Ask HN: My boss just got fired

6 points by ameister14 ↗ HN
So, I took this job a couple of months ago in large part because of who I was going to be working with; three weeks in, the other guy in the SF office that could code well left. I stayed and took on a lot of his responsibilities.

Then, a few weeks ago, our ad ops person left. Now I fill her role as well.

I finally get into this and start to get used to my workload, and now my boss is let go.

I have some options; I can start up a company again and try to make that work; I could probably be poached to another company for more pay, or I can stay where I am and take advantage of the vacancy my boss left.

I honestly don't know what I should do here, so I'm asking you: in a similar position, what would you do?

9 comments

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If your boss was fired for justifiable reasons then perhaps staying is an option. If it feels that his/her departure was for financial reasons or just plain whimsy then it is time to explore the other options - as fast as you like.
It sounds likely that three critical people separating in just two months is more likely to be due to the latter class of reasons you cite. At the very least figuring out why, and why they aren't getting replaced quickly, is critical, and if answers to those questions aren't forthcoming, indeed get out ASAP.
GTFO. Do they have such a high turnover because they are so awesome? You will probably run into the same or another similar problem. This behaviour is endemic of a systematic problem.
I don't really understand the structure of your company.
I would go see my ex-boss' boss and tell him that we're down two people, and while I can keep things going somewhat smoothly for a few weeks, things are going to start breaking due to a lack of manpower.

Then, I'd tell him that I already had the names of a few people to interview (having selecting people I already knew). If you do it right you'll

a) Guarantee that you're working with staff you like b) Be able to redefine your role (for example, from Sr. Software Engineer to Software Architect or Support Analyst to Programmer). c) Create a reputation as a guy that solves problems independently and removes headaches from his superiors

Fortunes, careers and reputations are made by fixing problems in times of chaos, not by staying with the status quo or coasting in a comfortable path.

It's SF, the company is hemorrhaging staff, your job description is constantly mutating...and you can code well.

It sounds like time to get a better job, with a healthier employer, working on something more interesting, and making at least 20% more. Or take a run at building your own ship if that interests you and if you have the financial padding.

If you do not have a good relationship with whoever is now your boss then you might as well find a new job. You're starting over anyhow.
This is sort of like asking whether you should marry the person you're seeing. Um, it depends.

If you believe in the opportunity of the company or believe you can influence and contribute to a real success there, you should consider this an opportunity to prove that, derive benefit from it, and increase your role/responsibility/compensation there.

These departures are not generally good signs though. Have you considered asking your boss why he/she left? If they're firing/attriting under-performers, that's one thing; if the good people are all jumping ship, as the new person you have to ask yourself what they know that you don't.

It's amazing what people ask others on the Net.

What does your 'gut' say?