Why You Never Badmouth Your Boss at a Job Interview

March 29, 2010 RSS Feed Print
  • Comment (18)

A reader writes:

I was hoping you could answer a question I had about my most recent job interview.

I learned a little too late that it is considered a very bad thing to badmouth former employers at a job interview. But I was wondering whether you would automatically disqualify a candidate you were interviewing because of this or if you would still consider giving them the job?

I'm asking because when my interviewer asked why I left a previous job, I answered that "I felt my managers were too immature for their position." This happened early in the interview but after that mistake, I felt like I did well during the rest of the interview. I am a recent college graduate and I'm also wondering if my young age would grant me any leniency in regards to making interview mistakes.

Ouch. Honestly? It's very unlikely that I'd hire a candidate who said that.

[See the best careers for 2010.]

It's not that hiring managers don't realize that that might be true, because there are plenty of nightmare bosses out there and some of our candidates are undoubtedly fleeing from some of them. But right or wrong, the convention is that you simply don't badmouth a former employer in a job interview, unless there are extremely extenuating circumstances (something like racial discrimination).

[See why you should skip snail mail.]

Why? Because it raises questions in our minds that you don't want there. Questions like:

  • What's the other side of this story?
  • Is this person impossible to please?
  • Do they not have reasonable expectations of their manager? Will they be a pain in the neck to have on staff?
  • Are they going to quit here too the first time something happens that they don't like?
  • Are they going to be badmouthing me someday too?
  • Why doesn't this person realize that you don't say things like that?

Now, most hiring managers will allow for the possibility that your account is objective and correct. But it raises enough of a question mark that we at least have to wonder and worry, and you don't need those kinds of shadows over your candidacy. Plus, even if your account was unimpeachably objective, we still have to wonder why you didn't know what is and isn't appropriate to say in business situations, and we'll wonder how else that might manifest.

[See 5 lame but common interview answers.]

You're far better off explaining that you're looking for new challenges, excited about this particular opportunity, taking the time to find something right, and so forth. I'm not crazy about advising someone to be anything less than forthright, and I don't normally recommend it, but in this area, the potential for giving an employer an bad impression is just too great to do it safely.

Next time, you’ll know. Good luck!

Alison Green is the author of Managing to Change the World: The Nonprofit Leader's Guide to Getting Results. She is chief of staff for the Marijuana Policy Project, a nonprofit lobbying organization, where she oversees day-to-day management of the staff as well as hiring, firing, and staff development. Her writings have been published in the Washington Post, the New York Times, Maxim, and dozens of other newspapers. She blogs at Ask a Manager.

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I was "head hunted" for a job and to be honest I was very impressed by this and left a good employer that I had only been working for 18 months to go to this new employer. I was promised the earth and it was in my contract etc. However I realised after being there only a few weeks that I had made the biggest mistake of my life and after 6 months in the job I asked for the benefits that I was supposed to be getting and that were in my contract (and that I still hadn't received) and my boss (owner/director) said he didn't have time to talk to me about it and would get back to me. I asked him repeatedly for him to give me time even asked him by letter also in the letter I listed my grievances, which included sexual harassment, breach of contract and bullying and intimidation. It got me no where and my boss when I asked him about my letter I was told he hadn't received it (I had put it on his desk personally) I then sent him a copy of the letter. I approached him at least once a month re a raise etc for over two years then on a yearly basis thereafter for the next 5 years. All this time I was keeping a diary of what was happening to me the discrimination etc on a daily basis until three months before I left the Company now this is the important bit to anyone that is reading this. Even though I had kept a diary all of this time only the last 3 months of the diary FROM WHEN I LEFT THE COMPANY is relevant and because I didn't ask about my contract by letter every week to my boss I didn't have a leg to stand on in a court of law. The way I was treat by this Company was awful and was effecting my health badly therefore I can only say to anyone that is having problems with an employer you must get evidence and have it right up to the day you leave. I lost faith in ever getting anywhere with this Company so stopped my diary writing this was WRONG and I should have kept it up even though I had for nearly five years it was all irrelevant in the end because I hadn't kept it up until the end. I went to solicitors and they told me that it was the worst case that they had come across (the treatment that I had received from this Shipping Company). This was all to no avail

susan 8:48AM December 31, 2012

Okay .. here's a hell situation to be in ... I was working as an ex-pat in another country ... longest standing employee in the organization, offered the job of CEO, but turned it down as I felt it would be better to have a citizen of the country take the job... found and recruited the CEO ... but suddenly 5 years later, with no warning and no justification, made 'redundant' so her newly graduated cousin could replace me (with my 20+ years of experience and licensing). Then found out the CEO was having affair with my husband ... now I am single, back in my home country and any job reference checks shut me right out.... wtf do I say??

OMG??! 10:59PM October 17, 2012

I need to know what is appropriate to say about one of my former jobs.

My boss at that job caused several accounting errors during my medical leave, and on my return I had to correct all of them, which is a fairly major accomplishment. However, because it was something he did intentionally, it had to be reported to the corporate office as a breach of ethics, and things became so uncomfortable in the office that I eventually quit.

What do I say about that?

Thanks!

Amy of NV 2:31PM September 08, 2012

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