Hired to fired in 4 days - Project Manager VSolvit Employee Review

1.0
4 Sept 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Not sure as I wasn't with the company long enough to find out.

Cons

Was hired for a lead role for a brand new contract awarded in Chesapeake. I showed up to work on a Tuesday after a holiday and was fired that Friday. Position was as a lead role and it came with the usual project management oriented job description for such in their online advertising. I had a phone interview and in person interview with the top three folks at various times and answered all the normal PM related questions. I later had an in person interview with the software lead who was an immediate hire from the old contractor and answered all the normal PM related questions. An offer letter was then produced, which I signed and submitted my notice to my old company. Day one I walked in and had the following thoughts: I was hired for a lead role for a large defense contract overseeing ~50 personnel. I was shown my office, greeted warmly by coworkers and the top three folks at the company who flew in from the west coast and left alone. Lunch with the senior folks? No. Maybe dinner after work with the senior folks? Nope. This was replicated on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. At no time was there a one on one discussion on policies, way forward, directions, or any of the things that one would expect as the head of a major unit of a company with zero east coast presence. It was also a bit eerie as every single person was brought over from the old company that used to have the contract and the only person in the building that was a complete stranger to all was me. Stranger in a strange land as the song goes... Friday afternoon, I was called in and fired by HR and one of the top three folks from California. The paperwork said, "poor performance" I think, but what stated was: "There are no roles to move you upwards, downwards, or sideways into and you don't have the necessary skills to set up and configure servers, nor do we have time to get you up to speed on that, so we have to part ways today." I about fell over. Nowhere in their ads for the job did it make mention of server configuration experience. Nowhere in our talks with any party was this mentioned. Nowhere in my resume speaks to this as I don't have this as a skill set. So with having worked only four days, I was fired. No chance for unemployment claim nor severance. A month later I got a paper check. My guess is that whoever the lead was from the old company was said no to coming over to the new team and I was given an offer letter. Once that letter was issued, the old lead said yes and the company was then in a pickle....and decided to get out of the pickle by firing me for a bogus reason to get whom they wanted in the first place.

avatar
VSolvit Response
5y
Really? You did not lie on the resume, you were sleepy and checking your phone during customer meeting! Your "meeting minutes" were "novice" and incomplete at best ~ complete misrepresentation of your capabilities as depicted in your resume. Perhaps this was not a good fit... and I know at least I am glad that the experience was short lived. Key message to readers: We SERVE the warfighter. They DESERVE our best. This is no place "to hide" poor performance.

Explore other reviews about VSolvit

5.0
6 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

work from home. being a family first company i never felt like calling out sick or requesting time off was going to end my career. in fact they always push using your PTO.

Cons

little interaction with others in the company. need more connection events and planed meetups.

1.0
20 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I hope they can create some good things. I have seen none.

Cons

While the company presents itself as employee-focused, my experience did not reflect that in practice. Support for employees is minimal once you are placed on a contract. The primary emphasis appears to be on maximizing billable revenue, with far less attention paid to employee development, technical growth, or long-term career planning. Engineers often feel more like assets being sold to clients than professionals being invested in. Management involvement tends to surface mainly when there are contract concerns or billing-related issues, rather than when employees need guidance, advocacy, or support. When challenges arise on a project, employees are largely expected to handle them independently, even when issues stem from unclear requirements or poor client-side planning. There is also a noticeable gap between how roles are described internally versus how work is actually performed on contract. Expectations can shift after placement, and employees are left to adapt without meaningful backing from leadership. This creates a sense that individuals are being “disguised” to fit client needs, rather than being honestly positioned or protected. Career progression is unclear, and feedback is limited. Promotions and raises do not appear to be tied to technical contribution or workload, making it difficult to feel valued beyond your billing rate. Overall, the company may work for those seeking short-term contract placement, but engineers looking for genuine support, transparency, and long-term professional growth may find the environment disappointing.

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