
A Gen Z employee who was fired over “attitude” and “culture fit” concerns was called back by the same company just two weeks later after internal systems allegedly began breaking down, according to a viral post on X shared by career coach Simon Ingari. The employee, instead of rejoining on old terms, reportedly demanded double his earlier salary as a consultant, turning the workplace fallout into one of the internet’s most talked-about corporate stories this week. The incident quickly caught attention online, with many users saying it reflects what often happens in IT and startup companies where technical employees quietly manage critical systems behind the scenes.
Fired despite delivering projects on time
According to the viral post, the Gen Z employee regularly completed projects within deadlines. However, during a performance review, HR allegedly raised concerns about his “attitude,” “communication style,” and lack of “culture fit.”
The employee reportedly questioned the decision and pointed to his work record and completed assignments. But the discussion allegedly shifted away from performance metrics and focused more on how he behaved in meetings.
The company terminated him immediately without a notice period or detailed handover process. Access to company systems was also reportedly revoked within minutes.
The story struck a chord with many professionals online, especially in India’s startup ecosystem where terms like “culture fit” are often debated heavily.
Company systems reportedly began failing two weeks later
The situation reportedly changed dramatically around two weeks after the firing.
Automated reports stopped functioning, operations faced disruptions, and internal teams struggled to trace the source of the issue. Managers later realised that the former employee had built and maintained large sections of backend infrastructure that had little or no documentation.
The post claimed leadership had earlier treated documentation work as “low priority.” That decision reportedly backfired once the employee left the organisation.
Without proper system knowledge or technical records, teams allegedly faced downtime and operational stress while trying to understand how the setup worked.
Employee returned with a strong counter-offer
The company later approached the former employee and reportedly asked him to return full-time. But instead of accepting the old role, he allegedly proposed a consultant arrangement on new terms.
The viral post claimed he demanded twice his earlier monthly salary per session and asked for payment upfront.
"Apparently my 'culture fit' became very valuable once the servers stopped working," the post quotes him as saying.
That line quickly spread across social media platforms, with users praising the employee for knowing his value while criticising companies for ignoring technical contributors until problems appear.
Why the story feels familiar to many Indian workers
The viral thread resonated strongly with employees working in India’s IT, fintech, and startup sectors. Many users shared similar experiences involving vague feedback, heavy workloads, and undocumented systems handled by a small number of employees.
Professionals from cities like Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, and Gurugram often describe situations where one individual quietly becomes responsible for critical operations. Experts sometimes call this “key person risk,” where the departure of a single employee can disrupt an entire workflow.
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The debate also reopened discussions around workplace culture and whether companies place too much importance on personality-based evaluations over measurable work output.
Bigger questions around modern workplace culture
The incident has also sparked wider conversations about how younger employees view work. Many Gen Z professionals prioritise flexibility, recognition, and work-life balance, while older management styles may continue to focus on hierarchy and behaviour standards.
As India’s digital economy expands rapidly, the story also highlights the risks of poor documentation and weak knowledge transfer practices inside companies.
Whether the viral post describes a real incident or a symbolic workplace lesson, many online users believe the message is difficult to ignore: organisations that overlook skilled contributors may eventually pay a far bigger price later.