Oh, and I really want to hear from Elbino as to his career prospects on the Main lobster fishing grounds.

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Wow, that could have been spouted from my very own brain. Hail, complacent brother!The Meal wrote: as far as titles go, I'm comfortable with my place in life. I watch younger, more eager, go-getters get larger amounts of responsibility without any jealous emotions cropping up. I do not aspire to bigger pieces of the pie and do not feel like my talents are getting squandered. I have suitable amounts of ownership over my demesnes, and generally work with capable coworkers who do a good part with their own plots.
If it's any consolation, Stern was very happy to be working with you when I talked to him a couple weeks ago.coopasonic wrote:Congrats.
My review for 2014 hasn't been scheduled yet, but I expect the worst review of my career since I was promoted to Corporal in 1992. That is a primary driver for my recent job change. We're still getting started on that.
Ditto. Was going to quote that exact paragraph. Things are good here.Carpet_pissr wrote:Wow, that could have been spouted from my very own brain. Hail, complacent brother!The Meal wrote: as far as titles go, I'm comfortable with my place in life. I watch younger, more eager, go-getters get larger amounts of responsibility without any jealous emotions cropping up. I do not aspire to bigger pieces of the pie and do not feel like my talents are getting squandered. I have suitable amounts of ownership over my demesnes, and generally work with capable coworkers who do a good part with their own plots.
I have never been climber. But climbing finds me. My title changed this year from EDI Coordinator to IT Coordinator but titles mean nothing to me. I only worry about having one because I need one for a lot of paperwork, a business card I never hand out, and the signature of my email. Responsibility always find me though. Irrespective of title change. "This needs to be done. It falls under your purview. It is now your responsibility." Eventually, they say "Wow. we value you. Have a raise." Then quickly they say "We pay you a lot of money. This needs to be done. It falls under your purview. It is now your responsibility." Right now I need a second person but at the same time, I'm constantly left with the impression that my position is at will and they pay me too much money for a job they only notice when things go wrong.GreenGoo wrote:Ditto. Was going to quote that exact paragraph. Things are good here.Carpet_pissr wrote:Wow, that could have been spouted from my very own brain. Hail, complacent brother!The Meal wrote: as far as titles go, I'm comfortable with my place in life. I watch younger, more eager, go-getters get larger amounts of responsibility without any jealous emotions cropping up. I do not aspire to bigger pieces of the pie and do not feel like my talents are getting squandered. I have suitable amounts of ownership over my demesnes, and generally work with capable coworkers who do a good part with their own plots.
Life in a 6-person company will always be like this. Technically, I'm the trainer, but I do project management, grant writing, tech writing, tech support, QA, etc. My biggest gripe is that my boss (company owner) holds his cards close to his chest and seemingly has a pathological need to keep us in the dark as much as possible. I love what I do, but being given 2.5 weeks to learn an entirely new database management system that we developed using an outside contractor with whom I had no contact, then write all the documentation and context-sensitive help for it, and then train clients on it, having seen it for the first time 2.5 weeks ago just about drove me over the edge last month. That kind of stuff happens all the time. He expects us to pull stuff out of thin air and either forgets he hasn't told us anything, or will give you a 30-second overview and expect you to be an expert. He'll know for 3 months about an RFP with an 11-30-14 deadline, and not tell me about it until a week before its due, than act shocked when I'm pissed because "it's all the same stuff as the last one." No, it isn't. Every contract has its own requirements. These are the kinds of things that will lead me to punch him someday, except not really because I assume every place is like this.LordMortis wrote:I have never been climber. But climbing finds me. My title changed this year from EDI Coordinator to IT Coordinator but titles mean nothing to me. I only worry about having one because I need one for a lot of paperwork, a business card I never hand out, and the signature of my email. Responsibility always find me though. Irrespective of title change. "This needs to be done. It falls under your purview. It is now your responsibility." Eventually, they say "Wow. we value you. Have a raise." Then quickly they say "We pay you a lot of money. This needs to be done. It falls under your purview. It is now your responsibility." Right now I need a second person but at the same time, I'm constantly left with the impression that my position is at will and they pay me too much money for a job they only notice when things go wrong.GreenGoo wrote:Ditto. Was going to quote that exact paragraph. Things are good here.Carpet_pissr wrote:Wow, that could have been spouted from my very own brain. Hail, complacent brother!The Meal wrote: as far as titles go, I'm comfortable with my place in life. I watch younger, more eager, go-getters get larger amounts of responsibility without any jealous emotions cropping up. I do not aspire to bigger pieces of the pie and do not feel like my talents are getting squandered. I have suitable amounts of ownership over my demesnes, and generally work with capable coworkers who do a good part with their own plots.
I am responsible for everything. I never asked for it but I got it. No one bothers me or works with me unless I need to spend money, need authorization for paperwork, or something goes wrong. My boss, her boss, and his boss don't even really know what I do for a living because I am responsible for everything.
My stress it too high but my work is certification free and jack of support trades, so I'm afraid of what an alternate job would be like. So I work really hard hoping to kept around long enough afford an early retirement. (another 11 to 15 years off)
Captain Caveman wrote:I'm a tenured-track assistant professor at a research university. It's been a long, neurotic ride, filled with anxiety about publishing and securing grants, but I've almost made it to the promise land. My tenure review occurred last semester and went really well. It'll hopefully be official soon. After that, as long as I don't embezzle money or date my students, I should have a job for life. Not a bad gig.
Lol, I actually wrote out that I had turned down a couple of promotions that would have moved me into management, but decided it sounded too much like rationalization.LordMortis wrote:I have never been climber. But climbing finds me.GreenGoo wrote:Ditto. Was going to quote that exact paragraph. Things are good here.Carpet_pissr wrote:Wow, that could have been spouted from my very own brain. Hail, complacent brother!The Meal wrote: as far as titles go, I'm comfortable with my place in life. I watch younger, more eager, go-getters get larger amounts of responsibility without any jealous emotions cropping up. I do not aspire to bigger pieces of the pie and do not feel like my talents are getting squandered. I have suitable amounts of ownership over my demesnes, and generally work with capable coworkers who do a good part with their own plots.
I am not going to say anything because it would be wrong to crush the worldview that is keeping you from punching the boss. Of course you work at a company of 6 and I work at a company of 40,000. There was a time I worked for a company of 10 and it was closer to your experience on some points. At a company of 40k nobody expects anything to happen fast and I am always getting praise for answering questions and providing documentation in a timely manner.MHS wrote:I assume every place is like this.
Cool stuff. Congrats.Captain Caveman wrote:I'm a tenured-track assistant professor at a research university. It's been a long, neurotic ride, filled with anxiety about publishing and securing grants, but I've almost made it to the promise land. My tenure review occurred last semester and went really well. It'll hopefully be official soon. After that, as long as I don't embezzle money or date my students, I should have a job for life. Not a bad gig.
This. And it's by far the worst part of the job. Work is done Mushroom Management style by the upper management, the parent corporation, our customers, and people who I don't even answer to but for whom my job is symbiotic to. It adds tons and tons of stress where stress doesn't need to be.my ... company ... holds his cards close to his chest and seemingly has a pathological need to keep us in the dark as much as possible.
Thanks.GreenGoo wrote:Cool stuff. Congrats.Captain Caveman wrote:I'm a tenured-track assistant professor at a research university. It's been a long, neurotic ride, filled with anxiety about publishing and securing grants, but I've almost made it to the promise land. My tenure review occurred last semester and went really well. It'll hopefully be official soon. After that, as long as I don't embezzle money or date my students, I should have a job for life. Not a bad gig.
Yeah, I would say most MICRO companies are like that.coopasonic wrote:I am not going to say anything because it would be wrong to crush the worldview that is keeping you from punching the boss. Of course you work at a company of 6 and I work at a company of 40,000. There was a time I worked for a company of 10 and it was closer to your experience on some points. At a company of 40k nobody expects anything to happen fast and I am always getting praise for answering questions and providing documentation in a timely manner.MHS wrote:I assume every place is like this.