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Ex manager can be a huge pain. I interviewed with this new company. I passed their tests, first and second interviews with 7 managers, supervisors, chief, and etc, passed the background check and employment verifications. I also gave out 4 good ex co-workers references. But, the company wants to talk to my ex manager or supervisor. The problem is I worked from team to team on projects for every 3-4 months during my previous job.

I was under different seniors. My ex manager is basically someone who attended the meetings and didn't interact much with me. So he is not even answering the phone. When my new company called other seniors, they gave great references, but they mentioned that they worked with me for around 3-4 months each. The new company took that as negative. I explained to them the situation, but they still won't accept it and replying back to me in a way like I was hiding something. I mean HELP. I really don't know what to do. I am thinking to forget about this company no matter how much I think I match the job.

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closed as not programming related by Jim Ferrans, Jonathan Fingland, David Brown, Michael Petrotta, Robert Harvey Oct 30 at 5:27

1 Answer

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If you've explained it and they don't accept your explanation, there's not much you can do. I don't think anyone can force them to hire you.

Make it clear to your prospective employer that you are a great match and that they risk losing a great resource if you can't come to a compromise. Then, if they still say no, move on.

Next time, tell them up front about your situation, that the ex-manager doesn't respond, but that you have other great references. That way, no one's time is wasted if it's not good enough.

And, if they later say they have troubles because they can't contact your ex manager, remind them that you informed them of this up front and you're not happy about having your time wasted.

The up-front informing will mitigate the chance of them thinking you're hiding something. It will also make them less likely to use that as an excuse not to hire (assuming they're decent people which is likely but not absolutely necessary).

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I would also point out that you can't control what your ex-supervisor does, and that he's not exactly happy about losing one of his better people. – Robert Harvey Oct 30 at 5:26

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