28/12/2025
Some people don’t realize their past employer is killing their future until it’s too late.
Chidi had left his previous job on bad terms. His boss was vindictive, petty, and had made his last three months hell. When Chidi resigned, the man took it personally.
But Chidi moved on. Or so he thought.
He started applying for roles. His CV was strong. His interviews went well. He got to final stages with three different companies.
Then, suddenly, nothing. Offers that seemed certain would vanish. HRs who were excited would go silent.
After the fourth time, one recruiter was kind enough to tell him the truth: “Your former employer gave you a terrible reference. We can’t proceed.”
Chidi was shocked. He’d listed that job on his CV but hadn’t thought about what they’d say if someone called.
His friend Adanna had been smarter. Before leaving her toxic job, she’d quietly built relationships with two senior colleagues who respected her work.
She listed them as references instead of her direct boss.
When companies called, they heard about her actual contributions, not her boss’s bitterness.
She got three offers in two months.
Chidi spent six months trying to undo damage he didn’t even know existed.
He finally learned: your exit strategy includes managing what people will say after you’re gone.
When you leave a job, you don’t just leave the role you leave a reputation. Protect it, or it’ll haunt every future opportunity.
💡jobdockets Insight: References matter more than you think. Choose them carefully. Build bridges even when you’re burning out.
And if you can’t, find alternative references who’ll speak truth, not revenge.