He‘s got the spirit (unionize!)
Asked for more hours at my 2nd job
So I work Monday-Friday 7:30-4 at an insurance company and at a jewelry making shop on weekends and I honestly love both my jobs. However I told my boss at the jewelry store that I’m available weekday evenings after 4:30 so I can get more hours than just every Saturday and Sunday. I checked the schedule for November, I now work Friday evenings and Sunday. That’s it. So I actually got even less hours because after my day job to close is less hours than I’d typically get working a Saturday and now I have every Saturday off… I feel like she really missed my point of I want more hours and more money not just a different day of the week
This just happened as of now. I have been working as a lead in this clothing store for about 3-4 months. I generally do not have any major issues (not trying to brag). The text comes from an unknown phone number and states “Your dumb a** is getting fired”. So far I texted them “Sorry who is this?”, and I have no response. I am hoping that this is a prank or a scam because I am just super afraid right now. I don’t work until Friday, so should I wait until then or should I call my boss tomorrow and ask about this?
This is from years ago
My work area hired a new P and VP of operations who had years of experience in the medical device industry, but not relevant experience to what we produced. Over the course of nearly three years morale, productivity, and profitability waned. Policies became black and white with no greyscale to accommodate life and reward systems were phased out. They operated off the “Beatings will continue until morale improves” school of thought. When profits got low enough to where they could not afford the staff we had they cut jobs. The VP had a document named “Culling the herd” that tracked our productivity metrics. Some people found this document in a public folder and brought it up to HR. The guy who found the document got a four day suspension without pay because he was “exploring sensitive files without permission.” The VP was made to apologize to us, and he turned…
Much like the previous company, this one-Invida-made this “opportunity meeting” sound like a one-on-one interview sort of deal, when it was neither. They sent quite a few reminders, and acted just about the same as the last company when someone typed in chat that they hadn’t been made aware that this was not going to be one-on-one. Don’t apply to Invida and don’t give them your business. They attempt to mislead applicants, disrespecting their time. And if you find yourself in a surprise group interview, don’t be afraid to call the interviewer out. Companies need to know that this is not acceptable behavior.