my boss has delusions of grandeur about our website — do I have to burst his bubble? by Alison Green on May 16, 2018 A reader writes: I work as a personal assistant to a retired broadcast journalist who made the transition from analog to digital but hasn’t been able to make the leap to the internet. Much of my time is spent teaching/explaining basic tech things such as how to bookmark internet pages or why Facebook pages are different than regular web pages. My stated primary role is helping him run a news website, which in reality is him sending me articles he likes and me posting them to his blog and social media accounts; no commentary or original writing just a news aggregation site. He seems to think this site will one day be a major news site and spends a great deal of his day, and my time, talking about the future impact of this site. Our site is a WordPress blog that gets no traffic, and the only people that follow his social media accounts are his children and grandchildren. On top of that, he changes the name and intended audience of his site every other week. My question is, am I under any obligation to try and explain to him that this site isn’t going anywhere? I provide him with metrics from the Facebook and the blog, I make sure what he wants posted gets posted, and I do my best to make the blog and Facebook pages look professional but I’m left with a bad feeling that he’s paying me to essentially shout into the void. I’m living at home while going to school and this is a good part-time job that pays well and works with my schedule. Yeah, I think you have some ethical obligation to try to explain it to him if he’s pouring time and money into it, since you’re seeing evidence that he doesn’t understand the landscape he’s dealing with. That doesn’t mean that you’re obligated to successfully convince him, or to quit if you can’t. But I do think you owe him at least one serious attempt to say something like, “I really enjoy doing this work and may be shooting myself in the foot by saying this, but I want to flag for you that based on the metrics we’ve seen so far, there aren’t any indicators that the site is attracting readership. To attract an audience, I think you’d need a more robust marketing plan, including SEO.” Assuming that you don’t feel qualified to put that together, you could add, “That’s not something I’m qualified to advise you on, but you can hire consultants who specialize in this and can tell you what you’d need to do to expand the site’s reach.” And you could say, “I’m happy to continue on with the work we’ve been doing, but I didn’t feel right not flagging that for you.” Once you do that, I think you’ll have met your ethical obligations to ensure he’s clear on what you’re seeing. (Theoretically, he should already be clear on it from the metrics you’re sending him, but sometimes people need things contextualized for them — especially since this is a medium that he doesn’t seem to have much frame of reference for.) From there, it’s up to him. If he chooses to continue on after that, I don’t think you’re obligated to keep trying to burst his bubble. The exception to this is if he seems to be losing his faculties — like if he’s suffering from age-related dementia — in which case I don’t think you can ethically continue taking money for work that you know has little value. But otherwise, once you explain it to him, it’s his call. You may also like:update: my boyfriend has my old job and there’s tons of dramaI could delete my former employer’s website — should I?employee has already decorated for Christmas, explaining a chronic cough to coworkers, and more { 129 comments }
when the job you’re interviewing for keeps changing by Alison Green on May 16, 2018 A reader writes: I am currently interviewing for a job and I think I may get the offer. I just finished up my third and final interview and expect to be notified soon. However, I am struggling because the position has been described differently by different interviewers and does not seem to match the job description. The job description states that the position is primarily administrative. It was made clear to me, when I met with the executive director, that actually it is a fundraising position, including grant-writing and soliciting major gifts. But in my second and third interview (with a board member and the organization’s founder, respectively), they stated that it was less focused on fundraising, more on administration, with some overlap. In my last interview, when I asked the founder for clarity, he said he would have to speak to the executive director. If the job description says one thing, the executive director says another, and other staff say something else, what do I do? I need more clarity before I accept the role. I’d be happy with it either way, as I enjoy and am good at both administration and fundraising, but I want to know what I’m getting into. How should I ask for this clarification? Should I ask for an updated job description? Or for something written into my contract? I answer this question over at Inc. today, where I’m revisiting letters that have been buried in the archives here from years ago (and sometimes updating/expanding my answers to them). You can read it here. You may also like:I’m doing way more work than I signed up for, my manager over-shares about my coworkers, and morecurrent employee is job-searching, negotiating with an old boss, and moremy boss refuses to give me a job description and told me to stop asking for one { 41 comments }
how can I stop panicking every day that I might get fired? by Alison Green on May 16, 2018 A reader writes: I was fired by my first job out of college and only salaried job. I knew I wasn’t doing my best work, was a general 20something mess, and was becoming very disillusioned and unhappy at the company. I don’t know how much was legitimately shady stuff they did or how much was early-20s idealism run amok. We received no feedback of any kind — no performance reviews, formal or otherwise — and had little supervision. The feedback we did get was usually comments about our metrics or, in one case, a comment that we were interchangeable. So since I never received any feedback, I had to extrapolate it myself. At any point I could list very plausible reasons to fire me, and I was constantly terrified I’d lose my job. But it still blindsided me when it actually happened. First they posted my position online. Then my boss sent an IM intended for another manager to a friend of mine with the same name, and my friend passed it on. But they didn’t tell me in person until the day they did it, and I don’t remember them giving a specific reason. (I’m sure if they had, I would obsess over it to this day.) Now I’m in a different job in a different field in a company that employs a lot of perma-contractors. I started in a pool of temps and after a few “callbacks,” I guess you’d say, am now a permatemp. While my initial contract had an end date, this one doesn’t have anything formal beyond “this project is in spring 2018.” But I don’t know if that’s because there isn’t an end or because it got pushed back since we’re behind (we are). And I don’t know whether it’s an end date for everyone or just a few people — after all, that’s why I’m still here. So as a result, though I enjoy this job much more, every single day I am still terrified of being fired. We don’t have performance reviews here, either, and the feedback we get is more micro (“here’s something you can do differently on this project”) rather than macro (“here’s what we think of you and your future here”). My manager seems reasonable, but so did my boss at my last job, and we don’t interact much. The anxiety — panic, really — is not interfering with my work but that’s only because work is slow; it’s definitely interfering with my interactions with coworkers and my manager. I keep a bottle of (prescription) anti-anxiety pills at my desk for when it gets really bad, but I’m needing them more and more, and their very presence causes a meta-anxiety that I’ll get in trouble over drug possession (they’re often abused). So, given no feedback, how does one A) know whether they’re at risk of being fired and B) manage the fear? Is it ever acceptable to ask? You absolutely can ask for feedback! You can ask for it on specific projects and you can ask for it more broadly. Some ways to say it: * “Could we talk about how this project went? I’d love to get your feedback on it.” * “I wasn’t sure the way I presented X at the meeting was the most effective way to approach it. Do you thoughts on how I could have done that better?” * “Could we talk about how things are going overall? I’d really like to get your feedback on how I’m doing, big-picture.” * “Could we talk about how things are going? I’m hoping to get a better sense from you of how I’m doing overall, and especially if there are things I should work on doing differently.” And since you’re unclear on how long your work there is slated to ask, ask about that too: “I’m trying to get a better idea of how long my role here is likely to last. Is it likely to end when this project wraps up, and if so, what’s your sense of when that will most likely be?” This is a totally normal thing to ask about! They’ll understand that of course you need to have some idea of that. But as for terror over the possibility of being fired … It’s certainly true that there are bad managers out there who will fire people without any kind of warning. But they’re not the majority. Decent managers give you feedback and won’t let you to believe that everything is going fine and then swoop in and fire you out of the blue one day. And even with bad managers, there are usually signs that things aren’t going well — like that you’re getting a lot of criticism and your manager seems increasingly dissatisfied with your work. (Read these signs too.) The best way to prevent yourself from being blindsided by a firing you didn’t see coming is to ask for feedback and take it seriously and ensure you understand how your manager sees your work. But sometimes people get fired! Generally it’s warranted, although sometimes it’s not. But firings do happen. So do layoffs. And they can happen even if you do everything right. Given that, and given your worries about it, you might feel a lot better if you have a plan in place for what you’d do if that happened. Sometimes knowing what you’d do if your fears come to pass makes them less daunting. So do the things you’d be grateful to have done if that does happen: keep an up-to-date resume, actively cultivate your network, and get some job leads in place — all of which is smart to do anyway when you’re a temp on a project that isn’t long-term. But also, the level of panic that you’re describing is pretty debilitating and not likely to help you at work, and it has to be harming your quality of life. So if you’re not already, consider talking to a therapist about strategies for combating anxiety. You shouldn’t be terrified at work every day. You may also like:employee keeps asking if she’ll be firedmy boss asked me, “if you were fired, who would you tell first?”my coworker is constantly convinced he’s going to get fired { 81 comments }
Blue Apron got me to eat raisins in pasta by Alison Green on May 16, 2018 And now a word from a sponsor (with a great discount offer included)… My husband and I keep shared Google docs for everything – from movies we want to watch to things we can make for dinner. (Yes, we are dorks. Mainly it’s my influence.) The dinner spreadsheet is in some ways aspirational, listing a bunch of recipes that we’re allegedly going to make some day, and a small number that we make over and over. We are in a recipe rut, as most people are. Blue Apron is an easy and fun way of that rut. Blue Apron solves the question, “What are we going to make for dinner tonight that we haven’t already made too many times recently, and how can we do it without one of us having to go to the store?” Blue Apron is a delivery service that delivers farm-fresh ingredients for delicious, chef-designed recipes directly to your door. Everything arrives pre-measured and ready to go, so that you don’t need to figure out what to cook or shop for ingredients; you just get to do the cooking and eating. I like that they give you the exact quantities you need so that there’s no food waste (you’re not buying a giant bottle of buttermilk because you need two tablespoons), and everything can be prepared in 40 minutes or less. You can order a two-person plan or a family plan, and you can choose from eight recipes each week — in any combination you want, which is a nice improvement. Everything all gets delivered in a refrigerated box so ingredients stay fresh even if you’re not home when it arrives. Meals start at $8.99 per serving, and you can skip or cancel at any time. Creamy Tomato Orecchiette with Broccoli and Crispy Breadcrumbs. It has raisins in it! This month, I cooked Spicy Black Bean and Caramelized Onion Tacos with Marinated Zucchini; Sweet Peppers and Lentils with Cashews, Yogurt, and Mint; and Creamy Tomato Orecchiette with Broccoli and Crispy Breadcrumbs. I was a little skeptical about the Orecchiette because it had raisins in it! Who puts raisins in pasta? As of eating this meal, now I do. It was seriously delicious. (This is one of the things I love about Blue Apron. I would have side-eyed this recipe if I’d seen it somewhere else and never tried it, and so I would have missed out on how great it was.) People sometimes worry about the packaging in subscription meal services. You can recycle everything that comes in your Blue Apron box, including the baggies, liners, ice packs, and the box itself. If you don’t have curbside recycling, you can return your packaging to them for free and they’ll take care of it for you. If you want to shake up your cooking game, or just make your evenings a little easier, you should try Blue Apron. And if you’re one of the first 50 readers to sign up through this link, you’ll get $50 off your first two weeks of Blue Apron, which is a pretty great deal. Spicy Black Bean and Caramelized Onion Tacos with Marinated Zucchini Sweet Peppers and Lentils with Cashews, Yogurt, and Mint Disclosure: This post is sponsored by Blue Apron. All thoughts and opinions are my own. You may also like:ask the readers: how to move from white-collar work to blue-collar workhow can I get my freelancers to turn in their work on time?I’m meeting my interviewer at a coffee shop — how does this work? { 143 comments }
coworker interrupts conversations, accepting a beverage at a meeting if no one else does, and more by Alison Green on May 16, 2018 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. My coworker interrupts everyone’s conversations I have a coworker “Josh,” who has a habit of interjecting himself into conversations. Frequently. And, of course, he sits right next to me in our open-office floor plan. It’s frustrating enough when he joins personal conversations so that he can insert his opinion. For example, “Which gynecologist do you go to?” (He has no children.) But I can tolerate that since the conversation is not work related.However, it’s even more frustrating when he invites himself to join certain work conversations, particularly on projects that have nothing to do with him or his work. For example, I recently had to correct him when he answered my teammate’s question about when an assignment was due. She was asking me, since we were working on the assignment together, but apparently he felt the need to chime in even though he isn’t involved in our project. And, of course, his answer of “sometime next week” didn’t exactly match our actual deadline of this Wednesday. The problem is so much worse when we have someone from outside our team come by to ask questions or seek expertise regarding my projects and research. Even though he works on entirely separate projects and doesn’t share my areas of expertise, he will try to answer questions himself rather than redirect the question to me or someone on my project. This behavior really bothers me and, while I haven’t witnessed any major consequences yet, that could just be a matter time. After all, clients won’t know he doesn’t work on the project, and it could give our team a bad reputation. We report to the same boss, so I have no authority over him. We are essentially peers, but Josh was just promoted last month, so he is now technically more senior. What can I do? Step one is to address it in the moment when it’s happening. When he jumps into answer a question that isn’t in his area, don’t be shy about asserting yourself and saying things like “Actually, that’s my project — come talk to me about it and I can answer your questions” or “No, that’s not correct. The deadline is Wednesday.” And after these incidents, there’s no reason you can’t say to him, “Hey, if someone comes in asking about X, please let me handle that since I’m working on it and know all the details.” This doesn’t work with the interruptions of social conversations, of course – but those are sometimes unavoidable when you’re working in an open office. Most of the time you may need to just roll with those — although if a conversation is truly personal (like the one about gynecologists — WTF?!), it’s fine to say, “Actually, I just wanted to talk to Jane about this.” 2. Should I accept a beverage at a business meeting if no one else does? This is definitely not a very serious question, but one that I’ve been wondering about nonetheless. I, a super junior person, recently attended a meeting with an external vendor, along with my boss and his boss (who’s at director level). We were asked the standard “would you like something to drink?” question and both bosses asked for coffee so I felt comfortable doing the same. I was thinking, though, if neither of them had asked for something, would it have come across as strange/demanding/out-of-touch for me to ask something? Intuitively I feel like I should be following more senior people’s lead when it comes to that sort of thing, but I don’t know if I have a strange preoccupation with blending into the background in these types of situations. What are your thoughts/how would you feel as the senior person in this situation (assuming we’re talking about a standard water/coffee request, not anything over the top)? It’s always fine to say yes to water, even if no one around you is requesting it. With other beverages, though, yeah, because you’re very junior, I would follow the lead of more senior people in the room. It’s not that it would be demanding to say yes to an offer of coffee if no one else does. But when you’re very junior, you’ll usually make a better impression if you follow the lead of people senior to you, and it can look a little off if the one very junior person in the room is the only one accepting amenities. I can’t fully defend this — a cup of coffee really isn’t a big deal — but you’ll fit in with the meeting better this way. (That said, if anyone is reading this and wondering if they committed a horrible faux paus by accepting a coffee or a soda at a meeting where no one else did, it’s not anything to be terribly worried about either.) 3. My contact added me to a Facebook group for moms in my field — and it’s horrible I work in a field in which women are still a big minority. Early on, I met a woman who was slightly ahead of me in her career who has become a friend and occasional mentor. One thing we had in common was that we were both still figuring out how to balance our careers and family lives. This year I went on leave to have a baby. After he was born, I experienced a lot of anxiety stemming from hormones, lack of sleep, etc. Around this time, my friend added me to a Facebook group that she belongs to for moms in my field. I imagine she viewed this as a support network, but it has been anything but that. Members of the group aggressively insult people who take time off, slow their careers, even respond slowly to emails while on maternity leave. Especially right after giving birth, seeing these attitudes convinced me I wanted to quit my field and do something else. I’m honestly still unsure about going back to work in this area. I’m wondering if I should tell my friend about this. I don’t want to make her feel bad or come off as overly sensitive. But I don’t think she should add new moms to this group without some warning. How often do you speak to her? If you fairly closer and speak frequently, definitely say something! You could say something like, “To be honest, the Facebook group hasn’t been for me. I’ve found a lot of the members are really insulting to women who take time off or even unplug completely during maternity leave. If you suggest it to other women, it might be useful to warn them about that element of it — I’ve found some of what I’ve read there pretty unsettling!” If she’s a very casual acquaintance and you don’t talk much, it might not be worth reaching out just about this, especially if she enjoys the group herself. That said, since you consider her a mentor, you could ask her about her take on it, using language similar to the above but also asking, “Have you encountered a lot of that kind of thing in the field more broadly, or do you think it’s something about this particular group that brings it out?” 4. Recruiters reformat my resume My type of job openings (technical writer) often go through a recruiter – they find my resume online and contact me about openings that might not be advertised. This is fine. However, the recruiters want my resume in Word format so they can “reformat” it. This is fine, too. But at a recent interview I noticed that the version of my resume that was given to the interviewers by the recruiter omitted the URL of the website where I store my work samples. (Oversight? Intentional? What else gets left out?) Interviewers seem surprised at this, and I always give them my version (which I bring copies of with me). Am I committing some terrible faux pas? I never tell the recruiters that I’m doing this, they probably would not approve and I don’t want to alienate them. What do you think? (Oh, I didn’t get the job anyway but I keep plugging away.) Nope, you can keep doing that. Recruiters will sometimes reformat your resume to add their logo and/or remove your contact info, because they want the company to send all contacts through them. (This isn’t as shady as it sounds; they’re trying to avoid people circumventing paying their fee.) But some recruiters will also redo your resume to make it “better,” and their idea of “better” isn’t always great. It’s fine to keep bringing your own copies of your resume with you and handing it to your interviewer, and many interviewers will appreciate that. It’s also okay to ask your recruiter about it if you notice that the version they sent the employer is missing key information. 5. Someone I used to manage is asking about a new job with me, and I know I won’t hire them I am currently hiring for a position and was recently contacted by someone from my previous company that I hired and managed. They are interested in this open role but they don’t know that I am the hiring manager (the role I’m hiring for is in a different office than where I’m based). The issue is that I really struggled with this former employee. They took a long time to train and never fully grasped the aspects and tasks that the job required. When I left my former company, this employee still needed a lot of hand holding despite being on the job for 6+ months at that time. I’ve made inquiries but it appears this former employee has not made much improvement in the time since I’ve left. Coupled with the fact that I will have to manage this hire remotely, I have no interest in hiring them. Since they do not know I am the hiring manager, the original email asked only for information on the company and role. How can I delicately handle this situation? I don’t want to be too blunt but I also don’t want to lie. Should I just ignore the email (even though my gut instinct is that would be rude)? Don’t ignore the email; because you know this person, that would indeed be rude. Instead, answer the questions (be brief) but don’t falsely encourage them. If they’re clearly not a match in some specific way you’re comfortable sharing, it’s fine to say, “In the interest of transparency, I want to tell you that we’re looking for someone with more experience in X, so I don’t think that this would be the right match.” But if there’s not a quick and easy explanation you can give, it’s also fine to just say something non-commital like, “If you think the match might be right, I’d be glad to take a look at your application (I’m the hiring manager for this job).” You may also like:my coworker’s husband gets annoyed when our meetings run overmy nosy coworker keeps joining my conversations, re-interviewing after a job rejection, and moremy annoying coworker is driving everyone crazy { 487 comments }
my daughter refuses to tell interviewers why she left her last job by Alison Green on May 15, 2018 A reader writes: My daughter got fired from her first full-time job for chronic tardiness. Due to a combination of youth, inexperience, and (in my opinion) stupidity, she somehow missed the signs that she was in danger of losing her job until they called her in one day and told her to hit the road. According to her, she was not given any explicit warnings that (to her) clearly spelled out “You MUST fix this or you WILL be fired.” That is unfortunate if true; however, the fact that being chronically late to work is something that can potentially get you fired from just about any job should be self-evident to anyone, in my opinion, and I was quite taken aback to learn that she was not aware of this. All of that is water under under the bridge, of course, and the problem immediately facing her now is how to answer the “Why did you leave your last job?” question at interviews. From what she’s telling me, I’m afraid the way she’s been handling this could be torpedoing her chances of getting hired. She tells me that when she’s asked that question, she has been calmly and politely declining to talk about why she left her previous job. Am I correct to feel that this is a big mistake? In my opinion, that gives the impression that she is hiding something (which she basically is), and they are going to find out anway if they call her last employer (which I understand is pretty much s.o.p. in most hiring processes). I can’t imagine that NOT leaving a bad taste in the mouth of anyone who is contemplating hiring her. I told her that I think she should be as transparent as possible about this and address it head on, perhaps by by saying something like, “This is really embarrassing to admit, but I made a dumb rookie mistake at my last job and was late too many times. This led to the loss of my job. I have learned a lot from this mistake and I don’t intend to ever repeat it. I realize how important reliability is to employers, and I promise to make punctuality my highest priority on my next job.” I’m sure this particular script can be improved upon, but you get the idea. They are probably going to find about this one way or another (if they don’t write her off then and there due to her evasiveness). Refusing to talk about why she left the job seems completely counter-productive. Unfortunately, it’s all too easy to wave off advice that comes from dear old Mom (what does that old fuddy-duddy know, right? LOL), and I know she’ll never write to you herself. So … do you think I’m on the right track here? If not, please set me straight. On the other hand, if you do think she should be handling this differently, please advise, because I need some ammunition to convince her that she needs to change her approach. She keeps getting interviews that don’t go past first base, and of course, the longer this goes on, the longer the gap in her employment history is going to get, which of course will just make matters worse. P.S. I know finding another job is HER problem, first and foremost, but it’s also my problem, because I need for her to not be living at home for the rest of her life! You are right and she is wrong. (And that is possibly the first time I have said that about a parent’s advice in the history of writing this column, where I usually end up having to dismantle terrible advice from parents!) Refusing to answer an interview question is … well, a really big deal! There are times when it makes sense to do it, like if the question is offensive or straying into territory that would be illegal for the interviewer to consider (like asking about a disability or religion or your plans to have children) — but even then, it’s smart to do it pretty delicately. But refusing to answer a very normal, commonplace question about why she left her last job is going to come across really badly. First, the interviewer will assume the worst — not only that got fired, but that she got fired for a really terrible or embarrassing reason, like that she embezzled or that she was holding nude photo shoots in the office. Second, they’re going to think the refusal itself, regardless of the reason, is a sign that she doesn’t understand professional norms and will be difficult to work with. Lots of people get fired! And they go on to find work again, even when they get asked about the firing in interviews. But they do it by handling the topic with some grace, meaning that they give exactly the sort of answer you suggested. If they instead just openly refuse to answer the question, their chances of getting hired again … are not great. Maybe you can suggest she do a thought experiment and pretend that she’s interviewing nannies for a hypothetical future kid (or a pet-sitter or something else that she can imagine herself needing to hire in the future, where she’d have real personal investment in hiring the right person and where the stakes would feel high). Ask her to imagine herself asking that person why they left their last job, and them refusing to answer. Ask her, too, to imagine that she has several other strong candidates for them, all of whom are open and forthcoming about their work histories. It’s possible she’ll come back with an answer like “I’d give that person a chance!” but hopefully it’ll still give her some insight into why other people wouldn’t. The wording you suggested is excellent and I hope you can convince her to use it. You may also like:my manager accused me of making up numbersmy boss asked me, “if you were fired, who would you tell first?”my boss told me to write the same sentence 500 times as punishment for a mistake { 342 comments }
my boss got fired and won’t leave me alone by Alison Green on May 15, 2018 A reader writes: I have been at my job for about six months, and started during a time of major transition. I started just weeks before our new executive director started. The new director assessed the financials of our nonprofit social service organization and realized what a bad position we were in, and decided to make some major changes. This included eliminating the position of one of the long-time employees here, who also happened to be my direct manager. While it was definitely a decision for the financial well-being of the organization, it was clear that there were also some personal differences between my supervisor and the director that probably factored in. The decision to let her go was a big shock to the rest of the organization, and my manager was absolutely blindsided. It was upsetting for everyone, but we accepted the change as growing pains and necessary for where the organization is headed, and we were told that the rest of our jobs were secure for the foreseeable future. This is where it gets difficult. My former manager has not been able to let go. I really do feel for her, I know she has a compassionate heart for clients and that work was her life. I know this can’t be easy. However, I feel that I am in an awkward position ethically and personally. I want to keep in touch with her so that hopefully she will be a contact in the field, possible mentor, and future reference, especially since I am early on in my career. She is the one who hired me, after all. But. She has stopped by the office (and we are not a come-and-go public office) multiple times since being let go to make the rounds and catch up with everyone. She invited me for lunch and did her best to get me to talk trash about the executive director, and I spent the whole hour trying to diplomatically dodge her inquiries. I am wondering what the boundaries should look like between a former manager and the organization they no longer work for. She has also decided to be a community advocate with some of our clients, which is fine if we have their consent, but I am worried that it will undermine the work I have done with clients, since she is now a go-between for them instead of them getting in touch with me directly. She will sometimes text me on weekends about clients (I don’t reply until the work week), and she emails me tips and work-related resources that I didn’t ask for. It makes me feel like she is still my supervisor, and undermines my sense of autonomy at work. I feel like when she was my manager, she wasn’t really around that much and rarely provided timely feedback or direction, so it’s strange and honestly frustrating for her to be so involved now. I feel like I am being pulled to choose allegiance to her or our executive director. It just feels weird and unprofessional, and I don’t know how to set boundaries without offending her (since I can tell that she does take it personally if I don’t respond right away or dodge her questions), while still maintaining a positive relationship. I work for an agency that does work in a small, cultural community (which I am not a part of but she is), and I think that is also factoring in to this whole situation. Anyone outside of work that I have talked to about it has told me how weird they find the situation. What’s your take about what’s going on here? What advice would you give me for dealing with this and maintaining my sanity and professionalism? I need your help! You can read my answer to this letter at New York Magazine today. Head over there to read it. You may also like:how long after resigning should you still answer questions?update: I hate my new employeeI’m running my department but can’t get promoted into the director role { 83 comments }
I’m about to go on medical leave, but I’m also hoping to take my long-delayed honeymoon by Alison Green on May 15, 2018 A reader writes: My husband and I eloped in December, and our dream honeymoon location is one where the weather at that time of year isn’t ideal, so we decided to push it back until August, our other anniversary. My coworkers even had a post-wedding show for me in which they had a money tree to contribute to our honeymoon fund. In the intervening time (and honestly, for a very long time), I’ve struggled with severe chronic insomnia. I’ve used up the majority of my leave time (vacation and sick) on it, and am about to go on intermittent FMLA after a particularly bad month so that my job is protected during future flare-ups. My coworkers are supportive and understanding, and my boss understands but also feels very strongly that my attendance needs to improve. I agree, but until I can get under better treatment (I’m waiting for a specialist to open up), I’m at the mercy of my illness. The nature of my particular beast is that when I have flare-ups I can either take a couple hours in the morning (usually after laying in bed for five to six hours, I can finally get some sleep) and catch a few hours of sleep and be functional for six hours a day, or I can come in to work and be falling asleep at my desk and barely minimally functional for eight hours a day. I do get my work done, and for the coverage-related aspects of my job we have several others in my position that help cover when I miss those few hours, and I do my absolute best to never miss a full day of work. I’m very good at what I do, perhaps one of the best on my position at our organization, and I love my job and my work, and I’ve tried to express that so that I’m not seen as trying to take advantage or be flighty. I believe that my boss takes me seriously and takes my illness seriously, but she also has made several remarks about my attendance that give me the impression she thinks I can just power through it and I’m choosing to have poor attendance. I’m concerned that attitude will result in her denying me unpaid time off in August for my honeymoon, because “I should have thought of it when I was taking so much time off.” We’ve already booked our week-long stay (the location is extremely popular) and it’s a known fact amongst the entire office that I’m going thanks to the shower. The only reason it’s not “on the books” at work is because nobody submits leave that early here. I won’t be quitting if I can’t take this time off, but it would be hugely demoralizing because my husband and I have been trying to take this trip quite literally years and we’re finally financially able to make it happen. I left my last job because they went back on their word about giving me a flexible schedule for school and time to take off for this trip when I was planning it originally several years ago, but I can’t leave without having something else lined up. The rash part of me wants to mention my last job and the reason I left, but the sensible part thinks that’s not too smart. I know it’s perfectly legal for her to deny me that unpaid time off because of my illness-related absences but is there any way I can try to talk through the situation with her? I’m also concerned if I bring the leave to her now, she’ll make me promise to have fewer absences between now and then … which I can’t promise. Is there a script I can use to talk to her about this? Well … it might not be entirely unreasonable for your boss to tell you that it would be tough for her to grant additional leave, given how much you’ve already been out this year. To be clear, she shouldn’t do that just for the principle of it — if she can make it work without a lot of hardship, she should find a way to accommodate you, particularly if you’re excellent at your job. But there are jobs and circumstances where it would be legitimately difficult to have someone miss more work, and it’s possible that could be the case here. It of course would be wrong to frame it as “you should have thought of it when you were taking so much time off,” as you fear she might — since that implies that your time off was a matter of choice, rather than a medical condition. But a reasonable boss could indeed end up saying in some circumstances, “I’d love to say yes to this, but we really need you here because of the X backlog from your time out earlier this year.” Because of that, I wouldn’t delay talking to her about it — especially since you’ve already booked the vacation. You say that everyone in the office knows, but that doesn’t mean she knows the exact dates or the length of time or other details that could impact her answer. And she may be put off that you haven’t actually requested the time, given the broader situation. It makes sense to have the conversation now, even if your office doesn’t typically deal with vacation requests so far in advance. Your best bet is probably to frame it this way: “I think you know that I’ve been planning to take my honeymoon in August. I wanted to talk to you about logistics around that, because I know that I’ve missed a lot of work due to the health issue I’ve been struggling with. I wouldn’t normally plan a vacation while I’ve missed work so much, but because this is my honeymoon, I’d like to be able to take off (dates) for the trip.” If you’re willing to put in extra hours before the trip to mitigate some of the impact, mention that here. Also, if you won’t have enough accrued PTO to cover the trip, address that too (for example, explain that you’re willing to take the time unpaid). You might also add something like, “I want to be clear that I understand that my reliability has been a problem, and that I’m actively working to get the health issue under control.” Normally I’d say to lean hard on the honeymoon element of this, because that does move this into the “special circumstances” category more than if it were a more routine trip. But that would probably be more compelling if the trip were immediately following your wedding; your boss may be less compelled by that since it’s eight months later. (I’m not saying it’s not still just as important to you, but she may see it as more routine vacation than honeymoon.) If she tells you that she can only okay it if you can promise to have fewer absences between now and then, the only realistic response to that is something like, “I’d love to say yes to that, but the reality is that because this is a medical problem, I can’t say with certainty that I can do that. What I can tell you is that I’m committed to getting this under control and I’m actively working to see a sleep specialist to help me resolve it.” (And of course, be sure that you’re doing all you can there — even if it means, for example, taking an appointment with a doctor who’s further away but can see you now. I don’t mean to imply that you haven’t exhausted all options — just that when you’re asking for something your boss isn’t obligated to say yes to and may have good reason to say no to, it helps to be really vigilant about your own end of things.) Don’t give into the impulse to mention that you left your last job because they went back on their word about your schedule and this trip. Your boss hasn’t gone back on her word here, it’s likely to read as a threat, and there’s a not-insignificant chance that it will irk her enough to harm your standing with her, potentially to the point that she might be less flexible with you than she’d otherwise be. Ultimately, her answer may still be no — and that might be a reasonable business decision for her to make (or it might not be; that’s info I don’t have). But don’t put off talking to her about it, since if the answer is no, it’s better to find that out now, rather than closer to the trip. You may also like:my coworker is constantly out and I have to cover for him — including canceling my own vacationsdo I owe my coworkers an explanation about my FMLA leave?do I really need to schedule my wedding around work events? { 417 comments }
my boss gave all the women flowers for Mother’s Day, I was demoted because of a horrific act by my employee, and more by Alison Green on May 15, 2018 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. My boss gave all the women at work flowers for Mother’s Day I was hoping you could give your opinion on a situation that recently arose at work. I work part-time in a retail setting. My manager, we’ll call him Fergus, can be seen as a little nit-picky or overbearing, but he is generally a nice person and we get along well. Today, for Mother’s Day, he brought in a whole bunch of roses and was giving them to all the women at work. I’m not sure if he only gave them to the mothers or not—he did give one to me, and made a nice comment about how even though I am not a mother, I am still a wonderful woman and he knows that should I ever choose to have kids I would be a great mother, but I’m not sure if he did that for the other childless women or not. Personally, I thought this was a really nice gesture that Fergus didn’t have to do. However, some of my coworkers were saying that it was overbearing, inappropriate, and sexist. I feel as though because they think Fergus is overbearing to begin with, they are seeing this gift in a negative way when it really seems to be just a nice thought. What do you think? I shuddered a little when reading this — it’s really inappropriate. Lots of women would find this over-stepping, patronizing, inappropriate, and sexist. There’s an implication there that motherhood is a calling everyone should aspire to, and it’s awfully thoughtless toward people who may be struggling with infertility, or who recently miscarried, or who may have zero interest in having kids and don’t appreciate society treating them as if child-bearing should be their default, or who just don’t want their boss treating them in a gendered way. It’s just … ick. And I’m betting that he’s not planning to give flowers to all the men in the office on Father’s Day — not that that would make this okay either, since it would still be overstepping and bringing gender into the office in a weird way — but I bet that he’s not, and that might make the sexism piece of this clearer. 2. I was demoted because my employee killed someone Is it common for a manager to be demoted over the actions of one of their reports, when they had no knowledge or control over what happened? Two of my reports and some of their colleagues were sent to an out-of-state conference by our company. I was not asked to go since I was attending a trade show somewhere else. There was an incident with one of my reports at the conference. After things had wrapped up for the night, my report used illegal drugs, left the hotel, caused the death of a random individual, and was found with no clothes. My report has been charged with murder. I did not hire them (they were on the team when I was hired to replace their retiring manager), did not know they used illegal drugs (I have never seen them impaired), and was not at the conference, but I was demoted to a non-management job over what happened. My (former) boss, HR, and the company say they had to do it to send a message. The person who hired my report and the managers who were at the conference were not demoted or written up like I was. I have been told the demotion is non-negotiable and to stop trying to fight it. My (former) boss says it is common for managers to be demoted when someone they manage does something wrong or troublesome to the company. I understand the company is embarrassed and is facing backlash over this but I had nothing to do with it. Is it really common for managers to get demoted over things they had no control over? I would appreciate any thoughts you might have. The demotion comes with a big title loss and pay cut. I am still reeling and my heart goes out to the victim. I had no idea what my report would do. It sounds like they demoted you in an effort to show that they’re “doing something” about what happened. Demoting you doesn’t sound like it does actually do anything about what happened, so it’s for show, not for any reason of substance. (Assuming, of course, that you didn’t ignore previous signs of trouble with that employee.) It’s not uncommon for companies to want to play to public perceptions when something goes terribly wrong, although it’s pretty awful when they do something like this rather than taking a real look at whether they played any role in what happened and, if so, taking real responsibility that (if they had any — it’s not clear that anyone at your company was negligent here, other than the employee themselves). Because they’ve told you this is non-negotiable and to stop fighting it, I’d say your best bet here is to work on moving on from this company, where you’re not only being treated unfairly but are likely to be held back from any future professional mobility because of this awful situation. 3. I was told to take PTO for time working from home I’m not sure how to process the following mess. My sole job is to carefully read nuanced documents and write deeply analytical reports. It requires a lot of concentration and deep thought. At the same time, I share a small office space with two other people who love to have social conversations. A few weeks ago, they had a one-hour social conversation on a wide range of topics (babies, houses, pets). After 20 minutes, I indicated that I was trying to concentrate and they thought they solved the issue by ducking behind some walls, but you could still hear the loud talk and laughter. My nerves were so shot after an hour, I decided to go home and work there. When I told HR I left because of the noise and that I had a super productive time working from home, they told me I had to use vacation time for my time out of the office. I complied with their instructions. But now I’m upset. So if I sit in the office and get no work done that is fine, but if I leave so I can actually get work done I have to use vacation time? That seems ridiculous and unfair. How should I feel about this and what, if anything, should I do? You shouldn’t have to use vacation time for time you spent working at home. However, it sounds like you’re in an office where it might not be common for people in your role to work from home, or at least where you’re expected to get permission before doing it. (I’m surmising this based on the fact that you talked to HR about it afterwards, since this isn’t something that HR would normally be notified about.) I’d talk to your manager, not HR, and explain why you worked from home that day; say that since you were working, you don’t think the time should be charged to your PTO; and ask whether working from home is an option in the future when noise is making you unable to concentrate in the way your job requires. (If it’s not, you might look into noise-canceling headphones or ask about a quieter space, even if just means borrowing an empty conference room.) 4. I haven’t heard back about my raise request Last week, I sat down with my immediate supervisor and requested an increase in my compensation. I’ve been with this company a little over a year, and have received one wage increase at my 90-day mark. So, it’s been a little over a year since I’ve had a salary adjustment . Since then, I’ve become a valuable member of my team (at times the only member!), have increased my output, get consistently great feedback from customers and coworkers, and am seem as dependable and capable. My supervisor was very receptive and said she felt like an increase was “absolutely deserved.” Of course, she had to speak with two other bosses to get it approved, so she let me know she would speak to them and get back to me soon. Tomorrow will be one week since our meeting. I have not heard back about my request. All of the people that need to approve this have been in the office and it’s business as usual. Should I follow up? I don’t want to follow up too soon, but also don’t want to wait forever. Am I just being impatient? I admit, I spent so much time anxiously preparing to ask for the raise that I hadn’t considered needing to follow up on it! And it’s very disheartening to feel like I need to remind my boss about this. I would really appreciate your advice. One week actually isn’t that long; it wouldn’t be odd for it to take longer than that. So don’t get disheartened yet! But it would be fine to bring it up and say, “I know you were planning to check on approval for a raise for me. Is there any update you can share on that?” If there’s no update yet, plan to ask about it again in two to three weeks. If there’s no update at that point, then you can say, “Can you give me a sense of what timeline to expect?” And if it really drags on, it’s fair to ask for the raise to apply retroactively to when your boss first approved it. 5. I never heard back after my internship interview After applying for my dream internship, I was scheduled for a preliminary interview over coffee with the first of two planned interns who I would be working side by side with. I nailed the interview and was told obstacles moving forward would be my schedule and start date, but they would reach back out by the end of the week to schedule a second interview with the department head. Which never happened! I followed up after a week via text (his preferred method). After no response, I waited another week and followed up again. I still have not heard anything back after a total of six weeks. Normally I would just assume that they decided to go another direction, but the curious thing is that the job posting is still up and was up for about a mouth before I applied. Over 12 weeks to fill an internship position seems very long, especially considering this company is now at the start of the busy season. However, I also know they are in the midst of filling about 15 positions, many with multiple part-time workers filling them. Perhaps they are just swamped with candidates to vet and interview. Should I even bother reaching back out or is it time to call it quits? It’s time to move on. They know that you’re interested because you interviewed and checked back with them twice. If they want to move forward with you, they’ll get in touch — but for now, assume that they’ve decided to focus on other candidates instead. They told you that your scheduled and desired start date would be obstacles, so it’s likely that they decided those were prohibitive — or just that they found other strong candidates who didn’t have those obstacles. They should have contacted you to formally reject you, but lots of companies don’t bother to do that (which is rude, but also very much the reality of job searching). You may also like:my employee insinuated I was having an affair … with my husbandmy boss enlists me in hiding his multiple affairs from his wifemen compliment my handshake { 994 comments }
I won money on a work trip to Vegas – do I have to donate it to my employer? by Alison Green on May 14, 2018 A reader writes: I work for a medium-sized national nonprofit. Recently, I attended and presented at a conference in Las Vegas on behalf of my organization, during which, on an off evening, I tried my hand at black jack and ended up winning $2,500. I mentioned this excitedly to one of my colleagues back in the office and we had a good laugh about it. Well, my manager overheard and asked for a meeting, during which she said that the right thing to do would be to donate my winnings back to the organization, since I was in Vegas on my work’s dime. I was taken aback and didn’t really know what to say — I ended up saying “Oh, I hadn’t thought of that. Thanks for mentioning.” But didn’t actually say yes or no. So is there some unspoken rule here? Yes, I was traveling on my organization’s dime, but I gambled with my personal money. I feel really put off by her request — and in a way, I actually *did* donate back to the company, because instead of expensing a meal, I used some of my winnings to treat myself to a nice dinner that night. Am I obliged to make a donation? No, absolutely not. Your manager is way off-base. You were gambling with your money, not the organization’s, and the winnings are yours to keep. After all, if you’d lost money, you wouldn’t expect them to reimburse you because it happened on a work trip. It’s not reasonable to say that you bear all of the risk and none of the reward. This was your own personal, off-hours activity. If you’d happened to win money in a private poker game with friends when you were traveling for work in Des Moines, I highly doubt your organization would feel entitled to that. What if you’d gone to a local fair and won a prize there? What if you’d entered a radio contest while traveling and won 100 bucks from that? These are all private, personal things done in your off-hours, and your employer has no claim on them. It doesn’t matter that you were in Vegas because of work. Your activities there in your off-time are yours, as are any resulting winnings. And yeah, nonprofits can be weird about money in a way that other employers aren’t, but none of the above changes just because you’re working at a nonprofit. It’s still not their money, and it’s not reasonable for them to feel any claim to it. If your manager brings it up again, you can say something like, “It was just something I was doing on my own time, not as part of my job. But if the organization expects that in the future, we should let people know ahead of time. I don’t think many people would gamble on work trips if they knew they’d be responsible for the losses but wouldn’t get the winnings.” You may also like:what are the ethics of keeping money left over from a travel per diem?my husband doesn’t want me to go on a business trip to Vegasemployer stole the work sample I created for an interview, coworker uses an offensive word, and more { 339 comments }