Build a manager exit interview outline
You're leaving the company and your exit interview with your manager is scheduled for Friday. This builds an outline that shares useful feedback without burning bridges — what worked, what didn't, what you'd want the next PM to know.
Exit Interviews Compound Long After You Leave
Exit interviews shape the reference conversation your future hiring managers will have in 5 years. First Round Review on leaving well and HBR on career capital both argue that the long-run value of a good exit interview — measured in future references, rehires, and network deposits — far exceeds the short-run catharsis of a blunt one.
How the Build a manager exit interview outline Prompt Works
The prompt structures the exit into six sections, emphasizes structural rather than personal feedback, and includes a handoff document for the incoming PM. The "feedback I'd hold back" output is the judgment: some feedback is right but unactionable, and holding it back preserves the relationship without losing signal.
When to Use It
- You are leaving a company in the next 30 days.
- A role exit is contemplated and you want to plan the conversation.
- A peer is leaving and needs a thoughtful framework.
- A manager relationship is ending and you want to preserve the network.
- An exit interview is scheduled and the usual instinct is to vent.
Common Pitfalls
- Personal blame. Personal criticism reads as vengeance. Structural framing reads as insight.
- No handoff doc. Leaving with no handoff burns goodwill. A written handoff buys years of reputation.
- Volunteering everything. Some feedback is not yours to share (e.g., peer issues not asked about).
Sources
- First Round Review — First Round
- Begin with Trust — Harvard Business Review
- Kim Scott — Kim Malone Scott
- Radical Candor — Kim Scott
Sources
- First Round Review — First Round
- Begin with Trust — Harvard Business Review
- Kim Scott — Kim Malone Scott
- Radical Candor — Kim Scott
Prompt details
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Open the live prompt detail page for the full workflow.