My grammar sucks I’m sorry But I’m in construction kind of always been never was my “dream” job was supposed to just get me by But anyways I thought I finally found a great place the owner always does charity work and we get bonus pretty regularly I get paid well but now I’m dealing with a supervisor and foreman that I’m assuming just hates me last year I was in a car accident and wound up with brain damage and 2 discs messed up and a family death along with getting Covid so last year wasn’t a good year for me and my attendance Also I have to go to the Dr every 3 months and have to fast 12hours before so I usually take the whole day off This year started with my first car blowing the motor and then me getting Covid this past week my truck…
Author: Olivia
I worked for a small manufacturing company in sales, straight of of college and took an entry level, below market salary role just to get a job. The CEO at the time told me “when traveling for work, make sure you spend the company money as if it were your own. You wouldn’t spend your own money on expensive dinners would you?”. Fast forwards 5 years – that CEO left the business, I got a 6x raise after a few promotions. He then came back to the business and I reminded him of that statement. He backpedaled saying “no I don’t believe that, as some people do spend their personal money on expensive meals”. It was only true for me at the time because I was being paid under market. So they were being cheap on my salary and my expenses. Needless to say, I don’t work for them anymore!
This is gold lol
Listening to a leadership conference for a global corporation, this was a statement by the CEO during his keynote. I think its an important perspective to keep in mind. You can influence change. You can stand up for yourself and your co-workers and what is right. Even if you think your sphere of influence is small, you never know the ripple effect it might have. Have the courage to be ethical, and be a good influence. I don't think his statement was made with this movement in mind, but I think it is a powerful and relevant statement.
I have been put on a performance improvement plan and felt my situation was not recoverable in terms of office reputation. So despite probably surviving the PIP I sought and found another job, starting in 2 weeks. Options: Inform current employer. Give 2 weeks notice. Schedule 1 week PTO 1 week out (we have that flexibility). Quit without notice thereafter I have been at the job 5 months and taken 3 days off. #2 is probably “fair” as a PTO catchup but I see no reason for the company not to just terminate me. Unless it's a legal risk. What would you guys do?
I (27f) work in an office and this coworker (m, I guess in his early 30s) always snaps at me when I do anything different than him or make a mistake. Mind you, he is better in this job than I am and I make some mistakes that could be avoided, am working on it, but this guy shames me for my faults multiple times a day now in front of all our coworkers and our boss. He is legit in telling me I made a mistake, but he does it in such a degrading, shameful way and it comes across as if I can do nothing right. He is always angry about something, has temper issues and smokes at least 15 cigarettes a day (in office only) when he has a hard day. When I make a mistake, he asks me openly what I thought when doing so or…
Discussing Wages
In my experience, I’ve never seen a business I’ve worked for openly discourage discussing salaries; HOWEVER, I have had coworkers and peers that are adamant that this is taboo and refuse to disclose their income. How do you overcome this barrier?