weekend open thread — June 19-20, 2021 by Alison Green on June 19, 2021 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: Home Made: A Story of Grief, Groceries, Showing Up — and What We Make When We Make Dinner, by Liz Hauck. A woman’s account of what happened when she spent one night a week teaching teenage boys living in a state home how to cook. * I make a commission if you use that Amazon link. You may also like:all of my 2019 and 2020 book recommendationsall of my 2017 and 2018 book recommendationsall of my 2015 and 2016 book recommendations { 891 comments }
updates: my boss wants me to help him jump the line for the Covid vaccine, and more by Alison Green on June 18, 2021 It’s a special “where are you now?” season at Ask a Manager, where all month I’m running updates from people who had their letters here answered in the past. Here are four updates from past letter-writers. 1. My boss wants me to help him jump the line for the Covid vaccine The day after my letter was published, my boss again asked me to make the calls but once I told him I was uncomfortable doing so, he gave the assignment to someone else. Things died down for a little bit after that. However, about a month or so later, my company planned a company trip to the Bahamas which the CEO was attending. The day before he left, the requests started coming again. This time around, I didn’t call but let my boss know that there weren’t any appointments (per the websites of the places he was having me check with). He was annoyed but didn’t force me to keep pushing like he had before. The requests finally stopped once the CEO was able to get a vaccine driving 3 hours to and from. I was relieved to hear it! So over all, things resolved themselves but it still leaves a bad taste in my mouth. 2. I want to quit … but if I leave, my project will die (first update here) THE BAD NEWS: Lorna ended up not paying out my last two invoices (as I expected) and no one at the company will respond to my requests for information. I’ve tried calling and was hung up on before my number was apparently blocked. Luckily, I’ll be stateside this summer and can take more direct action from there. THE GOOD NEWS: I took the plunge, started freelancing, and saw pretty immediate results! I also got a great new job at a much more organized institution where so far no one’s gaslit me, lied to me, insulted me, or questioned whether I had the intellectual capacity necessary to come inside when it starts raining. I now have job security and get to do work I enjoy! Between that and the freelancing, I’m making nearly as much money as I was under Lorna–except I actually get to collect it! I’m also satisfied and happy. Thanks again to you and your readers for your support and advice! 3. My boss read my Skype conversations I was the letter writer who wrote in a long time ago about my boss reading my IMs to another manager in the company and how mortified I was about it, especially being in HR. You told me to let the issue go after my initial apology, but I ended up reiterating to my boss that it would never happen again. I think she saw how horrified I was about it and never brought it up again. I am happy to say that I am still at the same company and have received a couple of promotions since that time. My boss is the greatest and I don’t plan on moving companies any time soon. I learned my lesson and keep all work communication as neutral and professional as possible. Thank you for all the advice that you share, it’s helped me in my early career more than I can say! 4. My boss lectured me about arriving on time – when I’m working a ton of hours (first update here) You answered my letter about my boss 2 years ago – wow how time flies! I have one last update after catching up with one of my old project managers. After re-reading my initial email and update, I should offer some background information: 1) My start time had been 9 am (agreed upon by the boss), so from my point of view I was coming in 30 minutes late. I had been working without breaks (I ordered in or brought lunch and dinner) until bare minimum 7:30 pm, but more often the 9:30 pm time for about 2 months with no end in sight. The night before this email I had been there until 11 pm, which only added fuel to the fire. 2) Members in my group really did have flexible start times. Some came in at 7 am, most came in 8-9 am, and one project manager came in at 11 am! 3) The projects I had been working on were for three different project managers in our group. Management was notorious for having poor communication about workloads, so each of them had a vague idea that I was busy but had no clue what my actual workload looked like. 4) I received comp time for the overtime I was working, but I couldn’t take it with all the work I had. On to the last update on this! I recently was talking with one of my old project managers (Elizabeth) who I remained friends with and the infamous email came up. It turns out my suspicions were correct! The email was about me. The morning that this all happened, one of the PMs (Jane) wanted to call an impromptu project meeting at 8 am but I wasn’t in yet. She went to my boss (Collins) and asked why I wasn’t there. Instead of him answering that I typically came in at 9 am or that I had been working late, he decided to write the email instead. I also remembered that when I did come in, he greeted me with a fake joking “Nice of you to show up!” to which I had responded something about needing enough sleep with all the work I had been doing. I caught up with Jane as soon as I got in but she didn’t say anything about this missed meeting, so I had no clue that was the reason behind the email. Once the email was sent out, I went to Elizabeth to ask if it had been about me and to essentially rant about the lack of communication between the project managers. Elizabeth went to Jane and Collins about the email where they confirmed the reason behind it, and she explained that I was working 10-12 hour days without breaks to finish all the work that only I could do with tight deadlines. She also was very clear that I was pissed about the email. Neither Collins nor Elizabeth ever mentioned this to me, nor did they apologize after learning all the facts. I had tried to talk to Collins about it once, but he brushed it off and said something about just needing to reiterate corporate policy. Which, after my recent conversation with Elizabeth, is nonsense and indicative of his aversion to confrontation or admitting he’s wrong in general. This email was the catalyst that pushed me to get my license and allowed me to get to my “dream” job a lot sooner than I had ever expected. In the end it worked out for the best, but it’s nice to have closure! You may also like:my boss wants me to help him jump the line for the Covid vaccinecan my company require employees to get the Covid vaccine?unvaccinated employees are complaining about a $100 bonus for getting vaccinated { 32 comments }
it’s your Friday good news by Alison Green on June 18, 2021 It’s your Friday good news, with more accounts of success even in this weird time. 1. Four years ago, my colleague Cindy and I were both hired at Company because of our experience in Project X, a community outreach project that Company wanted to introduce. Cindy had been hired as program director, but because we worked so well together, and had such similar previous experience, we effectively shared the role. Unfortunately, we soon realized that Company was not really interested in Project X, they just wanted the positive PR. Our efforts were regularly hijacked and sabotaged by senior management, and Cindy would then be harassed and berated for not meeting targets. A year ago, Cindy escaped and accepted a position as managing director at a different company. A huge step up! It was widely assumed that I would take over the program director role when she left, but having seen how she had been treated I refused to apply. Despite many strong applicants for the position, our new program director, Ted, has zero experience in any form of community outreach. I offered to support him the same way I had supported Cindy, but instead was frozen out of all Project X work. Not only that, but Ted has also given others at Company the impression that I HAD applied for the director role, but that he was the superior candidate. Project X is dying a slow death here, and I am miserable, but was hesitant to quit in the middle of a pandemic. Now here comes the good news. Last month, Cindy called and offered me the role of program director at her new company. It’s a wonderful opportunity, a company that aligns with my values, a big step up in my career, and the chance to work with Cindy again. Even better, my salary will be DOUBLE what Old Company offered me for the same role. I’m thrilled for the opportunity, and so glad I followed my instincts. I’m not in the U.S., so if I had taken the job at Old Company, I would have signed a 2-year contract and wouldn’t have been able to accept Cindy’s incredible offer. Thank you Alison for reminding us of our worth, and that hiring is a 2-way process. If I weren’t such an AAM fan, I suspect I would have felt pressured to take the job at Old Company. I’m so glad I held out for a role that’s such a perfect fit. 2. I’ve been following your advice for job applications and dealing with people in general for years while I worked my way through university. I’m about to graduate into the stressful world of COVID, but I’m not stressed at all! I used your tips to write a dynamite CV that highlighted all my best qualities and biggest successes, as well as a personal statement/statement of purpose that my advisor referred to as exemplary. I just accepted an offer from my dream graduate school to get a master’s in my field—with full funding and a teaching assistantship. Thank you SO much for being an amazing guide to the terrifying world of convincing people to give you money for your labor. (I even tried negotiating the package—they said there was no wiggle room, but congratulated me for making the effort! Thanks for giving me the confidence to try!) I’m excited for this chapter of my life, and I’ll be back to figure out how to turn it into employment in a couple of years. 3. I work in a male dominated industry and have had my fair share of bad bosses. Over the years I’ve become very wary of changing jobs, because it’s just so hard to tell whether the culture will be sexist from a few interviews. But this company actually *showed* me how their culture would be different, and I am so happy to have accepted an offer with them today. Things I didn’t know I was missing before this company: – They never asked about my salary history, just what I wanted to make working for them. – They actually offered me the base salary I asked for, which is extremely competitive for the area. For once, they didn’t try to convince me the target bonus and ESOP plan ‘counted’ toward my requested salary. – The hiring manager stopped me halfway through the first interview question and said, “I know we are often conditioned to use the term ‘we’ when discussing team accomplishments, but I’d like to encourage you to retell this story and share what you, specifically, contributed.” He challenged me a few more times, “if that’s something you owned more than the rest of the team, make sure to tell me so.” – All of my interviewers offered feedback on my interview as I went. One suggested a tweak to my resume to better showcase cost savings. One asked if I could think on a different example and email it to him later, and one said “wow, that was an excellent answer” and asked if I had any book recommendations on the subject. – Without my asking, they set me up with a call with a future coworker. She explained that she works 6 hours from the office and 2 from home each day, so she can be home when her kids are home. She also said, “Whatever doesn’t get done in those 8 hours, waits for tomorrow” and described the process for reprioritizing work each week. – They were up-front and communicative with me throughout the entire process, laying out specific next steps and timelines and then… Sticking to them! – The nature of the job requires in-person work, but the company requires routine on-site COVID testing and hosts an onsite vaccine event every week. – The company is a very active sponsor of a women’s shelter. Update: I just wanted to update you that I started the job and it has been fantastic so far! Everyone is friendly, helpful, and … refreshingly normal. On the first day, my boss went over a list of expected outcomes and how my performance would be measured for the first month. This was accompanied by a full training plan and a schedule of informational interviews with representatives from all over the company. Unfortunately, my second week on the job, a family member passed away unexpectedly. They encouraged me to take as much (paid) time as I needed, and I came back to a touching handwritten note from my new boss. He had even tweaked my training plan to a slower pace, saying he doesn’t want me to feel pressured to maintain normal work performance when my “real life” is anything but normal right now. 4. I have started reading your blog in earnest this year and it has given me lots of strength to combat imposter syndrome! I am a late 20s woman in an operations/management position that I never expected to find myself in but do enjoy (and great pay – yay!) Recently our HR rep was out sick and I stepped in and did a phone screening for a new assistant position (for my team). I have never done a phone screening before but I thought of you and your advice and just jumped in feet first before my anxiety could take over! The candidate isn’t one I’d move to the next round but I feel more confident about what I’m looking for and proud of myself for not shying away from managerial work. 5. I currently work at management level (no direct reports) doing several different job functions. I am primarily responsible for customer care (complaints, feedback, service, etc) but I also do various things like supporting other departments and helping manage projects. I recently started putting out feelers for other jobs, since I was concerned that my (fairly small) company had changed direction significantly since I started. I had concerns about senior management and the long-term stability of my employment. I was also pretty fed up with constant customer problems which are a direct result of products suffering from legacy issues (lack of design control, etc). My boss is great, though, and I hated the thought of leaving one of the best managers I’ve ever had. I actually found another position (at a pay cut, but steady and reliable) and tried to resign. I say “tried to” because my current company immediately went into salvage mode and asked me what it would take to stay. My boss was fantastic and helped me come up with a list of things to mitigate my concerns, which includes a guaranteed severance package and also a retention bonus (!) and a title bump (!!). I was also given more information about upcoming changes to the company which should put us back on track to being the collaborative, innovative company I signed on with. I am beyond thrilled – it won’t eliminate the everyday stresses of the job, but it goes a LONG way toward repairing my confidence in the company, our products and its future. I know accepting a counteroffer is sometimes not a great idea, but in this case it worked out for the best for all parties involved. Long story short – don’t be afraid to ask for what you’re worth! You may also like:candidates get snippy when I won't talk to them before they apply, I found out my employee is job searching, and moreI think my boss just hired my replacement, but hasn't told meI think the compliments I'm getting are undermining my reputation { 13 comments }
open thread — June 18-19, 2021 by Alison Green on June 18, 2021 It’s the Friday open thread! The comment section on this post is open for discussion with other readers on anything work-related 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 talk 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:love letters as writing samples, the candidate who spoke Pirate, and other tales of amazing resumesmy coworkers are passing around a list of reasons they hate working with mehere's a bunch of help finding a new job { 934 comments }
my boss hates when I mute myself on group calls, telling a job I’d only take it if I could work remotely, and more by Alison Green on June 18, 2021 It’s four answers to four questions. Here we go… 1. Shouldn’t we mute ourselves during group calls? Our org is working remotely right now. A few times a week, I’m on calls with my boss and two coworkers. During these calls, I keep myself muted when I’m not one of the people in the conversation. For example, if my boss and a coworker are talking about a project they are working on that I have zero involvement in, I’m not really in that conversation and will mute myself. When appropriate, I’ll unmute for a few seconds to add in encouraging responses to indicate I’m listening and engaged. (This is not to fake that I’m listening and engaged; I am actually listening and engaged.) Over the past few weeks, my boss has started commenting on me muting myself. It’s happening repeatedly and often, to the point that it makes me equal parts irritated, uncomfortable, and worried/wondering why it’s become an issue. It usually sounds something like this: “Well, Jane is over there muted” or “Jane, you keep going on and off mute” or “Jane, do you know you’re muted?“ —all said when I’m not being addressed or am a party in the conversation. It may also be relevant that we don’t have videos on during these calls, and the comments aren’t being made to anyone else. It’s obvious my boss doesn’t like it, so I know the answer to what to do is to stop muting myself. But my question to you is, is this weird? I thought muting yourself when not speaking was the norm. Or at the very least, it’s a sign of respect for the people you’re talking with so that your background noise doesn’t overtake their speaking. For what it’s worth, our boss never mutes their end of the calls. We can hear them typing, audibly reacting to chats or emails, talking with their dog, muttering about the people walking by their window, etc. It’s distracting and a little demoralizing. Maybe I’ve started muting myself more without realizing it as a reaction to that? It’s weird to me that it’s become “a thing” and I’m wondering if my read on work norms is wrong, or maybe things have changed or evolved in the past year and I’m not aware? No, you are right and your boss is the outlier! Muting yourself on a group call when you’re not actively engaged is usually considered proper etiquette, especially if you’re anywhere with background noise. If anything, most people have become more conscientious about muting themselves over the last year, with so many more group calls than previously. Any chance your boss thinks you’re muting yourself for some kind of problematic reason — like that you’re actively doing something else instead of listening? It sounds like they have plenty of reason to know that’s not the case (you’re paying attention and showing signs you’re actively engaged), but the comments are oddly critical of a normal practice. It’s made all the stranger by your boss’s own aggressive lack of muting on their end (muttering about the people walking by their window?!). In any case, your read on work norms is not wrong. Your boss just has a hang-up about muting for some reason. (You are right, though, you should stop muting yourself in light of her response.) 2. Can I say I’d only take a new job if I can be remote? Late last year, I had the opportunity to interview at a dream company (it’s a huge, globally known corporation). I knew the hiring manager as we worked in the same division at a previous company. I was completely sold on this company throughout the interviewing process—great benefits, lots of room for growth, etc. Their only concern was that I would have to move about five hours away from where I am now if I accepted the position. They were very clear that everyone would have to work from the office full-time once the vaccine came out, no exceptions. At that time, I assured them didn’t mind at all. I have family in that state and there were many job opportunities in the area for my husband. Unfortunately, I did not get the role. I was pretty heartbroken about it. The feedback I got from the hiring manager was that it was between one other person and me, and they chose the person with more experience. I let them know that really liked the company and hoped they would keep me in mind for future opportunities. A few months later, the hiring manager reached out and asked if I would be interested in reapplying for the role. At that point, I had already accepted a fully remote job and my husband also started a new job. It just was not the right time to pick up and move five hours away. So I politely declined and said I wanted to see things through at my new company for now. What I wanted to say was, “Look, you want me, I want to work for you, but moving five hours is out of the question now. I will reapply if I can be remote full-time. You and I both know that I am a great fit for this company and that I am sure that we can make it work.” Maybe I’d say it more eloquently, but you know what I mean. So many of my friends and family keep asking me why I didn’t just go ahead and ask. There really wasn’t anything for me to lose. But I feel like that’s a completely delusional ask. Do you think it’s totally inappropriate to ask something like this? Leadership was very against remote work throughout the interview process and could not stress enough about reopening the second employees got vaccinated. If someone was very clear about their requirements, I shouldn’t try to negotiate. Nope, it’s not delusional. They reached back out and asked if you might still be interested. The honest answer is, “Yes, but only if I can be remote.” It’s okay to say that; they’re approaching you, after all! It’s fine to give them your real answer. If it doesn’t work for them, they’ll let you know. (That said, there are a lot of downsides to being the one remote person at a company where everyone else is in-person: You’re likely to be left out of informal or ad hoc discussions, you’ll be the only person joining meetings remotely, you’ll have less visibility with your boss and other decision-makers, you probably won’t get a shot at as many opportunities as people who are in the office do … and it can feel a lot easier to cut you if cuts need to be made. You might be fine with all that in exchange for being able to stay remote, but make sure to think carefully about those downsides.) 3. My boss ghosted the candidate I recommended My team was recently hiring for a position, and Rob, a former coworker of mine, reached out to let me know he was interested. I thought he’d be a great fit, so I put in a good word for him with my manager (who is the hiring manager). My manager, Jon, brought Rob in for an interview, and ultimately Rob made it through four rounds of interviews, one of which included a test that required several hours to complete. A few weeks after that, Jon updated me that he thought Rob was still a very strong candidate, but that he’d realized he should talk to a more diverse pool before making a hire. (Rob is white.) That was the last I ever heard from Jon about Rob. This week, Jon announced to the team that he’d filled the role with someone who isn’t Rob. Obviously, I’m not upset that they didn’t hire Rob, but what upsets me is that Rob says he was ghosted after four rounds of interviews and the time-consuming test and never even received a rejection email. I care a lot about diversity, of course, and am a woman of color myself, but I still feel frustrated that it seems like Rob was put through this whole process and then rejected due to something that had nothing to do with his qualifications. I also feel Rob was owed a rejection of some sort after investing so much time into the process. I am not sure if I should let Rob know that the position has been filled (the person does not start for another month) or if that would be going behind my manager’s back. I am also not sure if there is anything I can say to Jon to indicate that I feel it was discourteous to ghost Rob. Am I out of line for thinking it’s discourteous to me, in addition to him, since I made the referral? It’s rude to both of you. It’s rude to Rob, who invested significant time in the interview process, and it’s rude to you because your connections should be treated with care by your manager. This kind of ghosting of candidates is very, very common — but doing it to someone who a current employee recommended is particularly thoughtless. (For what it’s worth, it’s not clear that Rob was rejected over something that had nothing to do with his qualifications — it sounds like Jon wanted to ensure he had a diverse interview pool but presumably then chose the candidate he thought was the strongest. But either way, Rob deserved an answer.) You could say to Jon now, “Rob has asked me about the status of the job and mentioned he hasn’t heard anything yet. Could you let him know you filled the position? I worry it could affect my relationship with him if he feels he was left hanging.” 4. A good experience with an interview presentation Prior to an interview, I was asked to create a presentation about myself and my previous work. I found this a little weird and stressful, so I went looking for advice on your website and basically everything I found was negative or awkward experiences. Well, I went to my interview and it turned out to be really great, honestly the best and most enjoyable interview I’ve ever had. So I thought I’d write-in to tell you how interview presentations can be positive on occasion. This was for a mid-career, highly technical and specific engineering role at a company of around 70 people. I was asked to put together about 5 slides: a slide about me (where I got my degree, my previous jobs), a slide describing the general technical skills I developed as a foundation in my prior jobs, a slide describing work I’ve done that applied particularly to the role I was interviewing for, and a slide or two about what I thought the key factors were for addressing the technical problem at the core of the role. At the interview, it turned out that they didn’t want me to stand up and go through it all as a straight presentation. It was really a tool to provide some structure and guide the conversation between myself and the interview panel. On each slide I’d talk through it some, maybe pause part of the way through, they would ask me questions to get more detail, sometimes we would jump ahead or back a slide if the info they were asking about was on a different page. It was very casual and flowing. All in all, the interview had the same content and questions as a regular conversational interview, but having the presentation at hand made me feel so much more relaxed. With the slides right there, I didn’t have to worry about completely blanking and forgetting something from my resume, and I was able to make sure I had an opportunity to highlight my most relevant prior experience without the interviewers needing to ask a specific question about it. I think it was also helpful on the side of the interviewers to have something displayed in discrete chunks instead of having to look down and parse through a whole resume at once. Plus it’s great for folks who have trouble focusing or absorbing information only through audio. Obviously this doesn’t work for every type of job, and frequently presentation requests are just unnecessary work that add nothing of value to the interview (and even in this situation I could see it going poorly if I hadn’t been given details on what they wanted for each slide), but in some instances it can be a tool to make an interview better than it would be otherwise. In the end, I got the job, accepted it, and so far have had a great month working at this company! Thanks for giving an example of how these can go well! We tend to hear about the bad experiences here because people are writing in for advice (just as we tend to hear about the bad managers and the bad coworkers), but there are definitely times when presentations in interviews make sense and are set up well! You may also like:my coworker screams awful things at her kids during video callsmy noisy coworker won't mute himself on conference calls, checking references after someone's hired, and moremuting your boss, lavish virtual holiday parties, and more { 334 comments }
update: can I leave my job after one year if I committed to more? by Alison Green on June 17, 2021 It’s a special “where are you now?” season at Ask a Manager, where all month I’m running updates from people who had their letters here answered in the past. Remember the letter-writer wondering about leaving a toxic job after a year even though she’d committed to staying for two years? Here’s the update. I wrote to you back in March about wanting to leave my job with a jerk boss after one year even though I had verbally committed to at least two years on the job. Your response was so reassuring, and the commenters’ responses were validating as well. At the time, I had no idea whether I would be able to get a new job in a month or in a year, but I at least felt like I was making the right choice in aggressively applying for new positions. The same day you posted my letter, a recruiter reached out to me on LinkedIn about a position she was recruiting for. I went through the interview process and discerned that this opportunity was exactly what I was looking for in a new position. I got a great offer at a 37.5% raise from my previous annual earnings (!!!) and very happily accepted. When I had the quitting conversation with my old boss, she responded positively and said she was happy for me. I naively assumed that I could go out on a high note instead of leaving on bad terms. However, pretty much immediately she started using my new job as another reason to unfairly criticise me, saying my attention wasn’t with her and that I was distracted because I was moving into a new job. (Meanwhile, I was actually working longer hours, doing everything I could to wrap up the major projects I was working on before I left or otherwise to minimize the amount of work my coworkers would have to do to see them to completion once I was gone). This kind of thing is par for the course with her, though, so I just tried to grin and bear it. …That is, until she called me and some of my coworkers a really degrading insult in a meeting a week before I was set to leave. At that point, I was fed up, and with a new job lined up, I didn’t feel the need to stay for the rest of my two weeks. I left that day, telling my boss as calmly as I could that I felt that her management style relied on bullying people and that I could no longer work for her because of it. Did I burn a bridge? Yep. Do I care at all? Nope! I panicked at first after I did it because it felt like such a brash way to leave. But the more space I have from the job, the more time I’ve had to reflect on how deeply, deeply dysfunctional and toxic that work environment was. I’m glad that I stood up for myself, said my piece, and got the hell out of there! Now I’m a few weeks into my new job, and I couldn’t be happier. My work environment is radically better, with everyone from the CEO to the interns being supportive. positive, and respectful toward each other every day. I get great feedback on my work, and my new boss has already taken the time to establish mentorship as part of our working relationship. This is my first time working in such a healthy, functional work environment. I wouldn’t have had the guts to get out and fight for a better position if it wasn’t for you and your readers giving me that final nudge forward that I needed. You may also like:can I leave my job after one year if I committed to more?update: my coworker is upset that I’m pregnantcoworker is obviously pregnant but hasn't told us, negotiating for more vacation time, and more { 59 comments }
our employee lied about having a sick child by Alison Green on June 17, 2021 A reader writes: I’ve worked for a company for a little over 10 years. “Lysa” started soon after me. We work in a semi-small and close department, and about a year after she started she ran into a streak of bad luck. Her husband asked for a divorce and she found out her young daughter had cancer. The children’s hospital was an almost two-hour drive, so she was in the car a lot. She was tired and as a department we came together to help. People would bring her lunch and coffee and everyone pooled money and bought her a gas card. Her daughter’s health improved, and she met a new boyfriend. She was always gushing about him, showing everyone pictures and having loud phone conversations. It became worse when he proposed because any conversation with her was about her wedding in Italy and how this weekend she was flying to Italy to check on the wedding venue and next weekend was a trip to New York for the dress fitting. (Her fiance was wealthy and was paying for everything.) A group of coworkers decided to throw a bridal shower at the office and invite her friends and family as well. So one lunch, they headed to her mother’s house (who one of them knew) to invite her to the bridal shower. The mother’s response: “What are you talking about? She doesn’t even have a boyfriend.” Lysa lied … about all of it. Her daughter was never sick. She was never married. She never met the rich man of her dreams, but she told us that. The long phone conversations were her talking to herself, not connected to anything (we checked the phone log). We believe the flowers and gifts she sent to herself. When she was confronted, she said her mother doesn’t like him and doesn’t acknowledge his existence. It was the same with the daughter’s illness. She pretended it was real but it didn’t fit. She had already told us that her mother had gone with her to Italy to check out the venue and was excited. And during her daughter’s illness, she talked about how her mother was so helpful and supportive. We reported it to management. Since it didn’t affect the business, they said there wasn’t anything they could do, but now we have a department with an outcast. Even management doesn’t believe her. When her daughter was in an accident, they asked her to bring in the police report to excuse the absence when before they would have just believed it. How should our company have handled this? 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 lied to get a job and can't let go of the guiltmy employee lied about meeting with a client -- to take a napI lied to my boss and said I've been doing a task I haven't actually done { 317 comments }
how can we get older members of our field to stop complimenting women on their appearances? by Alison Green on June 17, 2021 It’s the Thursday “ask the readers” question. A reader writes: I am a member of a prestigious society for my field, several thousand members strong. We include student practitioners, new practitioners, experienced practitioners, and people retired from our industry. So we have a very large age range — 20s to 90s. As you can imagine, the world has changed a lot from the initial founding of our society. Our industry is also changing. It is one of those things that was predominantly white and male, but is now becoming much more representative of the population. On top of this, we also have several different factions in the field, where parts of it are very reserved and proper, but other parts can be boisterous and bawdy. We have a group of older members who will compliment the younger, female members by on their appearance. The most recent example came from a very gentle, kind man who I know was well-intentioned. He’s always been a welcoming presence at meetings and still spends time years after his retirement attending conferences and helping to teach people new to the field. I am mid-career and was told about this by another colleague. I have no supervisory authority over the member. I am at best a peer, but probably 30 years behind him. I know that waiting for time to eliminate these members isn’t the best solution. I know that yelling at them is also not a good solution. I know that sometimes we need to understand that older people can’t always change entirely and that it is important to know when something is meant in a mean fashion and when it is meant kindly and you need to let it roll off your back. I’d like to turn this retired man into an advocate. How do I best do that? How do I take a person with great desire to mentor and support those newest to our field and teach him to do this better? Readers, what’s your advice? You may also like:my employee drastically changes her appearance in the middle of the workdaymen compliment my handshakemy coworker tries to compliment me into doing more work { 581 comments }
I’m earning less than someone who lied on their resume, difficult client will only deal with one of my employees, and more by Alison Green on June 17, 2021 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. I’m earning less than someone who lied on their resume I am perturbed by the fact I have worked my butt off for the last 15 years to get to what my salary is, and someone I know lies on their resume (who just started working about 5 years ago) is making more than I. Does HR not check backgrounds anymore? Should I push harder? I can’t lie, it’s more of an accomplishment deal for me. How should I move forward? Is this what people do these days? No, this isn’t what people do. This is what one unethical person did. You presumably value your own integrity and not having to live in fear of a lie coming out and torpedoing a job you’ve already been hired for (which is very much a thing that happens) more than that person does. You move forward by recognizing that there have always been people who lie and always will be, and that that’s something you choose not to do because those aren’t your values. But also — even without lying, sometimes people with less work experience than you might be earning more. Sometimes it’s because they’ve schmoozed their way into a higher salary than their work deserves, but sometimes it’s because they’ve genuinely earned it. The thing is to make sure that you feel you’re being paid fairly and competitively for the work you’re doing. Ignore everyone else (barring situations like systemic discrimination, of course). 2. A difficult client will only deal with one of my employees I manage a small team of customer service/account managers. I’m after some help navigating a tricky situation. I have a long-term client who is quite particular and has dealt with one of my employees for a few years now. Recently, I’ve brought a new employee on board and we decided to transition this account over to her. The client sent me a polite, but very stern email after about one week requesting to be put back in the original employee’s hands immediately. Now, nothing really happened to prompt this, the new employee hasn’t done anything wrong, and our strategic goal for 2021 is to split up clients in a way that means she should be handled by the new employee. I personally think it’s quite rude to demand someone be returned to your account, but I can’t see how I could refuse her either, which may be taken badly by my new employee! I once asked to be moved to a different account rep when the one I’d been assigned was repeatedly misunderstanding requests and giving me information that was clearly wrong — and if I’d been told I had to stay with him, I would have taken my business somewhere else. I don’t know what prompted your client’s request, but it’s not necessarily an unreasonable one. Before you conclude anything, you’ve got to find out what the concern is — either by talking to the client or reviewing the correspondence between the two of them or through whatever other means you have at your disposal. And then you’ve got to decide if the client’s business is valuable enough that you’re willing to move the account back to the previous person. Maybe it is, maybe it isn’t — but if it’s a valuable account, sometimes you do things like that to keep an important client happy. (It’s also worth finding out what the previous rep’s secrets of success are with this account — maybe she’s just highly competent, but maybe she has certain approaches she uses that others could use too.) Make the decision based on what makes sense for your business. And if you do move the client back to the old rep, be straightforward with the new hire about why. If this client is just picky and difficult and it’s not her fault, be honest about that. But if you find out that she wasn’t handling the account as well as the previous rep, explain that too — she’s new, so some of that is normal, and it makes sense not to saddle her with someone especially challenging while she’s still learning the job. 3. Handling things that aren’t my job when there are serious consequences if I don’t I do some work as a court-appointed attorney for parents (and occasionally children) in child protection cases. The social services department in my county is, quite frankly, horrible. I frequently have to step in and take care of things that are (literally, legally!) their jobs. I’ve been doing this for about five years. It feels like their whole department has come the proverbial missing stair. Quite frankly, it’s burning me out. I’ve tried pushing back and not doing it, but there are serious consequences when I don’t. For example, I’m not supposed to be in charge of finding placements for kids, but I historically have done so since nobody else will. However, the one time I pushed back and just didn’t help, a kid wound up sitting in juvie because “he was just too hard to place.” Needless to say, I wound up giving in and finding placement options. I’ve tried talking to the social services supervisor and the county attorney, and they just say that the social workers are “trying their best,” which seems uncredible since I’m able to find placements, services and resources without any of their tools. Do you have any ideas of what I could say or do to try and push back on this becoming my responsibility? I’m good at being assertive, I’m just not even sure what to say or try at this point. Children’s service workers are notoriously overworked and under-resourced, so it’s possible that they’re genuinely stretched too thin to give individual cases the time and attention you can. In fact, having to triage resources in child protection cases is so common that I’d assume it’s happening here unless you have real evidence that it’s not — there literally may not be money to pay for the additional staffing they’d need to do a better job. Readers who work in this field, do you have advice on concrete actions this letter-writer could take? 4. I don’t want to reconnect with a former coworker from a toxic job I spent the past five years working in a toxic environment where I was completely miserable. I recently got a new job in the same field in a different state, and I am so much happier! Moving out of state was difficult but so worth it for my mental health. However, I recently learned that a former colleague, Jane, will be moving to my city to start a job in my same field but with a different employer. It is a small and somewhat niche field, so our paths may cross even though we will not directly be working together. Jane and I were friendly at our old job, but I was privately not her biggest fan. She was very close with a high-up manager there (to the point where people thought they were having an affair), and he prioritized spending time with her over supervising his direct reports, including me, which caused my work to suffer. Thinking about having to see her just reminds me of the toxic and miserable workplace I was so anxious to get away from. I am worried that when Jane moves here, she will reach out to get drinks or dinner. I moved jobs and cities to get a fresh start and really do not want any reminders of the job that made me so unhappy. Is there a polite way to blow Jane off without making it awkward if our paths cross professionally? Yep — plead an overbooked schedule. As in, “My schedule is ridiculous and it’s hard to get anything new on my calendar right now. But if there’s anything you’re wondering about the new city, feel free to reach out and I can try to be helpful.” (If you don’t want to offer that last piece, you can change that sentence to, “But I hope you’re getting settled in and enjoying the new city! I really like Coffeeshop X and Restaurant Y.” The recommendations are optional, but including something of that sort helps soften the message so it’s a bit more than “I hope you shall never darken my path again.”) 5. Explaining why I’m staying remote without disclosing health information The return to work after Covid has brought up a conundrum for me. I am vaccinated, but immunosuppressed with other major underlying conditions. I’m fortunate to have a job that I can do completely remotely and my boss has allowed me to do so indefinitely. My issue is that the rest of my office has started resuming in-person activities. Celebrations, lunches, etc. My company is not tracking vaccination numbers or asking for masking of unvaccinated employees, so I have opted out of any in-person events. However, my absence is being noticed by other employees. I am not forthcoming about my health problems and for various reasons have no desire to share this information beyond my immediate supervisor. It is widely known that I have no children and if I claim to live with a family member who is immunocompromised it will just lead to questions about my spouse. The comments so far have been well-meaning and benign so far — “Hope to see you at [upcoming event],” “I look forward to getting together at [office celebration],” “Let’s meet up for lunch this week when I’m in the office.” I’ve been able to change the subject or use the phrase “I wish I could, but I’m still being careful.” But as time goes on I’m concerned this will become a perception problem that I’m not a team player. I am now the only employee opting out of in-person attendance at these events. It’s feeling more and more awkward and I’m getting the impression I’m being seen as antisocial and not wanting to join in on group activities, especially since I’m fairly high up in the company. There is one large event later this summer that I would normally be leading. Instead, I won’t even be attending. I feel like my health information should be private, but I also think showing up as the only masked person and opting out of eating won’t be received well either. I am younger and appear healthy so medical concerns are not what people jump to. This feels like a rock and a hard place. How do you recommend I navigate this? I get that you don’t want to disclose that this is health-related … but it’s by far the easiest way to handle it. You wouldn’t need to share any specifics; you’d just matter-of-factly say, “I have a health situation that means I need to stay remote for now.” You don’t need to provide details beyond that. If you really don’t want to say that, you could stay very vague — “I’m staying permanently remote for now” — but you’re right that it risks becoming a perception problem. That’s especially true because you’re higher up; there’s a risk of it being seen as unfair, or as hypocritical if you’re involved in high-level decision-making in an office that’s bringing everyone else back. You don’t have to disclose that this is health-related, but you’ll likely get a much better outcome if people have a general sense of why you’re suddenly not there. You may also like:my boyfriend wants to lie on his resume -- and his stepfather is encouraging itcan I avoid talking football without annoying my boss?should I avoid softening my emails with qualifying language? { 396 comments }
updates: my coworker told everyone we’re married (we’re not) and more by Alison Green on June 16, 2021 It’s a special “where are you now?” season at Ask a Manager, where all month I’m running updates from people who had their letters here answered in the past. Here are four updates from past letter-writers. 1. My coworker told everyone we’re married … we’re not even dating I didn’t expect my question would even be published, let alone receive so many supportive comments from the AAM community! I only wish my bosses and coworkers could have been that understanding. About a month after the break room scene, I still felt like I was walking on eggshells to avoid my “husband” and I noticed the attitudes from my manager and coworkers changing for the worse. I ended up leaving for a similar job that pays better, and is just a healthier environment overall. I hate how we call everything and everyone “toxic” nowadays, but that truly was a toxic environment in retrospect, and the lack of support from management and HR was finally the big red flag that sent me packing. Some of the commenters mentioned stalking and safety, because the man seemed a bit obsessed. While I’ve seen the guy a few times around town, there hasn’t been any interaction between us and I don’t think he or any of my former coworkers know where I work now. Nobody’s attempted to contact me, and I can breathe easier. I wish everyone at my old job well; I hope they can learn from this situation, and I thank everyone who commented for their encouragement. 2. I resent coworkers coming back from furlough (#2 at the link) I had written to you about feeling bad that I resented my coworkers returning from furlough. It has a happy ending. I got a promotion in recognition of the extra work i had done, my positive attitude (I hid my resentment well) and my value to the company. When I wrote to you, I was in what I now recognize as a state of burnout. 2020 was tough year and towards the end of it I was wrongly jealous of my furloughed coworkers who got a long break and extra unemployment money. I know that their situation caused a lot of anxiety for them, but in my burnout I fell into some self-pity. One commenter hit the nail on the head regarding a big piece of my resentment. Those on furlough continued to accrue vacation time so came back to lots of time that carried over into 2021 and additional time that had to be used by end of year. So I ended up working through the holidays while my recently returned coworkers had to take that time off or lose it. But I’m in a better place now and enjoying my job and being able to spend time with these coworkers who are actually really cool people. 3. Applying to jobs at home while waiting to travel abroad for a different one (#5 at the link) Unfortunately, due to the ever changing travel restrictions my flights to work abroad were cancelled then delayed then cancelled again, on top of changing visa requirements. The delay meant I had to withdraw from the position as I couldn’t afford to be indefinitely out of work and I needed to start a real job search (unfortunately the part-time work I’d hoped for did not materialise either). It was heartbreaking and I hated letting them down but it’s a messy situation all round. I sent a few speculative emails to companies I wanted to work for (who are open to that sort of thing) and applied to two really great opportunities, again with companies I would be excited to work for. I had a good look at your cover letter advice and the examples you’ve shared, and completely reworked my approach to them. I got a great response to one of my speculative emails and an offer for one of my applications! I had the first interview at the beginning of April, the second a week later, the offer the week after that and a start date the week after that. It was fast. So here I am. Still in the country with an exciting new job in a great company and in my preferred industry! Your advice has really been invaluable and not just with my cover letter; I feel like my whole approach to work and employment is healthier because of it. 4. Can I ask that an underperforming coworker not be placed on important work? (#4 at the link) Some very unexpected good news: the co-worker, after more than 10 years of mediocre-to-poor performance and incredibly unprofessional behavior…changed. She dropped her silent treatment, started engaging in group meetings with good suggestions and questions, improved her attitude towards customers, and started actually doing work to resolve cases. I don’t know what precipitated this change — maybe her manager reached his breaking point the same time I did (I was very much returning problem to sender, and we were receiving external complaints) — or maybe working from home *really* agrees with her. She’s been doing so much better that she received her first (small) promotion in years after 10 months of this new attitude and skill. I hope the improvement sticks! It’s been such a relief. You may also like:my coworker told everyone we're married ... we're not even datinga Valentine's Day round-upmost popular posts of 2020 { 140 comments }