I hated those things. I liked the lazy motherfuckers who turned them in saying how good of a job they do and how hard they worked though.
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I hate employee self assessments. Anyone want to write mine?
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Originally posted by Baron View PostCheck this out, its a long read. https://sites.google.com/site/forgottenemployee/
specifically part three.
Ha, I hadn't read that in awhile. Great stuff.
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The worst is "Where do you see yourself in 5 years". I have had 3 different managers in a year's time before and some areas of a large corp can be very confusing because the titles and responsibilities can all sound very similar. I HATE this question. I just want to make more money. Period.
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Like someone is mocking me or something.Originally posted by Baron View PostCheck this out, its a long read. https://sites.google.com/site/forgottenemployee/
specifically part three.Fuck you. We're going to Costco.
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Additionally, in my experience, your raise has been predetermined well beforehand. It's just used in the favoritism game to justify a person's higher percentage.Originally posted by Denny View PostMan, I'm so glad to be done with that. That's just a tool for lazy management."Self-government won't work without self-discipline." - Paul Harvey
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I didnt have it nearly that good, but I had a gig that went a bit crazy a few years ago. I was transferred into a department that had been basically dismantled, and there was just a manager. I worked my ass off, and we got everything done with just two people, when slated for 4. The manager up and quit, so they promoted me. I didnt have any help, so I was exempted from the normal BS meetings for the meantime. I started hiring, and we interviewed a guy that was a great fit for what we needed, except he wouldnt take the job unless it was a management job. We decided he should get that title, and go to the meetings. I kept my pay, and made all the decisions for the department, but didnt have to do the boring meetings and had him do a lot of the paperwork. It solved a couple of problems, I was able to fill in wherever I was needed, I didnt have to hire a paperwork clerk, and he was happy as a lark. I did what needed to be done, and would "turn things over to the manager" when I wanted him to do it.Originally posted by sc281 View PostLOLZ! Thank you for that.
Best job in the world right there.
It all worked well until I was getting transferred again, and he found out his position was a rouse, and he wasnt making manager's pay. He walked out the door mid-meeting he was so mad."If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford
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I have to do one of these things every quarter. We go online to our "career management tool" and waste our time. Its a drag every year. Other than showing hard metric numbers, its pointless IMO.
I am with Jluv. I am not the type of person to brag about my accomplishments Nor do I even bother documenting throughout the year what my huge accomplishments were. I figure its my job to make big accomplishments and never think about having to show every single thing I did on this assessment. Managers know who they like and who they don't like. You can document all of your successes and say you are the greatest employee in the world. But the manager is really going to give their final assessment on what they have seen, not what you wrote.
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Never saw that before. That is great!Originally posted by Baron View PostCheck this out, its a long read. https://sites.google.com/site/forgottenemployee/
specifically part three.
It does remind me of a position I had for a couple of years in the mid 2000's. I was a manager, and had set up my team to pretty much run itself with very little input from me. Like 5 hours of work a week, at best. It was nice for a while, but then I started hating it and left.
Now days I wish I could get that back
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