I've given too much information about my health, and now it gets used against me.
Your employer, managers, supervisors; they're not you're friends. You can and should remain friendly to an extent, but be careful what information you give away.
How does it feel like that has worked against you? [How could anyone possibly weaponize this [unless the non-profit is like Burning War-Orphan Flags and War-Orphans of America or something]?].
Its a bad deal doing extra at an employer expecting a raise or job security. You do the extra to learn the newer/better skill, gain the experience, then take those new skills to a new employer who will pay you more for having it. This is how you move up the ladder in the 21st century.
Anywhere that I've learned a new skill in hopes of getting a promotion, the response has either been "why did you waste time learning that? That's not your job." or more commonly "great initiative! Now we can add that work to your workload without having to pay you a cent more! This is great management because we can have one employee do the job of 1.5, and we didn't even have to pay to train them! Thanks for that and here's your extra work! Deadlines and expectations remain the same on your old work of course."
In a few cases, once that inevitably led to job change, they had the gall to try and shame me with a line like, "You know, that's a skill you learned under this roof, to do work for this company. While we are professionals here, if we weren't, this might feel like a betrayal..."
I wouldn't make it obvious who my work besties are.
It's assumed that you'll gossip with that person, so you won't get any info that they can't hear.
If they're more than 1 level junior to you, it will take longer to get promotions and raises since you'll be "junior" by association.
If they're the same level and in your team (and they're a poor performer), you won't get promoted because it's assumed you'll play favorites as their boss.
Sucks. Some of them were not professional and it impacted my optics. I need to pick better friends and set healthier boundaries.
Letting it bleed so much into life. My job and my hobby (code) have significant overlap. Stuff I learned on the job started making hobby coding not fun and shortcomings at the job started to feel like my own personal failures. I am slowly learning to separate my work and personal identities, to understand that my employer's stuff is not my own, and to leave work at work when work ends. I wish I had done that from the first day though.
Wfh doesn't necessarily help with imposter syndrome. I've been wfh for a couple years now, and I still feel like I'm just playing an admin rather than having earned my senior position lol
Stop acting like I'm worthless with low self-esteem. I don't know why I present myself that way. I'm a valuable competent skilled employee who passes background checks squeaky clean. Someone smack me and tell me to present myself as I deserve.
I even declined the hiring bonus because I felt unworthy of it although I meet all the criteria for it 🤦♀️ But really what I did was tell my managers that I'd rather be given the hiring bonus after I've been there a year because I've heard that some companies have a stipulation in the contract of hiring bonuses that should anything happen within the first year of my employment that causes me to stop working there, I would have to repay the bonus, so I kept it in mind that if I ever got a job that promised a hiring bonus, I would discuss it with the manager to have the bonus given to me at the end of a year. well I told my managers this and they told me I would have to talk to a higher up manager about it and they told me her name but I forgot, and they didn't even look me in the eye when they said this and I just kind of never followed up on it.
Instead of hearing about the bonus maybe being pulled back.. just read the contract?
And even if you would have to give it back.. just park it until its free to use (assuming you dont actually need it)
There's no mention of the hiring bonus in the contract. The hiring bonus was mentioned in the advertisement for the job on ZipRecruiter. I screenshotted it and one of my managers even mentioned it during our initial interview and told me I'm qualified for it so I know it's real and I have evidence of it. I'm still just laying here in bed in my pajamas not dealing with it. But I'm going to work tomorrow as scheduled.
as to your other point, over my concern of receiving the bonus and not spending it for a year, impossible that I would not spend that if I had it. I live less than paycheck to paycheck which is why I spend so much time on Lemmy because I don't have enough money to do the things that I would rather be doing. I just sit here when I'm not working and I pay my bills and all my money's gone then I go to work and pay my bills and just sit here cuz there is no money left to do anything.
No. It's not even very much. Anyway I guarantee I need it and would appreciate it more than any random internet stranger asking me to hand it over to them.
Google voice has been around for like 15 years. It's your perm number, that your direct calls to your real number as you like/don't like.
Personally I give out work number that is semi permanent and fam/friends get GV #. I use one message app for work # and one for GV. Allows me to pay attention/prioritize during work/personal time.
Been doing this for more than 12 years. 8 employers, no worries.
You must use your Google voice phone number often enough for them not to disable it. I had a Google voice number. Used it infrequently. They disabled it.
Yep, dual sim is a thing. However, my employer wants full control of the phone so they provided an iPhone. (I'm an Android user) The biggest pro of 2 phones is that you can silence the work phone outside work hours.
With my 1st temp job ('99) I told my boss that the best feature on the work phone the power button was. The moment I left the building it would be turned off. Alas, those modern phones have a complete sequence to go trough to get them off, so I now use the automated do not desturb. Alas, iPhone has only times you can set daily, instead weekday dependent times. Between 18:00 and 7:00 the thing is quiet, no exceptions.
Yes. Most modern phones are dual-sim. New Google Pixels, new iPhones, All Xiaomis afaik.
You can give them phone number A and then completely disable that sim out of work hours.
Edit: also you can have "virtual" phone numbers that you just use inside an app on your phone, but they don't do as much as a normal mobile number so I personally wouldn't take my chances.
This makes it a bit more difficult since I designed most of the architecture at my work. It would take a lot of work to be taken seriously again and not have my opinion being discarded because I'm the newcomer.
I would have to prove myself all over again though, not something I'd look forward to.
Hmmm.. I'm quite happy with my work and the benefits I get. I guess if I got to restart I would make some more friends in the right places from the beginning. It's something I learned only later on that it helps to be on good terms with those higher up, in case you need some support with budgets or priorities.
And vice versa, I would also be more careful with not pissing people off. Early on in my job I ruined a few relationships by being a prissy bitch about how things were supposed to be done, instead of being a bit more open minded. Looking back on it I inwardly cringe at how I acted back then. That's definitely something I would not repeat, I like to think I've grown a bit emotionally since :)
Similar situation for me, as well. My company's taken a turn that's very successful for the C-suites, but more and more stressful for the rest of us and I'm becoming majorly burnt out.
Same here, the manager hiring me left before my employment started. I was a contractor that joined, so I already knew most of the team. Alas, management destroyed the fun in the job. Way to much work, no new knowledged colleagues but we got a truckload of managers to work agile.
It could help you stay on topic and build good opening and summary slides. A good opening slide helps orient the audience and a good closing side summarizes well. Both help in making sure a decision is reached or the audience is aligned after the presentation.
Maybe. I would need it to follow specific brand guidelines and team requests but at the same time know when to make the creative decision to break rules and dismiss requests. I don't think the tech is there yet. I have already incorporated other AI tools in my workflow but they have only helped on small and simple tasks.
What I really need is for Microsoft to create a version of PowerPoint that's meant for designers.
I'd do a much better job of writing a certain web app so that I don't need to spend the next seven+ years maintaining a pile of shitty PHP and copy-pasted JQuery.
I haven't coded in years but I recall that reading someone else's code was like getting a glimpse of what their closets and cupboards probably looked like.
Not have any expectations about excelling in my career, nor any expectations about having support in serving the public, although that is entirely what we do.
I got put in a project that people overpromised and I'm getting shafted by the fact that the client wants way more than I think they're paying for, so it's certainly running late. I'd ask a couple months in for a bit more help.