Getting fired

So I was fired today. I had worked in the private sector for almost 2 years before landing a position with the DoD. All I'll say is it is the last time I ever try to go out of my way to do more work than what was expected of me.
I was hoping others could share their experiences on getting a new job and what you did if an interviewer asks if you've been fired and why. I'm not sure what to tell potential employers if this comes up.
I was hoping others could share their experiences on getting a new job and what you did if an interviewer asks if you've been fired and why. I'm not sure what to tell potential employers if this comes up.
Comments
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBnSWJHawQQ
Then cruz on over to the unemployment office & get that rolling.
Go revise your resume/dust it off, then start applying tomorrow...With your certs, I am sure you can land something pretty quick.
Cheers & hi5!
You were terminated from a DOD position? May I ask why?
I ask because I found the DOD to be very process oriented and very task specific. You have these 3 levers your pull daily and they better be pulled in the right order and at the exact same time, but that was it. Anything above and beyond was actually frowned upon. This was with the USDA, DOD and US Army - Joint Command. All very similar.
I don't want to reveal why I was fired.
"You have these 3 levers your pull daily and they better be pulled in the right order and at the exact same time, but that was it. Anything above and beyond was actually frowned upon."
"Anything above and beyond was actually frowned upon."
^ I just learned that the hard way.
No warnings? Write-up or anything?
Yeah, they're not SUPPOSED to reach out but It's happened to me so I don't believe or trust that for a second.
Do you mean that you don't want to tell a bunch of random people on the Internet or to a prospective employer?
GS are the "civilian" government employees. Basically, if you can land a GS position, you can go to work and, sit in a seat, and breathe and not be fired. I was not a GS.
No warnings or write ups for the reason I was being fired. I was written up a month ago for a different reason but that wasn't at all why they fired me.
I don't want to tell a bunch of random people. Sorry.
Yeah, there are a few people there now who could vouch for me.
Just be honest but don't volunteer anything. If it was something you did that was your fault, try to spin it as "yeah I goofed but I learned from my mistake". If it was friction or a hostile/toxic workplace and you pissed off management, say that but be very delicate about it, don't trash your former boss even if he was a psychopath who kicks his dog around the block when he can find time from beating his kids. I don't have any experience being fired, was only laid off once. When I got asked, I just explained I used the time in the gap to prepare, train, and pass five IT exams.
Databasehead is right, there are some DoD contract positions that put you in a box and god help you if you step out of that box. I was at NETCOM and it was like that. It didn't matter if there was an emergency outage, even if you invented the system that was broken, you absolutely were forbidden to do anything outside your PWS.
Good luck in your search!
Already passed: Oracle Cloud, AZ-900
Taking AZ-104 in December.
"Certs... is all about IT certs!"
Currently Working On: Python, OSCP Prep
Next Up: OSCP
Studying: Code Academy (Python), Bash Scripting, Virtual Hacking Lab Coursework
This is the equivalent of holding a piece of cake in front of a 5 year old and telling them they can never touch it!
Thank you for your post, that was helpful
I will say this if this helps you make a better response:
I was fired for one of these things: (being late, asking for too big of a raise, telling people to do their job when they weren't actually doing their job)
Bear in mind that even if your previous employer doesn't disclose the reason for a separation, there are carefully worded questions which are often used - for example "Is John Doe eligible for re-hire?" - many companies will answer that. And if you employer will not answer it, that's sometimes interpreted as an implicit "no".
Also - don't under-estimate the nature of back-channel references. I've worked at many companies where back-channel references are the norm.
Dood you worked a government job/contract and went above and beyond the call of duty? Dem der are heroics, I thought everyone knew that was a HUGE no-no. That's like G'ment work 101.
Current Goal: CCSE
Continuous Education Plan: AWS-SAA, OSCP, CISM
Book/CBT/Study Material: Max Power
I personally would go with scaredoftests advice. With contracts, I do not see them trying to dig up with the contract was renewed or terminated. If HR calls a company, its usually to ask "did Mr X work for you?". Most former companies will not give more then is asked because people are sue crazy and one wrong word could be a lawsuit.
2019 Goals: CISSP, Splunk certifications (Certified Core, Power User, Admin, and Architect)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Malware_Mike
Website: https://www.malwaremike.com
+1 What JoJoCal said is a good suggestion
you can always say that you found that the DoD environment wasn't a good fit for you as you like to be challenged and maybe laugh it off and say that private sector is better
a lot of employers don't really care, just say it didn't work out or that the environment was very quiet with not much to do.