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Today I started a new job as team leader in a new company (150 employees in total, the branch in my city counts about 35-40 people).

It is in IT and IT consultancy (company is more towards consultancy side whereas the local branch is more a software house with projects developed inside, not at clients locations). The location is EU.

I was hired after a three rounds interview process:

  1. With an HR guy.
  2. With the senior team leader and two senior developers of the team I was supposed to join.
  3. With a senior manager (who introduces herself as the manager of all the projects for that specific client of the company and should have been the boss of my boss).

All the interviewers were very friendly and I was extremely happy when I signed the contract.

To my enormous surprise, I found that all these five people left the company before I started and when they interviewed me they were all in their notice period (one of the senior developers was even on his very last day!).

I’ve never been in this situation before: is this a red flag? Or is this a red flag only if other conditions are met? Or I’m overthinking?

I passed my morning with an HR person from headquarters that came here to help me with papers. Apparently they had not found a replacement for the HR guy that interviewed me (and my impression is they didn't try at all) and that was the only HR here. I tried to ask two or three questions about the situation, but she responded in an evasive way using a tone between embarrassed and annoyed. I didn't push further. I've not yet talked to other team members.

Big Update

I have a big update. Last week I asked many questions to teammates and yesterday I took part in a dinner with 20/22 coworkers, the 5 people that interviewed me, 5 or 6 people from the client I was hired to work for and a few guys from Kate’s new company (Kate is the senior manager of my last interview). Situation is much much worse than I thought. Summarize by points:

  • Kate directly hired all (except 4) people (including the HR guy) of the local branch in the last 4 and a half years. With the exception of those 4, everybody was used to report to her, was used to work on her projects (all for one client) and didn’t have any contacts with the rest of the company
  • The HR person that came in for me on my first day was the first person of the company they saw in the last 2 years. CEO, the direct report of Kate, didn’t show up for at least 3 years and she phone him 1 time every 3 or 4 months
  • The company is purely consulting, whereas my local branch is a software house and Kate was trying to start the development of a product The gains brought last year from my local branch were equal to the rest of the company
  • The product imagined by Kate was studied 4 hands with the client and the contracts were already written: my company was supposed to develop the product for 1 year, then the client committed itself to buy it and continue the development. My company step in and blocked everything intimating to Kate to leave the company
  • Kate found a position as international division manager in a new company and more or less everybody in my local branch are going to follow her (or already did it, as the 4 people that interviewed me): last week 3 left, during this week 4 or 5 will leave, for the middle of March there will be me and 2 or 3 others that had not already decided to leave.
  • The client already has terminated one of the contracts with my company and is going to terminate the other 4 soon. Of course they already signed new contracts with Kate’s new company (as the client’s people and Kate’s new coworkers confirmed at the dinner)
  • Talking privately to me, Kate explained what has happened: they interviewed me not to hire me where they were working at the time but to hire me in the new company. In fact they gave a negative opinion of me to the headquarters HR office. But because of this (probably to make a last spite to Kate), headquarters HR proposed me a very good contract
  • Finally Kate said that she already has a contract with my name and better conditions at her new company for me and she is waiting me to sign it. Given the situation, I’m strongly thinking to accept

tl;dr: This is definitely a huge red flag. Everybody is going to follow the senior manager to her new company. The client also is following her. My local branch is going to die soon.

Final Update

I moved to Kate's new company at the middle of March. I really enjoy the work and the people here. I'm working in the team I was supposed to work in at the ex company (with few additions) and in September we will begin the development of the product that Kate and the client designed.

During the few weeks I was in the old company I did not have access to any company platform, even code repositories or email client (I was forced to used web based client) and I had literally nothing to do. Last person left at the begin of June (even the 4 people not reporting to Kate left the company). At some point in April, internet connection was no more available. In June even electric power was disconnected. Nobody from the company showed up.

My coworkers have a good relationship with the building receptionist of the building where the old company had his office. They said that all utilities were disconnected but everything is still there (desks, furnishings, servers and other IT stuff and specially all laptops of former employees). The only actions we see from our ex company are:

  • Remove my city office from their website page "Where we are" (and had it removed from Google Maps)
  • Remove from their website any reference to the client
  • Remove from their website 2 successful projects related to Kate and her team
Alexey B
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    Were all those people replaced already? It's certainly not a very positive point as this means high turnover and having to deal with lots of new people, but it's even worse if they haven't been replaced and you're lacking resources... – jcaron Feb 11 '19 at 13:20
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    Please, could you indicate industry and location (country or state should be enough). Some places have higher turn over as a normal thing. Startups in California, IT sectors in India are two that I know are much higher than where I am in Embedded Software in the UK's M4 corridor. Where I am it would be weird, in other places not so much. Hopefully, you are on a short notice period initially so you can leave if you decide things are not to your liking. – TafT Feb 11 '19 at 13:53
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    Have you asked if they have a workplace Lottery Club? Maybe, asking if they HAD a workplace lottery club would be more appropriate. – B540Glenn Feb 11 '19 at 19:00
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    @alexeyb please do give us an update in a couple weeks and again in a couple months. You should probably do an answer, and mark it as the accepted one. – Criggie Feb 11 '19 at 23:52
  • @jcaron none of the people that left has been replaced. For the HR replacement I'm 99% sure that they did not yet started a search – Alexey B Feb 12 '19 at 07:58
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    @TafT industry is IT and IT consultancy (company is more towards consultancy side whereas local branch is more a software house with projects developed inside not at clients locations). Location is EU. In my experience such a fast turn over is not standard in my country. I have to serve a 6 month probation period, so I have tons of time ;) – Alexey B Feb 12 '19 at 08:03
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    @Criggie I'll update the question for sure as soon as I'll found more informations – Alexey B Feb 12 '19 at 08:04
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    @JoeStrazzere - how exactly is he going to figure it out if not by asking questions? You're talking as if simply occupying office space you gain knowledge by some sort of osmosis. – Davor Feb 12 '19 at 11:14
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    @JoeStrazzere - I'm am saying that spending 10 years in the office without asking questions is little better than useless. How is he going to figure out why all those people left if not by asking questions? Should he eavesdrop on HR or something? – Davor Feb 12 '19 at 13:47
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    @Davor not osmosis, but observation. A perfectly reasonable way to gain knowledge. – stannius Feb 12 '19 at 16:39
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    @stannius - what could he possibly observe that would let him find out why those people quit? – Davor Feb 12 '19 at 20:02
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    How many days or weeks were there between when you did the interview(s) and when you started the job? It's possible that each left soon after interviewing you which isn't a particularly good sign for you, either! :-p – tudor -Reinstate Monica- Feb 13 '19 at 00:30
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    @Davor how could he possibly NOT observe it? If your boss is abusive and yells at you for something not your fault, it might be a reason they quit. If deadlines are way tighter than humanly possible, it might be a reason they quit. If you don't get payed on time, it might be a reason they quit. If nothing stands out, then you can THEN safely assume they quit for reasons not related to the job. This is really simple and obvious. It would not take much time at all. No idea how you don't get it. – user87779 Feb 13 '19 at 06:29
  • @tudor First interview in middle December, second and last one at December end. I started 2 days ago, second week of February. As far as I know 1 of the senior developers is in his last day when interviewed me, the other left the company between January and the week before I started – Alexey B Feb 13 '19 at 07:43
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    From experience, many people consider their future around the New Year (whatever New Year that may be), Considering that there was a 6-8 week gap, I'm not surprised that at least one of them left, and I'd be more of the opinion that it's just a random cluster. It's also alot harder to find new people in that period with less staff to do the hiring and more people on holiday, not reading advertisements. I'd enjoy the peace and quiet and the ability to make things work the way you want them. You have alot more power right now so I'd use that to shine. :-) – tudor -Reinstate Monica- Feb 14 '19 at 00:31
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    @alexeyb ok now you have a good intel about the future of your local branch. Maybe. HOWEVER are you SURE you want to go to work for Kate? Her behaviour seems shady (at best, possibly illegal, for sure extremely unprofessional). I'd think twice before committing with someone like that – Adriano Repetti Mar 25 '19 at 09:50
  • @AdrianoRepetti I just updated my question where you can see that I'm happily working with Kate. In my opinion all fault are on my ex company: as far as I'm concerned, Kate acted well (even if she was unprofessional or illegal as you say, this should not be my problem) – Alexey B Jul 26 '19 at 07:00
  • @AlexeyB "...even if she was unprofessional or illegal as you say, this should not be my problem...". Not everyone might agree but she is your boss then it's your call. – Adriano Repetti Jul 26 '19 at 08:24
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    Thanks for the follow-ups, that's not common. So many people just leave and never tell the rest of the community what actually went down. – Tom Sep 19 '20 at 09:23

16 Answers16

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Everyone involved in my hiring process left the company before I started: is this a red flag?

It's definitely a little weird. I've never heard of a company having an interview panel entirely composed on people on their way out especially across job functions. I would at least expect your hiring manager to be the same.

Normally you don't use people in their notice period to hire new people unless it's for their replacement and the employee is leaving on good terms. This situation could indicate a high turnover rate the company with very few people able to fill critical functions. Hence using people in their notice period to fill an interview panel.

If I were you, I'd keep an eye open for anything strange going on, but you're at the company now so you might as well enjoy your new role.

Robbie Dee
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jcmack
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    You may fall through the cracks and end up with the potentially envious position of being paid to do nothing... I mean, try your best of course, but if they start paying you regularly, and for some reason do not give you work, then... of course look for a new job. – Nelson Feb 11 '19 at 14:04
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Yes, it is a red flag.

That amount of turnover and the fact that none of the people who you talked to during the interview process are now still in the company is definitely beyond unusual and is certainly problematic for you.

That doesn't mean you should pack up and leave. But it definitely is something to be aware of and take into account.

For once, nobody except you now knows what was discussed during the hiring process. If there were any promises made, anything said that is important for your work, now is the time to get it in writing, at least in e-mail. Ask for clarification regarding these points:

"Mr X mentioned during interview that ABC. As you know he left since then. Can you clarify for me if ABC is still the case or if not, what I should adjust to?"

You should also keep your eyes open for other red flags. These people might have left for harmless reasons and that they all left at roughly the same time might just be a coincidence. But it's too much of a coincidence to just shrug it off. If you see no other alarming signs, that's good. But be aware.

And lastly, when people leave, they always leave a gap. This company now has a lot of gaps in a small area. Be aware of that. Workflows might be interrupted, responsibilities unclear, knowledge lost. This can be problematic and is a risk as well as an opportunity for you.

tl;dr: Red flag: Yes. But if you keep your eyes open, might turn this way or that for you.

Giacomo1968
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Tom
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  • nobody except you now knows what was discussed during the hiring process., wouldn't that have been carefully documented in writing? – gerrit Feb 11 '19 at 13:34
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    @gerrit in a perfect world, it would be part of the contract. But typically, more things than are legally relevant are discussed. That might be workflows, responsibilities, contact people, project status details and many other things. – Tom Feb 11 '19 at 13:48
  • @gerrit I have a few emails from the supposed boss of my boss where she talks of the project I was supposed to join and a generic list of my tasks. Nothing more detaild – Alexey B Feb 12 '19 at 08:07
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Maybe it's the other way around: given they were all going away, they needed to hire ASAP to replace key figures in the company.

And, it's normal in the IT world to have a very quick turnover, f.ex. half of my team has changed in the last year.

Still, I think some concern would be justified: that's why probation periods are for. It's probation also for the company, so you will hopefully have time to have an idea in the first weeks and decide whether to continue or not.

Czar
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    "half of my team has changed in the last year." that's normal? I guess it depends on how long are your projects, but to counter this anecdotal, at my place it's considered extremely hard to maintain long running project in the "half-life" of team is 3 years. Also try to reverse the logic, if you saw a folk, who left 50% of his positions in less than a year, would you confidently hire him? In some areas of IT maybe it's normal, but not in general. It kinda sounds like projects are done by freelancers. I agree with your answer but this statement startled me. Maybe i'm getting old =] – luk32 Feb 11 '19 at 12:56
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    It's normal in the fx world because so many people there are contractors, and for various tax reasons they don't want to stay more than 2 years at any one place. Even for perm roles I'd say that moving every couple of years isn't unreasonable if you find you're not getting what you want from the company. – UKMonkey Feb 11 '19 at 13:08
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    Use to work in a bank as contractor. Stayed 2 years there. Half of the devs come and go before 6 months. Quite normal in this field. – aloisdg Feb 11 '19 at 13:10
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    That shouldn't be normal. Research shows it usually takes about 6 months for a Developer to get up to speed. If they all leave at that point, then you're never getting the most out of anyone. – krillgar Feb 11 '19 at 13:29
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    @UKMonkey There's a big difference between contractors only staying a year and employees. One is pretty normal, the other seems strange. – Voo Feb 11 '19 at 14:02
  • @Voo 1. As a perm I've not stayed at a place longer than 2 years; not by design, but I wouldn't have it any other way early on in my career. 2. "half of my team has changed in the last year." note the lack of clarification about perms or contractors. It's the fact that it's fx, where I know there's a LOT of contractors, is why I bring it up. – UKMonkey Feb 11 '19 at 14:04
  • In my country in IT world 2 years is the standard. Change after 1 year is uncommon, less then 1 year is very very unusual – Alexey B Feb 12 '19 at 08:09
  • @luk32 I never saw this turnover as particularly alarming. I work in a city where the IT scene is thriving, and it's very easy for an excellent engineer to get interesting offers. – Czar Feb 12 '19 at 09:09
  • @UKMonkey Changing companies isn't the only option. I worked at the same company for my first 8 years. I got a promotion around once a year during those 8 though and by the end was working a very different job to the start. – Tim B Feb 12 '19 at 13:25
  • @krillgar It's different for contractors, we're expected to hit the ground running. I've been on my current contract for nearly 3 years now. Previous contracts have usually been around 9 to 18 months though. (In fact the contracts were usually for 3 months, they renewed a few times before the project was finished and I moved on though). – Tim B Feb 12 '19 at 13:27
  • @TimB I was a consultant for over 3 years, so I understand those different expectations. However, just because they want you to hit the ground running doesn't mean you are able to. The worse the code base is, the harder it is to get up to speed. All of my contracts were also in the 9 month range. – krillgar Feb 12 '19 at 13:28
  • @krillgar For sure. Some projects are much easier than others to get up to speed on. – Tim B Feb 12 '19 at 13:29
  • @krillgar "half of my team has changed in the last year" is not the same as "everyone in my team changes jobs every 6 months"; rather, if we take it has indicative of a general trend, it would imply that each team member changes every 2 years. As an analogy, 1/3 of the US Senators are up for re-election every 2 years, so a given Senator is only up for re-election every 6 years. – Brian McCutchon Feb 13 '19 at 05:15
  • @luk32 Your "reverse the logic" is not the same thing, since people on that team would change 2 years (see my comment to @krillgar). – Brian McCutchon Feb 13 '19 at 05:18
  • @krillgar Before speculating further: I have many members who are in the company since 2-3yrs. The quality of the engineers we hire is outstanding and in a city with a brilliant market, it's not uncommon to have very, very interesting offers. Besides: are we discussing my company's rotation rate or the validity of my answer, given that I implied the possibility that this is a red flag? – Czar Feb 13 '19 at 10:31
  • @BrianMcCutchon "Reverse the logic" was about changing the perspective onto the employee for whom you would define a meaningful statistic of 1 year half-life. Yours is still focused on a team. I never said how often would whole team swap out. I think your comment is about something other than I meant. – luk32 Feb 13 '19 at 15:44
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This is not just a red flag but a massive betrayal of trust.

The company has asked you to make a commitment to it and you did. At the time, the company was in possession of information that it had to know would significantly affect your decision to commit to the company and it chose to withhold this information until after you committed. If I were you, I would be livid.

For anyone who might think the company was entitled to withhold this information, consider this thought experiment: If he had asked a question like, "Who are the people I'll be working with?" or "Will you be my primary HR contact?", they would have had to tell him or lie to him. Obviously, lying is unacceptable. So what would you expect an interviewee at a company to do? Should every interviewee ask every possible question about things at the company, essentially a fishing expedition, to make sure a company isn't withholding relevant information like this?

Either the obligation has to be on the company to disclose things that should affect the new employee's decision or the new employee has to ask every possible question to make sure nothing relevant is withheld. Obviously, only the first option makes any sense.

That brings us to the question of what you should do about it. You would be fully justified in walking in to the office of someone in management (the exact person depends on the company's internal organization) and angrily demand an explanation. However, if your goal is to smooth things over with the company if there really is nothing wrong, this is a counter-productive strategy. Perhaps the only thing the company did wrong was withhold the information and the actual departures have an innocent explanation. Maybe they all left excitedly to form a new company.

So, if I were you, I'd assess over the next few days what I want out of this. If things seems fine and the job is good and the people you are working with seem sane, I'd just let it pass. I'd be on the lookout for further red flags.

Giacomo1968
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David Schwartz
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I once was hired to replace a person who died. Now if he'd died in the office that'd have been a big red flag but he died in a car accident, nothing to worry about.

You may well have been hired to fill the hole left by those people leaving, without knowing why they're leaving (and we can only speculate) there's no way of knowing whether it's a bad sign or not. They may have been moved to another department or office, or been hired by a customer (it happens, I've had jobs where there was a constant movement of people between our project team and that of the customer, the project had been running for 10 years and every few months someone would switch employers, while remaining in the same job).

Or they could all have been contractors and you were hired because the company wants to internalise that knowledge and reduce its dependence on contractors. I've experienced that myself, where suddenly a board decision is passed down that in 4 months time all contractors must be gone from all projects for example.

Just some examples of how people leaving isn't always a bad sign.

jwenting
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    "Now if he'd died in the office that'd have been a big red flag..." Depends on the cause of death. – jpmc26 Feb 11 '19 at 22:03
  • @jpmc26 of course, but compared to a traffic accident? (unless you're a highway patrol officer of course) – jwenting Feb 12 '19 at 07:07
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    "Depends on the cause of death " ... maybe a large red flag fell on him? – Mawg says reinstate Monica Feb 12 '19 at 08:11
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    One person leaving isn't a bad sign. Two people leaving within a couple weeks, maybe. But 5 people from different positions throughout the company is a big deal. – krillgar Feb 12 '19 at 13:30
  • would the customer also poach the HR guy though? ... Customer stealing a whole team was my first thought, but the fact the HR guy left at the same time makes this less likely I think. – WetlabStudent Feb 14 '19 at 06:46
  • @WetlabStudent coincidences happen. We had our PR person leave end of last year for example, at the same time as 2 other colleagues. – jwenting Feb 14 '19 at 11:32
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As a quick interviewing tip, it may be worth asking in the job interview what the history of the role is and why they have it open.

With that said, it is weird that everyone interviewing you was in their notice period. You don't explicitly state this in your question, but based on the fact that you're just now finding that out I assume that none of them mentioned this in the interview, which is also at least mildly strange. It makes me wonder if there were any other odd omissions during the interview process.

The third weird thing is that so many people left at once, especially across multiple functional areas. Was there some kind of recent dispute with management or something like that? Or was it actually just a coincidence?

The fourth weird thing here is the H.R. person's evasive answer.

So yes, I'd say that this is a definite red flag. As others have indicated, you don't necessarily want to quit immediately, but it's worth trying to find out more about, and you should be prepared for the possibility of receiving other unpleasant surprises in the near future.

  • I found very weird this too 2) I confirm, nobody said anything during any of the interviews (even the guy that was in his last day) 3) I'll try to investigate as soon as possible 4) Not only the evasive answer but also the tone
  • – Alexey B Feb 12 '19 at 08:15
  • This was my thought... the OP probably should have found out at least one or two were leaving through the interview process. They probably need to review the types of questions they ask in an interview. –  Feb 12 '19 at 19:24
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    HR being evasive in answering is pretty much the norm for HR – hellyale Feb 13 '19 at 22:23