new design by Alison Green on August 22, 2022 Thanks to everyone who’s given feedback on the new design. I have read all the feedback and changes are in the works to make it more usable for the people who are having problems. Give me a little time but I’m working on it! Also, there’s been a change to the line spacing in the main body of the posts that should help. If you’re not seeing it yet, try doing a hard-refresh in your browser or clearing your cache and you should. (If you’re not sure if you’re seeing it, the line spacing should now look like this.) More to come… You may also like:how do I tell an employee he doesn't have what it takes to do the job he wants?my employee keeps editing my work -- and it feels like a power playI need to give my employee more positive feedback { 262 comments }
my employee makes off-color jokes by Alison Green on August 22, 2022 A reader writes: I’m a fairly new manager (got my first direct report at the beginning of this year, and my second a few months ago). Both my employees are generally great, but the newer one, Fergus, semi-frequently makes jokes that I think aren’t quite suitable for the workplace. The most recent example that’s making me think I need to say something is that, the other day, another staff member (Martin) was in our area and made a joke that referred to drugs but in a fairly oblique way. Martin then said, “I’m glad Katie (HR manager) isn’t here!” Cue some laughter and eye rolling. Fergus then responded with, “Ahh well, Katie’s a huge cokehead anyway!” More laughter but this time there was a tone of shock to it, and someone said, “You really shouldn’t say things like that!” in a kind of jokey-scandalized way. Obviously, not a great thing for him to have said. And as it happens we have a review meeting coming up next week, so I think it’s a good time for me to address it. Like I said, he’s made jokes like this several times in his few months here (including things like, referencing orgies or other X-rated stuff — not in a way of saying it’s something he does, just referencing them). I’m struggling in how to bring this up with him for a number of reasons: 1) The Katie/cokehead thing was so obviously a joke — no one who heard it could reasonably believe he was actually saying that Katie’s a big-time cocaine user. It’s not like he was harming her reputation, so I guess part of me is struggling with why he shouldn’t have said it, other than the way it reflected badly on him. (I’m clearer on how to address the sex-reference jokes, as a side note.) 2) The culture of my workplace does tend to be quite collegial and jokey generally, and due to high-pressure projects, familiarity builds quickly here. So, some teasing and ribbing is not uncommon. (Let me stress — good natured! Not things like unkind personal comments, or dissatisfaction with someone’s work.) I’m not really sure how to separate this from Fergus’s comment when explaining why it’s not good to say these things. 3) So far, my relationship with my reports has been fairly pally. They’re generally great. I’m clear with them about hierarchy, assigning tasks, giving feedback, reviewing when things go wrong, etc., but “disciplining” in any way hasn’t really come up yet. Also, I like to joke around as well, and while I’m certainly careful not to cross lines or say anything hurtful or harmful, I do tend to swear quite a lot — probably more than is ideal, but totally not unusual in my workplace. (I can quite happily say the word “fuck” in a meeting with the managing director, for instance.) So it’s not like I’m super buttoned up and constantly talking in HR-style manager-speak. Which, I’m sure most people aren’t, managers included, but I don’t know if this will make things more difficult from a walking-the-walk perspective. Fergus is fairly young (mid-20s) and this is only his second job out of university. I genuinely don’t think he’s trying to be especially edgy or subversive, it’s more to do with not knowing the line of what’s appropriate to say at work vs when you’re in a purely social setting. I think he’ll be receptive to feedback. I just want to make sure that my feedback is clear and actionable. Yeah, this is thing some people early in their careers struggle with. They see the culture isn’t totally buttoned-up and figure, “Hey, people are saying the word ‘fuck,’ I can relax here” … without realizing that some things still aren’t appropriate for work and what those things are. They miss the nuance that generally gets more intuitive with more work experience. You probably don’t need to have a big, awkward conversation with Fergus, though. Don’t frame it in your head as “disciplining” at all; it’s just guiding him on office norms because he’s still learning them. I’d say it this way: “I wanted to mention that I know you were just kidding with that joke about Katie being a cokehead the other day — obviously — but you shouldn’t joke at work about people using drugs. Everyone in the conversation knew you were kidding, but you never know if someone might overhear and not realize it’s a joke. And even if you’re sure no one will overhear, that kind of joke can raise questions about your judgment, which I don’t want for you.” You could also say, “In general, don’t joke about sex, drugs, or religion at work. It’s easy to assume everyone will find the same things funny that you do, but those are topics where people often have very different comfort levels — even if they don’t show you that, and in fact even if they laugh along — and as a general rule those topics just aren’t appropriate for work.” The “even if they laugh along” caveat is an important one to stress, because that’s a lesson that it takes some people a while to learn (and some people never learn it). You may also like:can I use dark humor at work?what subjects are totally off-limits for office chat?employee is trying to force his way into a job that I don't want to hire him for { 198 comments }
should I really conduct exit interviews? by Alison Green on August 22, 2022 A reader writes: My assistant is leaving at the end of the month. I’ve always heard you should lead an exit interview with anyone who quits. Is an exit interview still the norm if the employee was part-time? He was at our organization 20 hours a week for one year. If I should lead an exit interview, can you please let me know what types of questions should be included? I answer this question — and three others — 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. Other questions I’m answering there today include: I heard rumors about about an employee’s professionalism Can we charge a new hire who flaked for the cost of her training? Responding to questions about an employee who’s on maternity leave You may also like:our boss's high salary is tanking moralemy boyfriend pretended to be a doctor, I called a coworker a moron, and moreis it okay to write someone's cover letter for them, a mysterious fragrance, and more { 47 comments }
I’m missing out on face time with the CEO because I don’t go on our monthly hikes by Alison Green on August 22, 2022 A reader writes: My employer has been organizing monthly staff hikes on the weekend to promote employee wellness and as a means for introducing employees who work in various parts of the organization. These hikes are optional, and I have not received any pressure from my supervisor or colleagues to attend. In fact, they’re not well-attended overall, which has resulted in a small group of about 10 employees who have gotten a lot of face time with the head of our company and formed their own informal clique. Two of those individuals recently received significant promotions, and while I cannot prove it had anything to do with them spending weekends with the boss, it certainly seems that way considering that one was very underqualified and was hired after receiving a recommendation from him. I know this because the supervisor who promoted her confided in me that she’d been hesitant because of the employee’s lack of experience, but felt pressured since the recommendation came straight from the top of the company. I tend to believe we get out of things what we’re willing to put into them, so I’m not typically one to complain about not receiving the perks of a function I chose not to attend. But the thing is, I’m not able to attend in this case. I’ve gotten out of shape since having children, and while I’ve recently started working out again, I am not at the fitness level to be able to complete the strenuous 5-6 mile hikes they’re choosing. It would also frankly be humiliating to meet colleagues for the first time while I’m struggling for air and not able to be the best version of myself. The company has not been supplementing these hikes with a non-physically strenuous equivalent that people of all athletic and physical abilities could attend. I tried gently making the company’s leadership, including our HR director, aware that there are people within our company who would be eager to attend a function that promoted a healthy lifestyle and internal networking but are being unintentionally excluded because of their physical fitness level or even physical limitations. (There are at least two people here in wheelchairs and others with disabilities that would limit their ability to participate.) They seemed receptive, expressing gratitude and shame that it hadn’t occurred to them. But then nothing changed. The hikes continue, and there’s no alternative outside of work equivalent for those of us who can’t hike with them. Am I overreacting? I don’t want to be childish simply because I’m feeling left out. We generally have a great office culture, and these events are optional. It just seems to give an unfair advantage to the few who are physically fit. Is there anything else I can reasonably do to advocate for the rest of us, or should I just accept my fate as an outsider at this point? You’re not overreacting. One hike a year where a small group of employees got extra face time with the CEO wouldn’t be such a big deal — although I’d still suggest they consider other events too so they weren’t constantly excluding non-hikers — but monthly is a lot. A small monthly social club with the CEO that just happens to shut out people by physical ability and has produced a promotion that can’t be explained any other way is … not good. Of course you feel weird about it. And HR knows it’s a problem too, or at least they do now that you’ve pointed it out, which is why they responded the way they did when you talked to them. My strong hunch is that HR pointed out the problems to the CEO and he doesn’t care; he likes the hikes (they might have even been his idea) and he’s not interested in stopping them. Of course, he wouldn’t need to stop the hikes if he added in other ways for people to get face time with him. I’m admittedly hard-pressed to think of activities that would provide the same intensive bonding time as several hours of hiking in a small group every month provides, but the company has a responsibility to think it through and come up with options (or pull way back on the frequency, or at least have better firewalls where the CEO doesn’t pressure managers to promote unqualified people he hikes with). You could go back to HR and ask what the plan is for responding to the concerns you raised. if you have coworkers who feel similarly shut out based on physical ability, you’ll have more power as a group. How much you push it from there depends on how much capital you want to spend. There’s a decent risk that if the CEO ends up feeling pressured into stopping his hikes, he’ll resent whoever he perceives as responsible for that … which wouldn’t be a reasonable response but it might happen, particularly if he’s already demonstrated something about his stance by brushing off HR earlier (if indeed that’s what happened). So you’d want to factor that in when deciding how much you want to keep pushing it. But you’re not wrong. You may also like:my employer requires us all to do tai chi in the officemy office loves expensive, physically demanding team-building activitiesmy boss wants me to name my weaknesses at monthly meetings { 308 comments }
my boss sent me a message urging me to follow Jesus, my coworker reported me for saying “data Nazi,” and more by Alison Green on August 22, 2022 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. My boss sent me a message urging me to follow Jesus My boss sent me this after I quit: “Good morning Jane! I wasn’t working on your last day and didn’t get a chance to thank you for your time with us. I sure appreciate you staying your last few weeks! With an employee/boss relationship I am limited on things I can talk about. Well … I am not your boss anymore. I am someone who cares very much about you. I pray for you quite regularly. I know by the messages you have on your vehicle that you might not think that matters. Oh Jane, it does. Satan is real; so very real. I know you have studied about Him and now seem to be inviting him to be Lord of your life. I beg you, Jane; please spend some time studying who Jesus is before you make your final decision. I was 44 years old when I decided to follow Jesus. Best decision I ever made. Eternity is a guarantee for all of us. I truly want you to be a part of mine.” I never responded. I don’t believe in God and have a hail Satan stickers on my car along with BLM, pro-choice, and pride stickers. She is very Republican and I know she’s religious from casual conversations we’ve had at work. And she also knows that I’m not a fan of mainstream religion from the same conversations. Those conversations have never crossed the line before, but I feel like this really crosses the line. I want to call her out but, she’s a year away from retirement and I don’t want her to get fired when she’s that close. I would feel bad but I don’t know what to do or if I should do anything. This is wildly inappropriate and it didn’t become okay just because you no longer work for her. Aside from the fundamental obnoxiousness of proselytizing to someone who has never invited it, you’re dependent on her for references so there’s still a power dynamic, and I suspect your former employer would be very unhappy to know your old boss is sending messages like this to people who worked for her. It’s so inappropriate that I would indeed report it to your former HR department, with a note saying, “I’m especially concerned because I’ll be depending on Jane for a good reference in the future” just in case they don’t connect those dots themselves. She’s highly unlikely to be fired (rather than warned) over this, unless she’s already been warned not to do it previously (in which case, firing would be a reasonable outcome). 2. My coworker reported me to HR for saying “data Nazi” I’m a data science manager working in a tech company. I jokingly used the phrase “Data Nazi” in a Slack message in a private team channel. 20 minutes later, I got a slack DM from HR, letting me know that she got some feedback about me that I probably would prefer to get ASAP. I appreciate the callout and I would like to be more sensitive. However, this also makes me very uncomfortable. My partner is Jewish, our children are half Jewish. I was in a conversation with another person in my company with a higher title than me. He used the exact same phrase. (The particular person happens to be Jewish as well.) I don’t have any ill intentions. Personally, I care about people’s intentions. I don’t get upset or report to HR for things like this. I understand that everyone is different. I have a hunch about who this person is. This person is certainly on my team. I want to treat everybody on my team fairly and I don’t want this incident to affect my relationship with them. I find it hard to overcome how I feel though. Try to let it go. It’s a phrase that a lot of people find offensive. Yes, the person who reported it to HR should have just talked to you directly instead, but for whatever reason they didn’t. Maybe they struggle with uncomfortable conversations, maybe they’ve had bad experiences addressing this kind of thing in the past, maybe they had reason to think you wouldn’t be receptive, maybe it’s the fifth offensive thing they’ve heard at work this week and they’re fed up — who knows. But now you know it bothers someone on your team, so you can avoid using it. That’s all it needs to be. You can choose to turn it into something, but you can also choose to simply accept the correction and leave it there. The second one is better for your quality of life. (For what it’s worth, avoid the whole “a Jewish person was fine with it” thing — no one Jew speaks for the rest of us, and it’s basically a tenet of Judaism that we have a bunch of different opinions on things.) 3. My coworker’s inattention to detail impacts my work I work in tech in a QA role. Most of my job is checking work that others have completed, making sure that it is fully complete and without error. My team is cross-functional and I am the most junior person. We use a work tracking system to define and assign work; by the time work is assigned, business has spelled out the requirements pretty specifically and developers have had multiple opportunities to ask questions and make sure that they understand what they are being asked to do. One of the devs I work with consistently skips half the pieces in his assigned work. For example, if he was supposed to do A, B, C, D, and E (and he previously agreed that this was a reasonable amount of work to be done in this time period and acknowledged that he did not have any questions about it); he’ll do A and C, then tell me the whole thing is done. I’ll come back and tell him that B, D, and E aren’t done yet, and it takes some back and forth before he sees what I mean. Sometimes we even go through a third round of this. It’s an inefficient use of both of our time and I’m not sure how to bring it up or who to bring it up with. The work that gets done is done well, he’s a nice guy, and I’ve only picked up on animosity in some specific and particularly stressful situations. I’ve also noticed he tends to be inattentive in meetings. I find myself wondering if it’s purely inattentiveness, lack of attention to detail, or if he has difficulties understanding written and verbal communication. Whatever it is, it affects my work and I don’t know how to handle it. Talk to your boss. In theory, you could try handling it yourself first. For example, the next time you need to have two or three rounds of “it’s not done”/“yes, it is”/“no, it’s not,” you could ask your coworker whether there was something the two of you can do differently so that it doesn’t keep happening. That can be a polite way to point out that there’s a pattern, it’s a problem, and something needs to change. But this sounds like a big enough issue with his work that I don’t think you’re positioned to handle it on your end, especially as the most junior person on the team. Instead, talk to your boss, explain it keeps happening and what impact it’s having on your work, and ask for her advice on how to handle it. (You do want her advice if she has any, but you mostly want to being this to her attention so she can intervene and asking for advice can be a good way of doing that.) 4. The horrors of an artisanal shop Could anyone who works in a small boutique selling gorgeous clothes, trinkets, or lovely fripperies tell me what to do when you go into an artisan-type shop, take one look at the hand-carved llamas or llama wool shawls on display (or the attached high-dollar price tag), and think, “Oops, not going to buy in here”? What is the most graceful and face-saving way of rapidly exiting this kind of quiet artisan store? I have an excess of polite apologetic-ness (being a stereotypical Canadian from the Maritimes perhaps?) and it kills me to leave a store without showing polite interest in the four stained glass mallards or tie-dyed tea cozies because it seems too rude to walk in, look around, go “Nope!”and stride out again. Do shop owners or assistants prefer the politeness band-aid being ripped off with a swift exit as soon as possible, or is there a benefit to the chit chatters who they know won’t buy anything? Why does this tie me up in knots and am I alone in this feeling? Shop owners/employees are used to people coming in, realizing the store isn’t for them, and quickly exiting! It’s a normal thing. You can just cheerfully say “thank you!” on your way out the door — that’s all you need to do. You do not need to hang around and make chit chat to be polite, and most shop workers don’t want you to chat with them out of a sense of obligation before you feel you’re allowed to leave. Readers who have worked in this type of boutique, would you like to weigh in? 5. Should I be setting goals? A lot of your questions/answers involve employees having goals and managers helping or hindering them from being achieved. Should I be setting goals? How do I identify what goals to set? Overall I just don’t know how to set professional goals, or what it means. If you’re managing people, you should indeed be setting goals, for them individually and for your team as a whole. Goals are what describe what a successful year (or quarter, or whatever period you use) would look like — so that you and your employees are on the same page about exactly what they’re expected to achieve and what success would look like. (But not just any goals. They should be measurable, outcome-based (not activity-based), and specific enough that you can both agree on whether they’ve been met or not, and should represent meaningful progress. SMART goals — look it up! you’ll find tons of resources — are a popular model organizations use.) If you’re not a manager and your organization doesn’t use formal goals, you don’t need to start doing it. But a lot of people find it a helpful tool to get aligned with their boss about what their priorities should be and what success will (and won’t) look like. You may also like:is it OK to say "Jesus Christ" as an expression of frustration at work?my boss accidentally sent me a message complaining about memy favorite posts of 2017 { 939 comments }
weekend open thread – August 20-21, 2022 by Alison Green on August 19, 2022 This comment section is open for any non-work-related discussion you’d like to have with other readers, by popular demand. Here are the rules for the weekend posts. Book recommendation of the week: The Startup Wife, by Tahmima Anam. A newlywed coder and her husband develops a wildly popular app with her husband, who soon becomes a messiah-like figure to users (the app creates customized spiritual experiences for the non-religious). Things go sideways. I make a commission if you use that Amazon link. You may also like:all of my 2021 book recommendationsall of my 2019 and 2020 book recommendationsall of my book recommendations from 2015-2018 { 1,511 comments }
it’s your Friday good news by Alison Green on August 19, 2022 It’s your Friday good news! 1. “I’ve read your site for a few years now, and found it when I started searching up whether weird stuff my boss did in my student job was normal. Obviously it wasn’t, and from being paid below the legal minimum, to weird sexist stuff, it hasn’t been the best. Due to it being a highly specialised position and specific to the industry I’m entering now as a graduate, I stuck it out for a bit longer than I needed (employee discounts!). My first bit of good news is that after 6 years there I’ve given notice, and I’m so excited to be leaving! Your site helped me feel justified in my frustrations, but also to approach situations calmly and professionally, without teenage angst and anger showing through. Your advice has also helped temper my ongoing anxiety and spiralling thought patterns, and kept me grounded at work. I’ve managed to keep a good reference in an extremely insular industry thanks to that. The second part and best news came 18 months ago, however, when I was headhunted for a related job at a wonderful institution that I’d always thought would come later in my career. I was specifically praised for my ‘formality-only-but-still-offical’ interview and resume (thank you!). The pay is triple what I made at my other job, their Covid response has been phenomenal across the board, and they make real and long-term moves to be allies to marginalised groups (I had never imagined being out at work but here we are!). The best part though, is that even 18 months later when the job isn’t shiny and new anymore, I still get excited about going to work because everyone is so genuinely kind and supportive! Sometimes I just grin thinking about it. Like I didn’t think that was actually a thing?” 2. “I’ve been working in academia in a rural town of 7000 for the last 8 years after following my spouse for their (academic) job. I’ve been a temporary or contingent employee the whole time, and have been increasingly frustrated while looking for a different job. This past spring, I took to heart your advice about targeted job searching and writing a strong, specific cover letter, and applied to several technical and/or training job. One of the ads I clicked on a whim- for a trainer in all my professional specialties- just offered me a wonderful remote position with a 75% salary increase and people who seem like really the best co-workers. I’m still pinching myself! Thank you for providing such a great resource.” 3. “I wrote in for myself in early 2021 and now, I’m thrilled to report good job news for my husband! For the last 11 years, he’d been working at a small urban university in mental health counseling, a job he was grateful to get at the time. But over time it became clear that the university administration didn’t support them and that there were no regular raises or appreciation to be found — and he wasn’t paid well in the first place. A decade later, he had the same low pay and a new director who turned out to be a bad manager who lived and died on petty grudges and didn’t have her staff’s back. He wanted to move on, but felt stuck and unsure how to proceed. So, with help drawn from years of reading AAM, I helped him with his resume and cover letters and he found two similar positions to apply for. He applied in March and then it was radio silence for awhile. He’d just about given up when the semester ended and then boom! He got interviews for both and an offer from one, the pay is over 50% more than he was making, and he was able to time it so he could make his last day before the end of the fiscal year — giving him 5 weeks of vacation time paid out. He just started his new job and while he hopes to be there for awhile, he also knows now that he CAN find a new job and that his skills are marketable. Thanks for being a great resource and giving me good information I could share with him.” 4. “I wrote in nearly 2 years ago for a Friday good news about my boss recognizing my work during the pandemic and that they had reduced the team size and giving me a $10k raise. Unfortunately, he left not long after that (redundant role after a merger) and things went to hell in a hand basket. In the last two years, I had 2 different VPs, 3 directors, and a manager come and go – some lasted 6 months and others only 2 weeks (sadly never got the tea on what happened there). All the while, as a senior analyst I had to keep the department running and train these people over me while being told they would hire more help and, when I applied for the manager role, that I would be a great candidate if only there was a strong leadership team in place (aka they wanted me to keep doing what I was doing and not replace me). It finally got to be too much so I started casually looking for a new job and was contacted by a number of recruiters. It took 6 months of frustration (the number of recruiters who contacted me first then ghosted!) but about 6 weeks ago I started my new job. It’s a lateral move in terms of duties/title, but permanently remote, 40% more money, and a company less than a tenth the size of my last one! I realize I’m still in the honeymoon phase, but it’s been a great stress relief to have other people on my team and, shock of shocks, having a boss that thanks me for my help and hard work instead of just piling more on my plate! Plus the cherry on top is that scuttlebutt I’m hearing from my previous job is that they’re having to hire 2 people to keep up with my workload. My company does quarterly bonuses so based on my start date I’m eligible for a prorated amount at the end of the month. However, as thanks for how quickly I’ve picked things up and everything I’m taking off my boss’s plate (mine is a new role), she got approval from her boss to get me a much larger bonus!” You may also like:my dad is giving me weird and sexist career adviceI was one of the interns fired for writing a proposal for a more flexible dress codedoes it look bad to be unavailable on one of the dates an employer suggests for an interview? { 12 comments }
open thread – August 19-20, 2022 by Alison Green on August 19, 2022 It’s the Friday open thread! The comment section on this post is open for discussion with other readers on any work-related questions that you want to talk about (that includes school). If you want an answer from me, emailing me is still your best bet*, but this is a chance to take your questions to other readers. * If you submitted a question to me recently, please do not repost it here, as it may be in my queue to answer. You may also like:we got quizzed on our new boss's horses, family, and vineyardI'm embarrassed that I went to an elite college and failed to do anything with my degreehere's a bunch of help finding a new job { 1,165 comments }
my coworker saves hair, applying for a job with a huge salary range, and more by Alison Green on August 19, 2022 It’s four answers to four questions. Here we go… 1. My coworker saves hair My coworker has a lot of odd quirks and strange things that she does in general. I’m incredibly bothered by one thing she does and am wondering if it’s as disgusting as I think? My coworker saves her hair anytime a strand falls out. I found out because one day when I looked her way I saw her taping a strand of hair to the side of her desk. Apparently she saves the hair and donates it. Normally I think donating is great, I think most people though go get their hair cut and donate it then. I looked one day while she wasn’t at her desk and found she essentially has a wall of hair taped to the side of her desk. Is this okay for the office and I need to get over it or is this gross and she should leave this activity for home? This is strange and gross and she should not do this at work … but it also doesn’t rise to the level of something you have standing to intervene on. All you can really do is save it as an amazing story that you’ll forever be able to use to one-up your friends when they talk about their coworkers. (Also, I am skeptical that she can really donate it — places that accept hair donations usually have stricter requirements than “a bunch of random hairs that I shed” — but who knows. Maybe that’s her cover story and she’s really collecting it all so no one can make a voodoo doll from it.) Related (sort of): someone is leaving their fingernail clippings in my desk 2. Was I wrong to say I was glad to have time to figure out if a job was a good fit? I was recently promoted to interim manager over my department. I had applied for the position but they decided to make me interim for 90 days while they decide if I’m the right fit. There are a couple of reasons: (1) We didn’t have a good pool of candidates and (2) on paper, I don’t have the credentials they are looking for and I don’t think my interview went as well as I would have liked to show my experience. I appreciate so much that they know me and have faith I can do this and are giving me the opportunity to try it out. In a recent conversation with my grandboss, I made a comment about how much I appreciate this opportunity and that it also gives me the time to see if it is a good fit for me as well. It got back to me that she found this a bit offensive. I think she just wanted me to be grateful. I’m not super concerned as I have a great relationship with my direct boss (and she thinks grandboss already forgot) but I wanted your take on it. Is that an entitled attitude? I think it is normal to figure out if it is a good fit for the candidate as well but I know she is somewhat old school. No, you don’t have an entitled attitude! Her attitude is the problem — you should just be grateful for the opportunity and not think critically about whether the job is the right fit for you? She should want you to be thinking critically about that — and if she’s not ready to commit to you for the job, it’s a bit much that she thinks you should be certain about it yourself. (I don’t mean that in an “if they aren’t sure they want me, why should I want them?” way, but rather that she clearly has some hesitations, so why wouldn’t it be okay for you to have your own questions about it too?) I’d rather hire someone who comes in well aware that a job could be a stretch than someone who just assumes their success is guaranteed. 3. Applying for a job with an enormous salary range I’m currently employed but looking for new opportunities. My current salary is $125,000, and to take a new job I would need at least something in that general vicinity. I recently applied for a job that included a very wide salary range in the position description. For simplicity’s sake, let’s say the range was $80,000-$140,000. After two rounds of interviews and a reference check, they offer me the job at $105,000. I told the manager that the salary was less than I was hoping for and asked if there was any room for negotiation. Turns out the salary offer was firm, but they could offer a $5,000 signing bonus. Obviously I had to decline the position. Had I known that the actual salary for the position was $105,000, I never would have applied in the first place, so I feel like I wasted everyone’s time, including my own. Is there anyway I could have figured this out earlier in the process? I have always heard that you shouldn’t talk about money and benefits until you have an offer. But that seems really inefficient. It is indeed incredibly inefficient, and fortunately it’s changing / has changed. When you see a wide range like that, assume it’s possible that you could be offered the low end of it (in some cases because they’re listing the full salary band for the role even though they always start people at the low end, or sometimes because the higher end is only for unicorns, or sometimes because they have criteria for who lands where that they haven’t bothered to share). If part of the range would be a deal-breaker for you, ask about it early on (even as early as a phone screen). You can say it this way: “I saw you listed a range of $80,000-$140,000. I’d be looking for the higher end of the range — over $X — and wanted to make sure it makes sense to to move forward.” 4. Ghosted by a company that invited me to apply I was recently invited to apply for a new position at a company I worked for 10 years ago. I left on good terms and am friendly with former colleagues – social media, chat when we run into each other in town, etc. I was interviewed by two of these friendly former colleagues who are now managers. I didn’t get the job, which is fine. However, they ghosted me. I determined they had chosen another candidate based on the time that passed. Given the circumstances – they reached out to me – and the fact that I’m friendly with these people, I’m annoyed about being ghosted. I expected a polite “thanks for your time, we went another direction” email at a minimum. Am I out of line to be irritated about being ghosted? I could use an outside perspective. The ghosting makes me think I don’t want to work for their department in any capacity in the future. No, you’re not out of line. Ghosting is rude when companies do it to candidates they have no history with (common, but still rude). Doing it in a situation like this, where they know you, have worked with you before, and asked you to apply, is even ruder. However, a caveat: You’ve determined they ghosted you based on the amount of time that’s passed. But if you haven’t seen a hire announced, it’s possible you haven’t been ghosted but the process is taking a lot longer than expected or is on hold. They should still update you (and that goes double if you’ve contacted them and been ignored) but you can’t be sure they’ve chosen someone else. If you haven’t already contacted them to ask for an update, you should. You may also like:someone is leaving their fingernail clippings in my deskcan I show armpit hair at work?are people judging me for looking scruffy at work? { 279 comments }
should I be concerned that my two employees do all their work together? by Alison Green on August 18, 2022 A reader writes: I have two direct reports who have the same job title and, after some shifting of job duties, the same duties for the most part, they just cover different areas. One has the east region and one the west. (No travel, just assigned clients that way.) And then of course there are a lot of non-region specific duties that they share as well, taking turns doing them. Or so I thought. It looks like they are working together more than I realized. This made sense when West was new and East was handling a lot of their training. But I assumed that as time went on they would handle more of their duties separately. To be fair, there are things where two people can be helpful, like some difficult phone calls, etc. But you don’t need two people on every call. You don’t need two people to simultaneously create the meeting materials for every meeting. In my opinion, them constantly working together isn’t the most efficient use of time. Should I be concerned about them working together so frequently like their job is a group project? To cut off any speculation, I have no fears or concerns about a romantic relationship. I’m just really questioning is this a topic where I can say, “I want you to work on these tasks on your own, so that East can work on their tasks alone.” Or is it too micromanager? I HATE group projects and work, though I love group planning and idea bouncing, so I can’t decide if this is a case of my personal preference or not. Maybe it’s just something I let ride and evaluate if it’s working better than I expected in a couple of months? I think I’m focusing on it because it’s coming up tangentially in a few different ways. Like East has served as the chair of a company-wide committee that does things like raise money for Jeans Friday, etc. and now they’ve pulled West in too. The problem being, they didn’t tell me, and they recently spent an entire morning planning upcoming committee items. This obviously needs to be addressed and will be, but I think I’m having a hard time separating whether it’s the actual working together that’s an issue or if it’s HOW they are working together that’s an issue. I’d be concerned about this for two reasons: First, as you point out, it sounds like it’s not a good use of time; some of these projects don’t require the time and attention of two people. Second, you won’t be able to evaluate their work individually if they’re doing everything together, and you won’t know if one of them is pulling a lot more weight than the other (and not getting enough credit for their work) or if there are weaknesses in one than you need to be aware of. There are some things you can do to combat that, like assigning each of them an individual project and making it clear you don’t want them to collaborate on it. You can be transparent about why; it’s okay to say, “I want to get a better sense of how you’re each approaching X and where you might need support from me.” But the most important thing is to ask each of them why they prefer to work this way. It’s possible that there’s more to it than you realize, like that East is great at X and West is great at Y and collaborating lets both of them produce work that would be stronger than what they’d produce on their own. Or there might be nothing like that. But ask and get more information before you decide anything. Crucially, though, have those conversations with them individually. It’s possible that one loves the arrangement while the other feels burdened by it, and you’re more likely to find that out if you talk with them separately. If you don’t hear anything in those conversations that puts your concerns to rest, then it’s reasonable to say, “It’s great that you collaborate and bounce ideas off each other, but not everything you’re assigned should be a collaboration and we’re losing some efficiency by having two people on every call or doing ___ (fill in with specifics). It’s fine to work on things like XYZ together, but projects like A, B, and C are individual projects that you should be managing on your own.” You may also like:I'm stuck in a job I hatecompany wants to have tea with my family as part of an international interviewmy boss says I'm not ready for a promotion, but is giving me work above my pay grade { 141 comments }