Why Badmouthing Your Previous Employer is an Interview Mistake (and How to Spin it Positively)
It’s tempting. The interviewer asks why you’re leaving your current role, and you have a list of grievances that could fill a novel. But before you launch into a scathing review of your last boss or company culture, pause. In a job interview, badmouthing a former employer is one of the quickest ways to derail your candidacy.
Here’s why keeping it professional is crucial, and how to successfully navigate the “why are you leaving?” question with respect and maturity.
1. It questions your professionalism
Regardless of how valid your complaints might be, venting about a past employer in an interview is seen as unprofessional. Recruiters want to hire individuals who handle challenges and conflicts with grace. If you speak negatively about your old company, they will wonder if you’ll do the same to them in the future. It suggests an inability to handle difficult situations constructively.
2. It can make you look like the problem
When an interviewer hears a one-sided, negative account, a common reaction is to question whether you were, in fact, responsible for some of the issues. Were you unable to adapt? Did you lack accountability? Instead of taking responsibility or showing a willingness to learn from past experiences, blaming others raises a significant red flag about your attitude and potential fit within their team dynamic.
3. It creates a negative vibe
Interviews are about building enthusiasm for a new opportunity. Bringing negativity into the conversation shifts the focus from your accomplishments and the exciting future to past conflicts and dissatisfaction. You are there to sell yourself as a solution to their needs, not a potential source of drama.
4. Explain the desire to change roles concisely
If your departure was due to external factors outside of your control (layoffs, restructuring, or a company change in direction), offer a brief, factual explanation and move on quickly.
- The Strategy: State the objective reason for the departure (e.g., “restructuring,” “shift in strategy”) without going into depth or emotion. Immediately move on to how this change led you to seek a better-aligned opportunity.
- Key Language: Use phrases like “due to a company-wide restructuring,” “the department’s focus shifted strategically,” or “I took this as an opportunity to find a role that more directly leverages my skills”
By applying the Positivity of this opportunity, you showcase that you are a resilient, self-aware professional who makes thoughtful career decisions, rather than someone who focuses on past grievances.
Key Takeaway
A job interview is a professional conversation focused solely on assessing your future potential and suitability for the role. By intentionally directing the discussion toward your professional growth and the exciting opportunities ahead, you demonstrate the emotional intelligence, maturity, and positive career vision that every hiring manager is actively looking for.
About TRBtalent FM
TRBtalent is a specialist recruiter with hands-on experience in both the FM sector and Sales & Marketing recruitment across all sectors. Within the FM sector, we recruit technical and non-technical positions at all levels. We support FM companies, In-house teams, and Subcontractors to find the skilled talent they are looking for. With our dedicated proactive search and selection on all assignments, we find top performers across the UK.
All placements come with our 12-month Rebate and Replacement Policy as standard on all roles filled.
To find out more, call 01622 934 954, fill out our online form, or contact Jeremy Barwick directly at Jeremy@TRBtalent.comIt