My boss told me to stay late every day to train my replacement. She would be making $85K. I made $55K—for the same role. When I asked why, HR shrugged and said, “She negotiated better.” I smiled and replied, “Happy to help!” The next morning, my boss froze when he walked in. I had organized every binder, file, and process into two stacks: “Current Role Tasks” and “Tasks Performed Voluntarily.” My replacement stared at the second pile like it was a mountain she never expected to climb.
For years, I’d unknowingly been doing the work of two people. Client escalations, vendor problems, cross-department coordination, scheduling system fixes—none of it was technically in my job description.
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