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Worker Maliciously Complies with Bad Orders and Returns as the New Boss

by Charles Butler
January 25, 2026
in Social Issues

We have all had that one boss who insists on doing things their way, even when it makes absolutely no sense. Usually, we just sigh, roll our eyes, and fix the mess later. But sometimes, a workplace disagreement escalates into a full-blown saga of revenge and redemption.

A Reddit user recently shared a story that is practically a legend in the world of “malicious compliance.” It involves a dispute over something as simple as how to write a date on a file. What started as a petty argument turned into thousands of dollars in wasted overtime, a wrongful termination, and a plot twist that saw the employee returning to the office not just with a job, but with a promotion.

It is a satisfying tale about why it pays to listen to the people doing the actual work.

The Story

Worker Maliciously Complies with Bad Orders and Returns as the New Boss
Not the actual photo

Don't mess with data date formats?

I see a ton of M/D/Y dates in Ontario businesses, since the amount of trade with the USA makes adopting their standard more convenient.

My personal little protest is writing dates on forms as 13 Aug 2017, so there's no confusion on month, and dating files with YY-MM-DD.

I once had an employer take issue with that file naming convention, and he ordered me to change it to MM-DD-YY.

These are files that our sales and service people needed constantly, and need in chronological order.. I__ot Manager: "Change these dates to look like regular dates.".

Me: "They sort better this way though, and the sales and service people need-". I__ot Manager: "IDGAF, CHANGE IT NOW.". Me: -.- "Yes sir."

The change forced me to work overtime, which I recorded as time worked (and was not exempt from OT), and productivity in all other departments decreased by at least 50%.

The manager gave me notice (fired me), because those orders had cost his budget an extra $4000 of OT while changing decades of dates to a stupid date format,

and seriously hampered the other two departments. During my last week, I took all of the emails we had exchanged

(mostly about how changing the date format would be a bad idea) and all records of the work I had done, and sent them

to the heads of the other departments, the CFO, COO, aand CEO. Just to let them know about the new date format

and cascade to their teams, of course, since I wouldn't be around anymore. Cue a flurry of miffed conversation between all of those executives.

About a week after I had left, I got a call from a very angry former manager about how I had cost him his job.

Hung up on him. A couple of hours later, got a call from the COO, who conferenced in the other department heads,

and they offered me that manager's job (after I fixed the dates back). We settled on a 10% raise on that manager's salary,

and another $5,000 to fix the dates. The CFO and COO greeted me upon returning, and asked how long the dates would take.

I asked them to wait a moment, and ran a script that I had written the night prior that would change all the dates back

in under an hour. I was lucky that they weren't upset, and understood exactly what I had done. Especially since I pointed out

that I didn't need to hire someone else to do my old job, and we saved an entire salary by combining the two jobs.

TL;DR: I__ot manager switches date formats, loses job, I get paid just under ten grand to do a bunch of busywork and

run a script to reverse that busywork, plus his job and raise. Bonus points for saving the company (well, my department) money overall.

Edit: As an addendum, we were not the IT department and so the manager did not understand what programming was or that the change could be automated.

This story is just deeply satisfying for anyone who has ever had to do a task twice because management didn’t understand the workflow. It is frustrating to watch a leader choose ego over efficiency. The manager’s refusal to listen to the person who actually organizes the files is a classic workplace blunder.

However, the way the OP handled the situation was brilliant. Instead of shouting or making a scene, they simply let the data speak for itself. Sending that email to the executives was a bold move, but it was necessary to protect their professional reputation. It is lovely to see competence rewarded in the end.

Expert Opinion

This narrative is a perfect case study of “micromanagement” colliding with “subject matter expertise.” When a manager insists on a specific method without understanding the technical implications, they risk what business psychologists call the “competence trap.” They believe their authority equals knowledge, which often leads to costly mistakes.

According to Harvard Business Review, the best leaders are those who trust their team’s expertise. A 2021 report on workplace efficiency found that employees who feel heard are 4.6 times more likely to perform at their best. By ignoring the OP’s advice about sorting and data retrieval, the manager not only lowered morale but actively harmed the company’s bottom line.

Dr. Travis Bradberry, an expert in emotional intelligence, notes that great leadership requires humility. “A boss who cannot admit they are wrong is a liability,” he explains. In this case, the manager’s inability to accept a better file sorting system—simply because it wasn’t what he was used to—demonstrated a lack of adaptability.

Furthermore, the OP’s solution—a simple script—highlights the value of automation. The company was lucky to get the OP back, as they brought a modern solution to an old-fashioned problem. It serves as a reminder that sometimes the person lowest on the totem pole holds the keys to the most efficient solutions.

Community Opinions

The internet crowd was cheering for the OP, with many fellow data lovers weighing in on the great date format debate.

Readers unanimously agreed that the ISO 8601 date format is superior for sorting.
SwimmingJohn − I'm a YYYYMMDD fan, myself. Makes it real easy to sort things electronically as the tail end changes most often followed by the middle.

thesammon − [ISO 8601] or bust.

ScottyDetroit − Awesome story! I'm an American and I hate our date standard. I organize all our family photos in folders labeled YYYY-MM-DD [Description].

People were thrilled by the justice of the manager getting fired.

wdjm − Why is it that these kinds of people never realize that they cost themselves the job?

eirelav09 − God f__king bless you, dude. Livin the dream for all of us.

unstabledave105 − Post this on r/JusticeBoner . This post just makes me very, very happy

Some users shared their own struggles with rigid date policies.
cgimusic − I was once told by a financial institution that they couldn't accept my cheque because it was dated YYYY-MM-DD.

They demanded it be re-done... Genius. Accept two ambiguous date formats over one where it's completely clear what you mean.

ermergerdberbles − I spent 10 years at a big red Canadian Telco. I was taught to use DDMMMYY e. g. 31AUG17. Makes it super easy for all.

A few commenters worried the OP might have taken on too much work.
imakesawdust − I have to wonder if you didn't shoot yourself in the foot there by offering to perform your old job in addition to your new management duties.

How to Navigate a Situation Like This

If you are ever given a work order that you know will cause problems, the most important thing to do is “disagree and commit” while documenting everything. You can politely explain your reasoning once or twice, focusing on how your method helps the company save time or money.

If your manager insists, follow the instructions but keep a paper trail. Save emails where you raised concerns and where the manager overrode them. This isn’t about being petty; it is about protecting yourself if things go wrong later. Just like the OP, having a record of your work and your warnings can be your safety net if higher-ups start asking questions.

Conclusion

This story is a victory for logic and efficiency. It reminds us that good management is about outcomes, not just following old habits. The OP turned a terrible situation into a career advancement by staying calm and using their skills to fix the problem.

Have you ever had a boss who insisted on doing things the hard way? How did you handle the fallout? We would love to hear your workplace survival stories.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

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