Misrepresentation

I accepted a job for what I was told was a Princeton location but once I started I found out it was actually in New York City.

You may be reading this in February, but the original post, written in late December, reflects on events from September 2023 to December 2023.

I asked ChatGPT to explain the word misrepresentation.

Misrepresentation refers to the act of giving a false or misleading account of the nature of something. It typically involves providing incorrect information or omitting key facts, often with the intention of deceiving someone or influencing their decisions or actions based on that inaccurate portrayal. Misrepresentation can occur in various contexts, such as in legal contracts, advertising, or personal interactions.

After a round of interviews, I accepted a consulting role with a well-known financial services company, enticed by the recruiter's confirmation of it as a Princeton hybrid position – ideal given its closeness to my home, just a 10-minute drive or 30-minute bicycle ride away.

Negotiating a New Jersey hourly rate to reflect lower commuting costs, I agreed to work (one day a week) from the client's Wall Street office for the first few weeks until I was familiar with the team. Wall Street firms value these types of interactions. Having once survived an undesirable pre-pandemic commute to New York City for a banking client, I voiced my unwillingness to repeat that experience. The recruiter reassured me, and she confirmed in writing that the role was indeed Princeton-hybrid and that the New York commute was only temporary.

After a month of tolerating the demanding two-hour (each way) trip, I talked with the manager about timelines for transitioning to the Princeton office. To my surprise, the manager explained that it was a New York City-only assignment. He also mentioned a corporate announcement about an upcoming change to two days a week in the office, starting January 2nd.

I raised this discrepancy with the recruiter, which led to them promising to discuss it with their internal management. After I presented the email evidence of their original written statement that this was a Princeton hybrid role, communication ceased on their end on December 20th. My attempts to reach out were met with silence.

Fortunately, I continued interviewing, hoping to find the right remote or local hybrid opportunity. Knowing that I did not want to commute to New York City and seeing no other way out of the situation on Friday, December 28th I accepted a six-month contract with a bank headquartered in Buffalo, New York with a start date of January 22. I informed the client and the consulting company that I was leaving the role.

Because of this experience, I no longer expect honesty, fairness and professionalism in the hiring process. Human beings are no longer involved. The process is dehumanising. I know that my resume and cover letter will be scanned by AI and despite years of experience and hard-won skills if it’s missing the expected keywords, it will be discarded minutes after my online application is submitted. I know that I will be required to complete up to five rounds of interviews for any role. I know that after all those interviews if I am not the ideal candidate, I will be ghosted with no feedback.

Getting paid

What Happens—Taxwise—When You Don’t Get Paid (Funding Gates Blog)

Once your company’s efforts to collect prove fruitless, it may be time to turn to a collection agency. This will allow you to nail down a partial write-off. When you hand over uncollected invoices to an agency, you agree to pay a certain amount to the agency. You can treat the fee as fixing a partial write-off of your receivable immediately.

One of my clients has an invoice that is five months past due. Time to bring out the baseball bat.

What Happens—Taxwise—When You Don’t Get Paid (Funding Gates Blog)

Once your company’s efforts to collect prove fruitless, it may be time to turn to a collection agency. This will allow you to nail down a partial write-off. When you hand over uncollected invoices to an agency, you agree to pay a certain amount to the agency. You can treat the fee as fixing a partial write-off of your receivable immediately.

One of my clients has an invoice that is five months past due. Time to bring out the baseball bat. I know a few good lawyers.

I don't work there ... anymore.

Yeah. Like my friend John LeMasney wrote earlier this month on Facebook," that happened." I was informed last week that my role with the company was eliminated. So what does that mean? Eliminated? I'm not sure. Many other roles were eliminated -- some of my friends are also affected -- so I'm trying not to take it personally.

If the local bank puts in automated teller machines does it needs as many tellers on staff? No. I was given two weeks' notice and a chance to apply for any open positions within the company that match my interest and skill set. Fortunately, I was with the company for several years ( ironically I celebrated ten years with the company on March 10th ) and I was offered a suitable severance package and help with finding new employment.

Besides John, and some of my co-workers, my brother and my sister-in-law are also recently "unemployed." Someone shared with me the news that other pharmas are cutting jobs. It seems the industry is preparing for tough times ahead. I also read that Metlife is moving jobs from this area to North Carolina.

My wife, family, and friends have asked me how I feel. I'm not quite sure. I'm neither angry nor sad -- although I do miss the family of co-workers -- so maybe I'm just numb. Or perhaps I haven't processed what happened yet. In any case, I'm looking on the positive side. I now have the opportunity to seek out something new. Perhaps like John, I'll return to consulting. I successfully consulted as an open-source web developer, Linux/Apache web administrator, and systems integration specialist from 1998 through 2003. I enjoyed the consulting/freelancing work style, and I think I can do it again. I still have those skills along with the wireless networks, cloud security, vulnerability, and threat assessment, information security management and compliance, project management, and other management and business skills I've acquired over the years.

Or perhaps I'll take a different route. Maybe it's time I take my destiny into my own hands and start a new entrepreneurial experiment. I've wanted to write that great iOS photography app for some time. Maybe now is the time. This is the end of one thing, and the start of another. A new chapter in my life. And it will be great!

This week I've polished my résumé and researching what's available in the local market. If you are reading this and want to help, please contact me via my landing page or via telephone ( 609.964.1226 ).

Image by Nadav Greenberg
Image by Nadav Greenberg

Stay hungry, stay foolish ~ Steve Jobs