I've only worked at this warehouse for 2 weeks and was genuinely curious about the hire on process. I asked 1 lady, she said her pay was lowered after she got hired and it kind of got me heated. So on my break, I asked 2 others and they said they are not allowed to talk about their wages because it caused a huge problem before. Less than 1 hour later, everyone was called to a meeting by the owner and co-owner. They said talk of wages and personal compensation is strictly prohibited and can and will result in termination. What the fuck? I posted in legal advice because I'm pretty sure that's against the law. Anyways, I thought it was funny because they're obviously completely fragile about how they're paying people which means that they're 100% taking advantage.
So I work for a very large company in the US and the CEO recently posted to the employee website about how the company exceeded profit expectations for 2021. Meanwhile they’ve cut hours for most retail staff, wage increases are abysmal, and everyone is doing the work of at least three others. Meanwhile they can brag about exceeding profits and I’m sure they’re not hurting for money though.
My boss says we’re all overpaid.
Im sitting here listening to him talking to a factory rep(we’re a GM dealership) and he’s telling the guy that his whole department(service) is over paid and a bunch of divas. My last day is the 18th. So glad to be out of here.
Just wanted to leave this here
I see a LOT of white collars making 100+k a year on this sub. That's fine. Just know the reality for most Americans. https://www.ssa.gov/cgi-bin/netcomp.cgi?year=2018 As of 2018, 50% of Americans in the workforce had a net income of 32,000 or less, including contributions to retirement plans as part of that #. If you're wondering why we're in such dire circumstances, there's your answer. Also, it appears that 71% of Americans made less than 52,000 net, including employer contributions to retirement plans as “income.” There aren't 75,000,000 “better jobs” for half of America. Sorry.
i’m a farm worker april-november, this is work i find very fulfilling and honestly i’d do it no matter how much i was paid (as long as i could afford to keep paying my student loans lol). but for the winter, i’ve gone back to a part time retail job at a liquor store, where i’ve worked before. within the first week of texting the boss and asking if he needed any extra help, i gave him a rough sense of my availability, which includes very limited weekend hours. i chose to limit my availability because my boyfriend and i have made a point to set several winter weekends aside to spend time together and go on little trips. we live an hour away from each other, and due to the seasonal nature of both our jobs, we’ll have quite limited time together in the warmer months. anyway, i made…
Simple life hack (This is a satire!)
Thanks, just thanks. Thanks for depowering disgruntled and overworked individuals who point out work flaws. Because of the interview everyone here knows about, boomers around my area now see anyone who isn't working or able to work for good reason, as lazy. Like they should put up with bad management. They should put up with unforgiving scheduling. They should put up with an unfair work environment. And if someone were to say something about it – they're classified as lazy. So thanks a ton… /s