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CEO Demands A C# Expert, Accidentally Hires A Database Wizard Who Never Wrote C# Before

by Leona Pham
January 19, 2026
in Social Issues

Hiring decisions can get messy when the people making them do not fully understand what the job actually requires. Titles, buzzwords, and specific languages often become more important than the real problems that need solving, especially in smaller companies where leadership wears many hats.

In this Reddit story, a technical manager found himself stuck between what his team truly needed and what upper management insisted on hiring for. When a key employee quit, it should have been a chance to fix a long-standing issue behind the scenes. Instead, it turned into a quiet battle of priorities.

What followed was a clever workaround that technically followed the rules while completely sidestepping their intent. Scroll down to see how one unconventional hire ended up changing everything for the better.

A technical manager needed a database expert but was told to hire another C# developer

CEO Demands A C# Expert, Accidentally Hires A Database Wizard Who Never Wrote C# Before
Not the actual photo

If it's a C# developer you want, it's a C# developer you'll get!?

This is the story of how I got hired at an old job I had a few years ago.

The technical manager (who ultimately became my boss) was a great guy and was the one

who embarked on a course of malicious compliance to get what he wanted.

It happened like this...

The company was small, about 20 people,

and run by a CEO who knew the company's industry but didn't know anything about technology.

What she knew was that she had a team of five developers and one technical manager,

and that the company's code was written in the a programming language called C# (pronounced "C-sharp").

One day, her favorite member of the development team quit, whom she regarded as their foremost expert on C#.

To the technical manager, this was an enormous opportunity.

He had four other developers who knew C#,

but what he was missing was an expert in database design and administration.

The company processed a huge volume of data, and he knew enough about databases

to know that theirs were a mess: the same data had to be recorded in multiple places

and was always getting out of sync, operations that should have taken a few seconds would run for minutes, etc.

He didn't want to replace the departed employee with another developer; he wanted a database expert.

But the CEO wouldn't hear of it. Cue malicious compliance.

Somehow he got a description of the person he actually wanted into the hands of a recruiter, who found me.

(I had over ten years of experience in database development and administration at that point,

but had never touched a line of C# code in my life.)

The technical manager had a "skills assessment" he was giving to all candidates

for the job, which was 100% database questions.

There was a huge, boldface warning at the top, which I found extremely odd, stating,

"These questions are extremely difficult; it is unlikely you'll be able to answer them all.

You may not be able to answer any.

Do not feel any pressure to attempt questions you find too difficult,

as these results are not related to the position."

I was told I had 20 minutes to work on it.

Well, I finished it in about 2-3 minutes, the questions were all actually very easy,

and walked back in to the office of the technical manager

to ask if I was missing something and what this was all about.

He gave me the "shush" gesture and motioned me back into the conference room.

Then he explained. His office was adjacent to the CEOs office, so he couldn't talk in there.

The warning was something he'd been forced to put on the test after a recruiter

(who apparently had initially been just as confused as I was) had called the CEO

to ask why they were giving a database assessment for a C# position.

He'd had to play it off to the CEO as, "Well, wouldn't it be good to know

if we happen to find a C# developer who is comfortable with databases too?"

He explained all the backstory described above.

And then we talked for about 30 minutes about databases. C# didn't come up.

The job sounded really interesting and would be a chance for me to make an enormous positive difference.

At the end, he said, "OK, you're perfect,

I'm going to recommend you for the position, but first you have to talk to the CEO.

Remember, when you talk to her, you're a C# expert.

Got it?" I was worried, but I thought,

"Worst case, I get caught and don't get the job; best case,

I can really help this company." Into the CEO's office I went.

After an exchange of pleasantries, she said, "So, what would you say is your #1 technical strength?"

I made a thoughtful face, and said, "Well, it's hard to say.

I have skills in a lot of different areas, but if I had to pick one,

I'd say probably C# programming." Her face lit up.

"Ah, fantastic!" she said, "That's exactly what we're looking for!"

We talked for a few more minutes about salary requirements and start dates (I said I could start in two weeks),

and at the end she offered me the job.

That night, I stopped on the way home and bought a book about C#

I think it was literally called something like "Learn C# in 14 Days."

By the time I started two weeks later, I knew enough C# to do my job.

As the technical manager had said, there was an enormous amount of database redesign to do,

so the C# programming was maybe 10-20% of my time.

I was able to get those database jobs down from minutes to seconds like they should have been,

and the CEO was so impressed she never even questioned my background.

I continued to learn C# on the job, and no one ever found out I hadn't been a C# expert all along.

In many workplaces, conflict doesn’t begin with bad intentions, but with misunderstanding. Leaders want clarity and reassurance, teams want effectiveness, and somewhere between those goals, frustration quietly takes root.

This story reflects a familiar emotional tension: a non-technical leader seeking certainty through labels, and technical professionals grappling with the consequences of decisions that overlook reality. Neither side is acting out of malice, but both are responding to fear in different ways.

From a psychological perspective, the technical manager’s choice to engage in malicious compliance was not driven by rebellion, but by pressure and responsibility.

He understood that the company’s greatest vulnerability wasn’t a missing C# developer; it was a failing database infrastructure threatening performance and scalability. Yet his expertise was dismissed in favor of a simplistic requirement.

This mismatch creates what psychologists describe as loss of control stress: when individuals are held accountable for outcomes but denied influence over the decisions that shape them. In such environments, indirect compliance becomes a way to protect both personal integrity and organizational health.

The OP’s role adds another layer to the emotional dynamics. Agreeing to present as a “C# expert” was less about deception and more about adaptability. Faced with rigid expectations, OP leaned on confidence, curiosity, and a proven ability to learn quickly.

Psychologically, this reflects a growth-oriented mindset rather than opportunism. The emotional trigger here was opportunity, the chance to apply meaningful expertise where it could make a tangible difference.

Readers often feel a sense of satisfaction when stories like this resolve positively. The company benefited, performance improved, and the CEO felt validated rather than challenged.

This sense of fairness is essential to why malicious compliance resonates. The rules were followed, authority wasn’t openly defied, and yet the flawed assumption corrected itself through results.

Psychological insight helps explain why this approach feels so compelling. According to Psychology Today, revenge-adjacent behaviors, including subtle acts of resistance, often emerge as attempts to regain control and reduce emotional distress after feeling constrained or wronged.

In “Seeking Revenge: Its Causes, Impact, and Challenge,” psychologists explain that while such actions may not lead to lasting emotional relief, they can provide short-term validation by restoring a sense of agency and competence.

Applied to this story, malicious compliance becomes less about defiance and more about balance. The technical manager reclaimed influence without confrontation, and OP earned trust through outcomes rather than credentials. The emotional reward wasn’t humiliation or victory; it was alignment.

In the end, this story invites reflection. Expertise doesn’t always announce itself through titles, and leadership doesn’t always recognize what it doesn’t understand.

When people are allowed room to adapt and prove value through results, everyone benefits. The lingering question is simple but important: how often do systems fail not because talent is missing, but because it’s hidden behind the wrong expectations?

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These users joked that learning languages is mostly syntax anyway

joppedi_72 − I will quote my programming teacher from 25 years ago.

"I know these programming languages, and the others I can fool you that I know."

12stringPlayer − I've said for decades now that

after you learn your first dozen programming languages, the rest are just syntax.

Cheers for that technical manager for knowing how to get what he needed, not what management wanted.

H0B0aladdin − As my family says Don't let your qualifications get in the way of your aspirations

This group criticized nontechnical leadership and praised the hiring manager

EvilGreebo − Love this story. Nothing can s__ew up a project

more than a top manager who has no idea how the project actually works.

You can't do a solid application design with everyone having just the same skillset!

Ck1ngK1LLER − As a recruiter I can tell you right now, this type of hiring manger is an absolute breath of fresh air.

It takes guts to go outside the wire, especially when it’s the CEO,

but a non-technical person dictating what a technical hire needs to be is the absolute worst.

Good for your HM for finding a work around that benefit the team more than the ego.

These commenters vented about chronic database neglect

grumpyOldMan420 − That is the problem with the tech industry.

never enough thought to actual database design and development. everyone is looking for a DBA.

who sits and watches a screen. and makes sure the back up runs.smh.

Spent 20 years in database world and am not qualified to be a dba or "programmer"...🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

ojioni − I've been screaming for a DBA for ten years now.

We're constantly having performance issues due to software developers thinking

they know what they are doing with fancy queries.

I'd settle for a contractor coming in for a few months to a year

to go through all our SQL and make recommendations. I can write queries.

I can't promise you they will be efficient queries because I'm not a DBA

and I've only learned enough SQL to be dangerous.

[Reddit User] − For a while there it sounded like you were describing a position in the dev team I work in.

Database is a nightmare and because it works "good enough" its never been improved.

My favorite story so far from this job was when I brought one report's runtime down from minutes to seconds

and an employee of one of the customers complained that it was too fast, so it must be doing something incorrectly.

These users noted how common on-the-job learning really is

SignificantPain6056 − I continued to learn on the job,

and no one ever found out I hadn't been a ___ expert all along.

Basically every dev in every job lol

archbish99 − My former employer told us when interviewing that your present skillset is only moderately relevant.

What we want to hire is demonstrated ability to come up to speed in a new technology,

become functional quickly and become expert eventually.

No one knows everything, we can teach anything you don't know..

But you have to be able to learn it.

This commenter questioned whether the management setup was worth the risk

FunkyPete − That's a great story, but there is no chance I would take that job if the management is this messed up.

Also, redesigning a database like that is not trivial,

the entire codebase needs to be modified to accept the new table design.

Everything about this job makes me want to run away.

Most readers agreed this wasn’t really about tricking anyone; it was about hiring the right brain for the job.

Some admired the technical manager’s nerve, while others worried about leadership gaps that made such tactics necessary in the first place. Still, the outcome speaks for itself: problems were solved, skills were learned, and the company improved.

Do you think flexibility in hiring is a strength or a liability? Would you trust adaptability over exact qualifications if results followed? Drop your thoughts below; this one hits close to home for many professionals.

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

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