. Yes he was. 16. The battle against the aged I used to do charity collecting with friends at university, for a different charity each week. So, one week the patter was, “Could you spare any change to help fight cancer?” and the next was, “Could you spare any change for [UK charity] Help the Aged?” Looked over during the second week’s session to see some passersby in absolute hysterics because my friend had asked them for change “to help fight the aged.” 17. The pic At my previous job, I was in charge of onboarding all new hires. We used the DISC (I know, I know) and hung up each person’s profile with a picture of them near their desk. Usually, I would say, “Can you please send me your DISC pic?” but once, to a male new hire, I said, “Can you please send me your dick pic?” I quickly corrected myself, turned eight shades of red, and then chose to rephrase my statement moving forward. I still cringe when I think about it. 18. The swinging grannies I work in the performing arts, and at one interview for an adult education role I expressed my desire to extend community aerial circus workshops to older people by declaring, “I want to get grannies swinging!’’ Cue irrecoverable giggles from the panel. 19. The fashion There was this person in my office who always had the BEST outfits — super well-fitting, super put-together yet fun, made animal prints (something that’s not always my thing) look super cool … Aaand for whatever reason, anytime I wanted to complement her, my brain decided to tell her how “fun” her outfits looked. Which, like, you can get away with once or twice, but I said this so often she must have thought I was determined to passive-aggressively insult her fashion sense. We also worked on different teams, so this was probably 70% of my interactions with this person. I genuinely thought she was very cool and wanted to be work friends, but I guess my brain was intent on sabotoging me. 20. The father About 20 years ago, I worked in a group of mostly under 25-year-olds in a call center. We were a high-spirited bunch new-ish to the working world and not particularly serious. There was a lunchroom with a big TV where we would eat in shifts, chit chat and watch junk TV programs, including one where the host would announce “You ARE” or You ARE NOT” the father after a mother’s paternity test. One time at a meeting right after lunch, our boss announced she would be taking time off because she was pregnant. Out of my mouth flew these words: “Congratulations! Do you know who the father is?” You may also like:I like to give small gifts at work -- am I doing anything wrong?my new coworker is putting fake mistakes in my work so she can tell our boss I'm bad at my jobemployer rejected me, then sent a list of everything I did wrong { 327 comments }
is it wrong to hire a replacement before an employee is fired? by Alison Green on April 14, 2026 A reader writes: My company has a habit of recruiting and hiring a replacement for fired employees before the person has actually been fired. The replacement doesn’t start work until after the original employee is gone, but the company is recruiting and interviewing before they’ve told the person they will be out of a job (and the person has no idea the company is actively interviewing for their spot). I suppose that this is … practical? But it feels so slimy! They’ve done this secret recruitment, not advertising the position in their normal ways so no one sees that it’s open and figures out what’s happening. It also prevents anyone internally from applying for these positions because they obviously don’t advertise them internally so the person being fired doesn’t find out. It all feels sneaky and gross to me, and makes me think I would have no idea if my job were in jeopardy (since the people who were fired were blindsided, no PIP, performance conversations, etc, which is another bad practice of course). Am I overreacting? I answer this question — and two others — over at Inc. today, where I’m revisiting letters that have been buried in the archives here from years ago (and sometimes updating/expanding my answers to them). You can read it here. Other questions I’m answering there today include: Should I ask older employees if they know basic functions in Word and Excel? Should remote workers be paid less because they have fewer work-related expenses? You may also like:I'm training my replacement -- and she's condescending, rude, and won't listenI think my boss just hired my replacement, but hasn't told mecan I ask someone to interview his replacement so that I can fire him? { 175 comments }
my boss overshares, makes sex jokes, and gives me unsolicited birth advice by Alison Green on April 14, 2026 A reader writes: I work at a feminist tech company. Our app is focused on sex and intimacy. We’re a very small team, primarily remote, but every month we have an in-person get-together and workshop. The issue is with the CEO of the company, who also oversees all the engineers. I’m not an engineer and I don’t report to him, but I am in a director role and the nature of my job does mean that I have to talk to him a lot. For the most part, I respect this man professionally. I think he leads the engineers well, and he takes my advice seriously when it’s about something I’m clearly the expert in. However, he’s a chronic over-sharer, discusses things that make me uncomfortable, and most recently, after I’ve told the company I’m expecting a child, has started giving me unsolicited birth and parenting advice. I’m writing this the day after he started telling me about the benefits of home birthing over hospital birthing, which I felt was a step too far — no matter what your stance is, it feels very out of bounds to weigh in on your employee’s birth plan when she didn’t ask! The first time we met in person he told me about the problems in his marriage and his ethically non-monogamous / swinger lifestyle. He also makes dirty jokes (admittedly to everyone, not just to me!), and yesterday also told me about the softcore “porn with plot” books he enjoys reading. I know we work on a product that is related to sex, so some of these have come up in a way that was at least vaguely related to a work discussion. But I haven’t found that anyone else in the company takes the conversation to uncomfortable places quite as often. We all make jokes and have a pretty convivial vibe (which I like!), but it’s starting to get out of hand. I do find his personality in general just not to my taste, which I worry colors my experience of him, and I also recognize that I’m generally more reserved and less “free” — I don’t like discussing my sex life or bodily functions even with my friends, I’m not somebody who enjoys physical contact, and, while I’m super excited for the baby, I’m just not the kind of person who enjoys discussing symptoms / supplements / birth / etc. with anyone, let alone the CEO of my company! I have made it pretty clear (in my opinion, at least) that I am, for lack of a better word, a “prude” and clarified that I wasn’t really the kind to talk about my pregnancy at work, but it hasn’t stopped. I look visibly uncomfortable when these things happen, but that doesn’t put a stop to them. Most of my exposure is limited to these monthly in-person events, but it’s wearing on me. He’s open about being neurodivergent, and he takes criticism really personally. I’ve seen him get extremely touchy when someone gives feedback on the app or disagrees with him in a meeting. The people I’d otherwise complain to — those I work with directly and my manager (who is also our sole HR person) — are extremely close with him. Some are even family. It feels like it isn’t an option because of the years-long personal relationships they have. I love my job. I really love the company’s mission, I like the team I work with. Being fully remote is an absolute godsend which means I’ve been able to move closer to my family and enjoy sunny weather all year round, I am paid well, and I find my work really fulfilling. This isn’t a bridge I want to burn, or a job I want to leave. I’m keen to set some boundaries, but I’m nervous about the fallout, and have really no sense of how to at this point! I wrote back and asked, “When you told you him you didn’t want to talk about your pregnancy at work, do you remember exactly what you said? And what did he say in response?” Admittedly, I was way lighter than I wish I’d been in hindsight. I’d told him and my manager because they were senior leadership, and I wasn’t keeping it a “secret” anymore at all (I’m six months along, so really starting to show anyway). He mentioned me “having a child soon” loudly enough in a small group setting that I felt a little obliged to share and say, “I’m having a child,” etc. (this was a little annoying, but I did tell him that it was okay to let people know and not treat it like a secret, so that’s on me). When people started congratulating me, I took the opportunity to say, “Thanks so much — I’m really excited! Although I’ve really learned about myself that I find talking about it quite embarrassing, haha.” I can’t remember whether he reacted specifically because this was said to the group, but he launched into full pregnancy stuff straight afterwards, asking me about cravings and recommending a supplement for thrush (?). Regarding the other stuff, I know he knows it makes me uncomfortable because 1) I say stuff like, “Oh, I’m just quite prudish, isn’t that ironic given our industry” a lot and 2) he’s poked fun of me for tuning out during an extended dirty joke bit a few of my colleagues were doing. Okay, yeah, I think you were not really as direct as you’ll need to be with him. He’s not picking up on “I find it quite embarrassing to talk about” (whether that’s pregnancy, or describing yourself as “prudish” about sexual humor or so forth) or uncomfortable looks and is going to need you to say, more or less, “Please do not do this.” Specifically, the next time he crosses boundaries about pregnancy and birth, say this: “I really don’t want to talk about it at work, thank you for understanding.” And if he continues: “I’m sorry if I wasn’t clear — this topic is completely off-limits for me at work. I am just not comfortable with it and need to change the topic.” Similarly, if he ever again says anything about problems in his marriage or his non-monogamous relationships or swinging (!) or the soft porn he likes to read, say, “I need to stop you there — this is way too personal and I am not comfortable hearing it at work.” The next time he makes a dirty joke, say, “I really don’t like hearing dirty jokes at work. Please don’t make them around me.” I know you’re worried because you’ve seen him react badly to criticism, but (a) this isn’t criticism; it’s you setting a boundary about what discussions you will have at work and (b) because hints haven’t worked, a direct “I’m uncomfortable; please stop” is the only effective way to deal with it. If he’s otherwise a decent guy, he might be embarrassed in the moment or even feel stung, but that’s okay and he will get over it. If he gets angry or holds it against you, then he’s really not a decent guy and it’s better to get clarity on that sooner rather than later anyway. You might also consider confiding in some of the people you put in the category of “people I’d complain to if they weren’t so close to him.” It doesn’t need to be a formal complaint (although you certainly have standing for it to be); it could simply be, “I’m really having trouble with this and wonder if you can back me up when those topics come up.” If you frame it in terms of asking for their help, it might be pretty effective … and if they’re close to him, they likely know he’s like this and know it doesn’t land well with everyone. The fact that they’re close could actually make them more comfortable helping to manage this aspect of his work behavior once they know there’s a need to. (Or, of course, it might not — but it’s a reasonable thing to ask for advice on and for help with, and it shouldn’t blow up your relationships there unless this company is so dysfunctional that the relationships aren’t especially worth saving anyway.) You can do all of the above despite working on a product that’s related to sex. When your work intersects with sex in some way, it does mean that there will be more sex-related topic in your office than there otherwise should be — but it should be work-related sex talk, and this is not. You may also like:my boss jokes about our bodies, our sex lives, our pregnancies, and moremy boss wants help with her dating app profilemy employee makes off-color jokes { 210 comments }
group work is driving me mad, giving feedback when I haven’t seen the problem myself, and more by Alison Green on April 14, 2026 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. My coworkers’ approach to group work is driving me mad At my workplace, we’re regularly required to give short presentations on how our work is coming along. As we work in teams, the teams need to present together. It seems like every time I come up against the same dynamic, and it’s driving me up a tree: For example, Fergus and I need to do a 5-10 minute presentation on sales in a certain district. We have to make a PowerPoint and a summarizing document to be shared with everyone. We split up the work so that we’re each handling one half of both the PowerPoint and the document, and set up a check-in meeting a few days before the meeting to run through the presentation. Fergus completes his work just a couple of hours before the check-in, so I’m looking at the document throughout the week, seeing nothing happen, and getting freaked out that I’m going to have to pick up his work. After the first check-in, more work needs to be done on the presentation, so we schedule another check-in. Again, nothing seems to be happening ahead of the second check-in, so I break and just go in and do his work. Fergus expresses remorse at not having done his part and, to make amends, goes in and makes unnecessary changes that make the presentation worse (think randomly italicizing words or making all the text different colors), necessitating me going in again and reverting the changes because it was fine before. Altogether, doing the presentation together has taken twice the amount of time it would have taken me to do it alone, and it’s eaten into other important work I need to do. By this point, I am livid and Fergus can tell, so doing the presentation becomes clunky and joyless, even though I actually really enjoy giving presentations. This is just one example, but it’s not specific to Fergus. Fergus is also not a bad guy, and I don’t think he’s deliberately trying to get a free ride. What I’ve shared above is a pretty specific example — not every person is formatting materials like this! However, the dynamic of me picking up other people’s work when it’s not done on time or correctly has happened with so many different people that I’m beginning to think it’s a me problem. It’s probably unreasonable to ask people to get their work done ahead of time so that I’m not stressed about it. And I know that there are certain aspects that I can just let go. It’s just that when a person seems to be on their way to giving me the runaround, I automatically get in that headspace of, “Here we go again! I might as well do the whole thing myself since that’s what’s going to happen anyway!” And then it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Can you offer some reframing so that I don’t lose my ever-loving mind? Are there some scripts I can use to make sure my coworkers and I are on the same page in terms of expectations? First, how much does it matter if these presentations are perfect? Are you correcting them to a standard used by other people presenting or to a higher one? If the latter, it’s worth revisiting if it would actually be fine to put less energy into perfecting these. Or, can you divide the work differently — like instead of each being responsible for half the PowerPoint and half the document, can you each take the entirety of one? (Probably not if you’re presenting jointly, but it’s worth asking.) And if you’re nervous when you don’t see work being done earlier because you know from past history that it means changes will be needed at the last minute, why not suggest checking in earlier in the process? But also, you need to stop looking at your partners’ work until the actual check-in, because that’s just making you antsy and adding to the problem — and the deadline needs to be the real deadline (without a secret deadline earlier in the week). And you definitely need to stop going in and doing your coworkers’ work for them just because it’s not done early; that’s not fair to them (they may have time carved out to do it later and it’s not okay for you to just decide to do it yourself) and it’s compounding the problem. If you find that trying all of this leaves you with substandard work, then it’s time to talk to your boss about what’s going wrong — but first do the above and see where that gets you. 2. Giving feedback to a staff member when I haven’t seen the problem myself I work in a structure with four managers and four officers, where the direct reporting lines don’t really correspond to working areas. So as a manager, I have regular and comprehensive catch-ups with my reporting officer (Lily), but I don’t actually get to see what she’s like to work with, only what she tells me. And I see enough to have given her some development pointers over the last year, but we don’t have any formal 360 review type mechanisms in place. One of my fellow managers has told me that she and the officer she manages have both found Lily isn’t great at collaborating — she can guard projects a little too closely. I’d love to work with her on developing this skill, but I don’t want it to sound like people are coming to me unprompted complaining about her. I don’t think this is a failing, just an area of working where someone relatively junior and inexperienced can stand to improve. Can you suggest any scripts for how to bring this up? Be transparent: “I periodically talk to other managers and offices about how things are going and where we can develop, and one things I’ve heard is that they’d like better collaboration on things like X and Y. When you’re the owner of a project, sometimes it can be easy to guard it so closely that other people feel shut out from opportunities to engage on it — but we want them to have chances to hear about progress, give input, and spot problems that they’re especially well positioned to spot (and which we may not be). Can we talk about how you’re handling input from others — and where we should welcome it, and what to do when you’re not sure a particular piece of feedback makes sense for the work?” Before you do this, though, go back to the other manager and get more information about exactly how this is playing out (if you don’t already have those specifics ). You want to know exactly where Lily is struggling with this since your guidance will differ depending on what that looks like. For example, your focus would be different if she’s getting defensive when people offer input versus never giving them chances to offer it in the first place, and so forth). Alternately, in some cases you could just ask, “What are you doing to ensure we get input from the X and Y teams?” or “What kind of input has Jane offered on this?” (and then, “What was your thinking on that?”) and dig into it that way, or even sit in on a couple of relevant meetings where you could observe it firsthand and then give her feedback afterwards. But this isn’t something you should need to dance around. 3. Can you use a follow-up email to “fix” responses you messed up in the interview? Can post-interview thank-you email be used for other purposes — namely, is it an opportunity to shore up responses where I know I didn’t nail it in the interview? I tend to either nail or whiff my interview questions entirely based on whether I anticipated and prepped for the questions in advance, so inevitably I have at least one or two questions where I fail to answer them well. Can I use the thank you email to share some of what I wish I’d said on reflection? I’m imagining something like this: first, thanking them as normal. Then, if the question I whiffed was about X, I’d say, “As someone who does X in my work — such as with Example A, B, and C — I continue to be excited about the opportunity to leverage these skills in service of….” And if you whiffed more than one question, can you address multiple things? I think trying to recover from more than two issues would make the email way too long, but wondering if “thank you, highlight area X, highlight area Y” is also crossing that line. Yes, you can use your follow-up email to correct or expand on things that came up in the interview, including things you don’t think you answered well. But your proposed example is too subtle! You should be more direct about it. For example: “I realized that when you asked about X, I should have shared ____.” Keep this relatively short — a paragraph or two at most. And I’d limit it to just one or two things. The second can be framed as, “I also wanted to mention…” More than that will come across a little weirdly, but it’s fine to do this with one or two topics. Related: thank-you notes: they’re not about thanking anyone 4. Explaining minor injuries at work I’ve recently developed a minor skin condition on my hands. It’s easily treatable and not something I think about or worry about too much. However, the medicated lotion makes the skin on my hands incredibly thin, so they’re covered with scars and scrapes constantly. This in and of itself isn’t even that bad, but even a minor scratch or bump causes me to start bleeding. This morning I was running to a meeting, sat down, and realized I had blood running down my hand where I must have bumped it getting out of the car. How do I address it so my coworkers aren’t worried? I don’t really need help or anything. I keep bandages everywhere and I usually just excuse myself for a moment, clean off the blood and come back. I’ve even started bleeding in a meeting after I hit my hand on the table! But to reiterate, these aren’t things that really hurt at all and I don’t want people to be concerned, but I appreciate that they are. Keep doing what you’re doing — excuse yourself to handle it and then come back. You don’t need to say anything beyond that. But if someone expresses concern, just say, “Oh, it’s just a minor skin condition that means I bleed easily right now, but nothing to worry about.” People will take their cues from you, so if you’re breezy about it, that’ll likely be that. 5. When I’m a witness for someone else’s complaint, can I share my own experience? My coworker, Vila, has raised an official grievance against his manager, Servalan, for bullying and discrimination. I’ve been asked to be a witness in the investigation, and I’m not sure what to expect in the meeting or what my responsibilities are. I haven’t directly seen Servalan’s behavior in this case because Vila is in a different office but, based on how she treated me for the four months I reported to her, I absolutely believe it. The only reason I didn’t raise a grievance myself is because I spoke to my skip-level boss and had my reporting line changed. Can I talk about Servalan’s treatment of me in the meeting, or am I expected to keep solely to how she treated Vila? Yes, you can share your own experience with Servalan. Be up-front about that: “I haven’t directly seen Servalan’s behavior with Vila because I’m in a different office, but I have my own firsthand experience with her that aligns with what Vila is reporting. Would you like me to share what I experienced myself?” You may also like:my employee meets deadlines ... but is much slower than the rest of usno, group work in school is not "just like in the real work world"I'm helping a peer with a project and she's wasting a huge amount of my time { 285 comments }
what do interviewers hope to learn from asking why you’re leaving your job? by Alison Green on April 13, 2026 A reader writes: There have a been a few questions recently that are along the lines of “How do I explain that (insert reason here) is why I want to leave my job?” I am curious what interviewers are getting out of asking this question. People leave for a multitude of reasons or no reason at all, and are going to put the best spin possible on the answer if they are asked. How does what someone states as their reason for leaving translate to helpful information for hiring? Because sometimes the answer gives really helpful information. Not always, but enough of the time to make it worth inquiring. For example, if a candidate says they’re leaving their job because it involves too much X when they want to focus on Y and the job they’re interviewing for has a huge X component or very little Y, that’s relevant info. If a candidate says they’ve disliked an aspect of the culture at their current job that happens to be something they’re going to encounter a lot at the new job too, that’s relevant too. It can also be a way of simply understanding where the person is in their professional journey and what’s important to them. The answer can provide helpful context for how the person sees their career progressing — like if they say they’re interviewing for this role because they want more responsibility, or because they’re excited about how much X this job entails because they’ve always been energized by that in past roles. Or as an interviewer, it might not be clear why someone would be looking to move on very soon after starting their job, and an answer can put that in context (like that their team is having rolling layoffs, or they thought they were coming on board to do X but it turned out the team really needs Y). Also, not everyone does put the best spin on why they’re leaving! Some people are extremely candid, far more than it’s in their interests to be, and so as an interviewer you’ll sometimes hear all about how much they hate their boss or their clients or that they got fired for letting their friends steal, or all sorts of other useful info to consider. In those cases, not only do you learn whatever is said, but you also learn something interesting about the person’s judgment in choosing to say it. And enough people do answer this way that it makes sense to create an opening for it, because who knows what you might learn. That’s not to say the question is intended as a “gotcha”; it’s not. There are just lots of ways it can elicit useful information. You may also like:my daughter refuses to tell interviewers why she left her last jobhow honest can I be with recruiters that money is the only reason I want to leave my current job?do I need to give interviewers a great reason for why I'm looking to leave my current job? { 235 comments }
is it a bad idea to work for a first-time manager? by Alison Green on April 13, 2026 A reader writes: I need help in assessing the pros and cons of going to work for someone with no experience managing employees. I have over 10 years of experience leading teams or managing programs in IT and am looking at senior mid-level roles. I’m currently in the process of interviewing for a role that seems very promising and checks off almost all my boxes. Yet in the process of learning about the hiring manager, I discovered that this person is a recent graduate (less than five years ago) who was rapidly promoted into a role that now sees them managing people. I would be the first person they hire and manage. This is concerning to me, as I’m afraid that someone with little experience may need too much managing up. I also know that people with little to no management experience have the tendency to be micromanagers as they gain confidence in their managerial abilities. I have a meeting with this new manager in a couple of days, so will be learning more about what they see the day-to-day being like. If it weren’t for the major pay increase this new role would have, I would decline going further with the interview process. Is the pay increase worth taking a risk on a new manager or is this a red flag that I should not ignore despite the amount of money being offered? I answer this question over at Inc. today, where I’m revisiting letters that have been buried in the archives here from years ago (and sometimes updating/expanding my answers to them). You can read it here. You may also like:new manager keeps telling us we're frustrated and defensiveis it a bad idea to work with my boyfriend?new manager keeps pushing hard for me to be his friend { 71 comments }