‘Speaking up was a red flag’: Reddit post on sudden PIP after 4 years of praise goes viral

A Reddit post detailing how an employee was placed on a performance improvement plan after four years of strong reviews has gone viral, sparking debate on burnout, overwork and whether speaking up about workload is increasingly being punished in corporate workplaces.

Anjali Thakur
Updated23 Dec 2025, 08:35 PM IST
A Reddit user has shared that they were put on sudden PIP after speaking up
A Reddit user has shared that they were put on sudden PIP after speaking up(X)

A Reddit post describing how an employee was placed on a performance improvement plan (PIP) after four years of glowing reviews has gone viral, igniting a wider debate on workplace burnout, overwork and the risks of speaking up in corporate environments.

In the post, the anonymous user says they gradually took on a heavy workload far beyond their job description, largely out of necessity. Trouble began when a major assignment pushed them beyond capacity. The employee says they informed management, eventually resolved the issue independently, and assumed the matter was closed.

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However, a change in leadership altered the outcome. According to the post, the previous manager had even considered reclassifying the role to better reflect the expanded responsibilities and pay. Under new management, though, raising concerns about workload was reportedly viewed as a “red flag”. The employee was subsequently placed on a PIP, with managers questioning their ability to handle the role.

The post ends with a pointed remark: the employee says they now plan to strictly stick to their official job description, suggesting the company may soon feel the impact of work that had previously gone unnoticed — and uncompensated.

Internet Reacts: “This Is Why People Burn Out”

The story struck a nerve online, with hundreds of users sharing similar experiences. Many argued that the post highlights a common corporate pattern: rewarding overwork until boundaries are set.

“Going above and beyond becomes the baseline, and the moment you push back, you’re labelled a problem,” one user commented. Another wrote, “This is exactly why people stop caring — honesty gets punished.”

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Several users also pointed out that PIPs are increasingly seen as exit tools rather than genuine opportunities for improvement. “Once a PIP starts, it’s often about documentation, not development,” a commenter noted.

A Familiar Reality For Indian Professionals

Though the post does not specify a location, many Indian professionals said the experience felt all too familiar, especially in fast-paced corporate setups where role creep and understaffing are common. With unclear boundaries and informal expectations, employees often find their expanded duties working against them during leadership changes.

As the post continues to trend, it has fuelled a broader question across social media: in today’s workplaces, does going the extra mile still lead to growth — or does it simply raise expectations without protection?

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For many online, the Reddit story has become less about one employee and more about a system that struggles to balance performance, transparency and mental health.

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