In the heart of a nonprofit plagued by toxic leadership, one brave employee stepped forward to give a voice to the silenced. Taking charge of the neglected exit interviews, they turned a simple review into a powerful statement, urging departing colleagues to show their care through honest, two-star feedback — a cry for change wrapped in subtle defiance.
As the toxic truth spilled into public view, the company’s once-stable reputation crumbled, revealing a landscape of despair and deception. The CEO’s desperate attempts to mask reality only deepened the wounds, culminating in a scripted resignation that echoed defeat. This is a story of courage, exposure, and the hope that even in darkness, accountability can spark the dawn of transformation.

I destroyed my former employer’s credibility on Glassdoor, and now they can’t fill any positions.





According to organizational psychologist Dr. Adam Grant, effective feedback mechanisms are crucial for organizational health, stating, “When people leave, the exit interview is the final chance to gather the crucial data needed for improvement, not just for the departing employee’s benefit, but for the remaining team.”
The individual’s initiative to organize exit feedback, even outside formal channels, suggests a strong sense of ethical responsibility or perhaps frustration stemming from perceived leadership failure. By guiding departing employees toward two-star reviews rather than one-star reviews, the individual introduced a nuanced signaling mechanism. A one-star review is often dismissed as purely emotional venting, whereas a two-star review implies sustained disappointment coupled with a belief that the organization had potential but failed to meet basic standards. This subtle distinction effectively weaponized constructive criticism, making the collective feedback harder for leadership to ignore or rationalize away, especially when contrasted with the CEO’s planted five-star reviews.
The resulting drop in ratings and the CEO’s subsequent resignation indicate that this coordinated feedback strategy was highly effective in exposing the underlying organizational toxicity. While the intent was to advocate for change, future approaches in similar high-conflict situations should prioritize establishing formal, protected channels for dissent if available. If formal channels are absent, clear, factual communication focused on systemic issues, rather than tactical rating suggestions, often provides a stronger, more defensible record of concern.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.









The individual felt compelled to address the harmful environment they experienced by actively encouraging honest, yet constructive, feedback from departing colleagues. This action directly challenged the leadership’s attempt to maintain a positive external image while struggling internally with significant staff turnover and low morale.
Given the documented negative impact on the organization’s reputation and the eventual departure of the CEO, was the strategy of encouraging two-star reviews an ethically justifiable maneuver to force accountability, or did it cross a line into manipulative behavior aimed at causing professional harm?







