I Got Offered Double Pay at a Competitive Company, Now HR Got Involved

People
2 weeks ago
I Got Offered Double Pay at a Competitive Company, Now HR Got Involved

Many people face unexpected challenges when trying to improve their careers, especially when rival companies and workplace pressure collide. Stories about job transitions, employer retaliation, and sudden setbacks resonate with thousands of readers looking for guidance. Recently, we received a letter from a reader dealing with this very situation.

Jane’s letter:

Dear Bright Side,

I (43,F) got a job at our competitive firm, same role, double pay.

When I went to hand in my resignation letter, HR panicked. They said a 2-week notice wasn’t enough, especially during our busiest season. I didn’t really care.

Then they added, “Betraying us and going to our biggest competition after 12 years won’t end well for you!” I just smiled and walked out.

But on my first day at the new job, something felt strange. Everyone in the office was staring at me. No warm welcome. Nothing.

Then I froze when I received an email from my new manager. It said, “We sincerely apologize for having to withdraw our job offer. We received a letter from your former company with negative feedback, stating that your work was left incomplete. We wish you the best of luck with your future endeavors.”

I went pale. That first day was supposed to be the day I signed my contract for this new, better job — but suddenly, I had no job at all.

Clearly, my former company had pressured them to drop me. No company wants to risk bad blood with another firm over a single employee.

What should I do? Was I wrong for leaving my former job?

Am I really the betrayer — or the one who was betrayed?

Yours,
Jane Q.

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If you ever saved any of your annual performance reviews, or letters of accommodations from the offending company, gather them up, go back and plead your case. Explain their number one competitor is trying to railroad you. Then chat with a lawyer to see what they think.

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Thank you, Jane, for trusting us with your story. What you went through is shocking, unfair, and deeply personal, and we take it seriously. We’ve looked closely at your situation, and we have advice that can help you move forward. Let’s go through them together.

Document the Retaliation and Protect Yourself.

Lesson 1: never tell anyone where you are moving to. Don't update LinkedIn for a couple of months. Lesson 2: always have your new employment contract signed for your new job BEFORE you submit your resignation letter. Lesson 3: Consult an employment lawyer. Lesson 4: once you are safely employed, leave an honest review of the old company on Glassdoor.

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Companies are not allowed to op do this. They can say that you are not rehireable. But they can't send info like that. Go to the labor board with copies of everything. If companies were allowed to do this people would not be to get a job at another company. Also talk to a labor lawyer. This is not legal in the usa.

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Save the withdrawal email and anything showing HR’s panic and threat. This is clear workplace retaliation and employer interference.

Create a digital folder with timestamps: rescinded offer, “incomplete work” claim, the HR quote. Strong documentation helps you fight defamation, wrongful blacklisting, or intimidation tactics between rival companies.

Push the New Company for Transparency.

Email their HR or compliance team and politely request a copy or summary of the negative feedback they received.

Companies become cautious when asked to justify blacklisting, sabotage, or unverified accusations. Your silent, awkward first day suggests internal nerves—sometimes a simple request forces them to reconsider or admit they acted too quickly.

Use Your 12-Year Reputation as Leverage.

A company doesn’t keep someone for 12 years if their work is “incomplete.” That claim is weak and suspicious.

Highlight your long record to industry recruiters dealing with toxic workplace exits, career sabotage, and competitive-firm drama. Present the situation as an unethical feud between companies, not a performance issue—this reframes you as the professional victim of corporate politics.

Explore Legal Options for Interference.

Your former employer clearly influenced the competitor after you resigned, causing a financial loss. That’s classic tortious interference, wrongful job offer withdrawal, and potential defamation.

A labor lawyer can tell you whether you have a case or if a warning letter to your former employer could stop them from damaging your future opportunities.

Luckily, there’s still plenty of empathy and compassion in the world to balance out the hardships we face. These 15 real stories are a reminder of just how powerful kindness can be.

Comments

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Pretty sure that is illegal. Sue them. For as much as you can get.

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What the job did is illegal. The only thing they're supposed to tell another company is when you start it and when you stopped and how much you earn there are not allowed to bad mouth you to another company that's illegal and you need to sue.

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Consult with an attorney, but honestly it seems there are missing pieces to this scenario.

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