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Mindaugas Balčiauskas

30 Red Flags To Keep An Eye Out For At Any Company

There’s no such thing as a ‘perfect’ company. However, that doesn’t mean that employers shouldn’t do their best to create supportive workplace environments so that their staff can reach their full potential. Some workplaces, however, are the stuff of nightmares that staff dread to return to. Toxic environments aren’t just bad for the employees, though—they harm the bottom line, too.

Knowing how to spot the signs early on can help you avoid a ton of disappointment and frustration later down the line. The members of the r/AskReddit community shared the biggest red flags to look out for that indicate a company might be an awful place to work. Read on to see what they had to say.

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Toxic workplace environments are absolutely awful for employees’ mental health. However, they also have a deeply negative impact on a company’s finances, too. If you constantly have to replace people who quit due to stress and mistreatment, you’re eating into your profits.

Research commissioned by SHRM in 2019 found that 58% of employees who quit their jobs due to workplace culture said that their managers are the main reason they left. The cost of this high turnover rate is a whopping $223 billion over 5 years.

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The SHRM report also found that just 38% of American workers were ‘very satisfied’ with their current job, while 49% have thought about leaving. A fifth of respondents have left their jobs due to the workplace culture there, while a fourth say that they dread going to work, don’t feel safe voicing their opinions about work-related problems, and don’t feel respected or valued at work.

76% of respondents point out that it’s their managers who set the culture of their workplace. Meanwhile, 36% of employees have stated that their managers do not know how to lead a team.

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Talking to your manager, HR, boss, or union representative can help you tackle all the various problems that pop up at work. If they’re genuinely open to change and willing to make your stay at the company better—fantastic.

However, at the end of the day, we’re all personally responsible for setting the boundaries for how we want to be treated and what our work-life balance looks like.

If you find yourself chronically exhausted, drained, and demotivated at work, at some point, it might be time to look for better opportunities elsewhere. Your physical and mental health is worth prioritizing over petty office squabbles, tyrannical managers, and toxic coworkers.

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5 rounds of multi-hour interviews Unless you’re applying to be the f*****g CEO, there’s no reason to waste everyone’s time with such a horrible hiring process.When the boss says it's illegal to discuss your wage with others.When you arrive for your interview and you're being led to the interview room, you lock eyes with some of the employees and they slowly shake their heads "no".In the interview ask them “What opportunities for advancement will there be?” If they cant come up with anything, you’re either applying for a dead end position, or the company has no concept of employee retention and advancement, both of which are huge red flags.'We're like a family.' Just walk out. Hearing this means there will be cliques, and expectations to work long hours and to put up with some REALLY shady stuff. There are no outliers with this red flag.Someone leaves, their responsibilities get piled onto someone else, and the business thinks it's working so why hire a replacement? Then that person eventually caves and now two jobs are piled onto the next person. By the time the company thinks they *have to* hire someone nobody wants to do 3 people's work for 1 persons pay.A sign out front that says "Nobody wants to work anymore".When the longest working employee there has been around for less than a year.Idk if anyone else has gotten this but a bar I used to work at after they hired me said “We could use good looking woman on our team”. Anything to do with “We could use [insert gender or race or anything else here]” generally is a red flag for me.Speaking from experience: met with the hiring manager for an interview, got the offer at the table, they actually gave me more than advertised because of my experience, I started Monday, 8am. Showed up bright and early. The department manager, office manager, and store manager had no idea who I was or that I was coming.- “We’re like a family here.” - “We don’t do drama.” - “We offer great perks like a pool table.” - “We want believers here.” - “We always do a trial employment first.” - “After the 6th round of interviews, we’ll make a decision.” - “The pay is low but only for a little while.” - “We’re in the process of rebuilding.” - “Are you willing to work weekends?” - “We need someone who doesn’t mind being on-call all hours of the day.” - “We’re not for everyone. Only the strong survive here.” - “You’ll be reporting to 3 people from different departments.” - “We’ll I’m interviewing you now because he was let go yesterday.” - “Don’t worry about the pay. Look at the opportunity!”.When the people interviewing you are anxious and tired. When they say disparaging things about the person you're replacing, or about the team you're joining (with the hope that YOUR expertise will fix this seemingly "sub-par" team. In those situations, you will soon discover that you're joining a team of overworked people with no resources that some general manager likes to c**p on, but not support).One of my first jobs always had a sign in the window that said “we’re hiring”. So I applied, got the job along with one other person, but they never took the sign down. The job was awful, and it caused me impending doom anxiety every day I had to go there. After I was fired (lol) I would walk by every so often and there was still the “we’re hiring” sign in the window.High turnover rate.When they say they have an open door policy, but you watch someone use it to report something, and they get punished/harassed for doing it, and the person they reported has nothing happen to them. Also, if mangt tells you at said meeting that going to HR, they will open an invitation into both of you, and end the end, you both will be punished, so best not talk to HR. But they make you watch videos on workplace harassment/bullying and how much they care, and will stop it.When you get paid more as a new employee.When the employees are either close to retirement age or they're all fresh out of school but there's no one in between."How long has your longest, non-manager employee been with you?" "I dunno. Maybe .... a year and a half? Why?".The most toxic person that consistently gets in fights with both other employees and customers got promoted to a management position because she's friends with the store manager and really good at kissing the high ups a*s.When the job posting doesn’t say what the job is and have a weirdly high pay.I had an interview once where I asked the interviewer, “what is your favorite thing about working at this company”, and she sat there for like an awkward 10 seconds and then was just like, “I just took this job after I graduated college because it was the first place that gave me an offer….but I guess the experience has been good”Bullying, made to feel bad if sick ..When the staff keep dieing and /or develop severe chronic illness.This happened at a high profile US finance firm that had a London office in which I worked. In fact, isn't this a common occurrence in high profile financiers? I can think of two other such companies whose staff committed s*****e or literally worked themselves to death. It just never gets talked about.Not disclosing the actual product/company without signing NDA first.If you see a small few people working and majority of them f*****g around.Disheveled interviewer.Anything with a vague job description, especially if they do a mass interview. I spent 3 months at a well known retail and grocery inventory service until they screwed me out of nearly $500 in pay and wanted me to adjust my school schedule around them. That's the only time I have ever ghosted a job.When the job you apply for isn’t the one offered to you.When most key employees do not have many years on the job.When the grandfather was the COO, and after him the son was, and later the grandson... Bad habits never die, they say.
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