coworkers are angry that we got rid of their smelly, fly-ridden compost bucket by Alison Green on January 6, 2025 A reader writes: We have about 25 employees, and prior to Covid, we had a somewhat-contentious compost bucket under the sink in our staff kitchen. It was always gross, full of flies and rotting food, and rarely emptied by the people who used it. Recently, a colleague decided to reinstate the compost bucket and messaged the group chat to inform everyone that they would be emptying it at least twice a week. Of course, that didn’t happen, and it quickly got disgusting — several weeks’ worth of rotting, smelly food and hordes of fruit flies. After maybe two months of this, another coworker got fed up, made an executive decision, and tossed the bucket entirely. And so “compost-gate” began. Some of us agree with removing the bucket; since it’s rarely maintained, it quickly becomes a health hazard in our shared kitchen. But the handful of people who do use it are upset, and telling the other colleague it wasn’t okay to get rid of it and it needed to be a group decision. What do you think? If the people who used the compost bucket wanted to keep it, they should have ensured it didn’t become a mess of smelly, rotting food and fruit flies. They didn’t, so now there’s no compost bucket. In theory, yes, the coworker who tossed the bucket could have given a warning that he was going to toss it unless someone started maintaining it (and if we had a time machine, that’s what I’d recommend) or could have appealed to someone with authority to manage the situation rather than just tossing the thing … but it’s not hard to understand people getting fed up with it and just removing it. “Sorry, but having a bucket of rotting food and flies isn’t tenable in a shared workplace” is a reasonable stance to take. If the rest of you are in the mood to compromise, you could agree that the bucket can come back as long as there’s an understanding that it will be tossed again if it’s not maintained … but frankly if I were the decision-maker here, I’d write it off as a project that has already proved impractical and not invite it back in. You may also like:I'm in trouble for re-sorting a coworker's trash -- and I'm enragedmy boss is infesting our office with fruit flies, my work funds the office BBQs, and moremy boss keeps rotting food in our shared office, my performance review mentioned that I pee a lot, and more { 132 comments }
my employee is too accommodating by Alison Green on January 6, 2025 A reader writes: I am having a very backwards problem with one of my employees, Jill, being too accommodating and self-sacrificing. We have regular hours that we work, but it’s not uncommon for hours to need to change when something comes up. Everyone is aware of this when they come onboard, and we do our best to rotate who has to stay late. Everyone seems pretty content with how things work as long as there is equal division of overtime. Jill, however, will often volunteer herself to work the longest hours to take the most un-enjoyable part of the work every single time. A lot of my conversations with the team will go something like this: Me: We have a large new project that’s just been brought it us and the client has put in a rush order, so we’re really going to need to push over the next few days. Jill: I’ll do it! Me: That’s okay, you did it last time, plus you’re going to be on vacation the next couple of days. We’ll see if we can get someone else to handle it before we come to that. Jill: No need, I’ll do it. I’ll cancel my vacation immediately! And the next thing I know, Jill has put in a request to cancel her time off and has already told the others they can go on home and she’ll stay late. She does this even if I tell her to wait! In any given month, there are at least a few times where Jill volunteers herself to stay late, work through lunch, cancel scheduled time off, or even do someone else’s work for them so they can leave early. Jill doesn’t seem upset about all the extra work or cancelling time off, and her work is always well thought-out and excellent. But I do not know how to tell her to please back off and let us distribute the extra responsibilities a bit more! Asking her to cancel a vacation would be an absolute last resort for me, not a first or even second choice. I have had one talk with Jill where I explained it’s okay for her to allow others to do the extra work. Throughout our conversation, she kept insisting to me that she didn’t mind and that she was happy to help in any way needed. Our talk ended up not being much more than me saying “you don’t have to do it every time” and her saying “I don’t mind!” After that, her behavior did not really change. I’d like to address this again because it simply isn’t fair to Jill, but I’m struggling to come up with a better way to phrase it. I suppose I could “pull rank” and ban her from working on certain things, but that seems too harsh for this situation. Any ideas on how to better handle 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:is this HR process for accommodations as bananas as it feels?argumentative coworker always says, "repeat back to me the point I just made"my employee wastes a huge amount of everyone's time with "helpful" suggestions and questioning { 90 comments }
my boss’s wife cheated on him in front of me, and now he’s icing me out at work by Alison Green on January 6, 2025 A reader writes: I work for an office of 20/30somethings with a strong drinking culture — our events inevitably end up in pubs late into the night and include all partners, funders, etc. This is not abnormal in my industry. The other night, we were all out late after a successful event and the boss invited everyone to his house for an afterparty. His wife and I got separated from the group, and she was very keen on “remedying” my singleness, so started talking to a random guy outside a nightclub and invited him back to the house “for me.” My boss very quickly Irish goodbye-ed and went to bed, and I fell asleep on the couch with people chatting around me. When I awoke, I saw my boss’s very drunk wife kissing this random dude, then leading him by the hand upstairs. I didn’t want to leave in the middle of the night, so I waited until I could catch the first train in the morning. Eventually I heard someone walk down the stairs and out the front door. I was sneaking out when I was surprised by his wife, who said, “Did you hook up with that guy?” I blurted out, “No, but you did!” and she burst into tears, saying she was married and so embarrassed. I left, and then received a call from my boss asking me to tell him everything that happened and then asking, “What do I do?” and requesting that I not tell anyone at work. Since then, my boss has barely spoken or looked at me, to the point that higher-ups have called for a meeting to ask about the office dynamic. I am at a loss for how to deal with this (beyond never drinking with my coworkers again). I don’t think I can tell the higher-ups why my boss is being so cold to me, but I’m not sure what to say. You can indeed tell them what’s going on with your boss, and you might need to. First, though, if you want, you can try talking to your boss directly. Whether or not that makes sense will depend on your relationship with your boss and what he’s generally like, but in some cases it might move things forward if you say, for example, “My sense is that you’ve felt awkward around me since last weekend, and I want you to know that I don’t consider that any of my business whatsoever. As far I’m concerned, I’ve wiped it from my mind and never plan to think about it again! I do need to talk to you as my boss, though, so I’m hoping we can go back to our normal relationship, which I really valued.” You could also say, “Rupert and Margaret have asked me what’s going on with the office dynamic. I don’t think what happened the other week is any of their business — just as it’s not any of my business either — and I’d like to be able to tell them everything is fine between us. Can we put this behind us before I have to meet with them?” Or, with some people, you could skip that and just look for opportunities to interact as normally as possible with him, as often as possible — on the theory that he’ll take cues from you and if you’re making a point of demonstrating “I’m comfortable just being normal and not dwelling on what happened,” it’ll make it easier for him to relax back into a normal dynamic. With some people and in some situations, this is remarkably effective. But if neither of those approaches work or feel doable, then I do think you’ll need to seriously consider telling your higher-ups what’s going on when they ask. You don’t need to get super specific (“Jeb’s wife hooked up with a random dude and I saw it”); you could say, “I witnessed something awkward between him and his wife at a party and he hasn’t seemed comfortable talking to me since then. I don’t consider it any of my business and I’d like to move forward but I’m not sure how to navigate it.” Is that an awkward thing to say to higher-ups? Sure. But it’s not okay for your boss to freeze you out (over anything, ever, but especially over something like this) and if that’s the path he’s picking, he’s the one choosing awkwardness, not you. You may also like:my new coworker seems to be asking us if he should cheat on his wifemy coworker had an affair with my wifemy boss is giving us the silent treatment { 167 comments }
our office banned couches, axe-throwing at the company holiday party, and more by Alison Green on January 6, 2025 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. We can’t have couches anymore I work as a staff member at a college. The other day, the HR director told us he is getting rid of all of the couches around administrative offices and lobbies. When asked why, he said, “Title IX. We want people to remain upright.” I have no idea what this means. I have never had a student or colleague try to lay down on these 3.5-foot couches. I looked briefly at Title IX documentation, but could not find anything on seating. These campus-approved couches are utilitarian at best: uncomfortable, wrapped in ugly, fire-retardant patterns and just long enough to fit two people reasonably without touching. They are in glass-walled, visible offices and public waiting areas. We were told the two-person couches would be replaced with two chairs instead. Which would be right next to each other. I am not sure what could happen on a couch — hanky panky? Or unwanted touching? Do you have any thoughts on whether “Title IX” is a reason to remove couches? I don’t really care what people sit on while they are waiting to meet with administrators, I just want to know if this absurd reason is actually real. Title IX is the law that makes it illegal to discriminate on the basis of sex, which can include sexual harassment and sexual coercion. Your HR director is saying, “We don’t want to make it easy for sexual contact to occur in our work settings, and we think the presence of couches may do that.” It’s a bit silly to think that someone who wants to have sex in an office would require a couch to do it, but that’s what he’s referencing. And I wouldn’t be surprised if there was An Incident that led to the change — but if there was, it’s pretty likely that it would have happened with or without the presence of a couch. 2. Coworker offered to use food stamps for our holiday party During the lead-up to our holiday party, a younger coworker offered to use their extra food stamps to get food for the team. They explained that they weren’t planning to use the stamps for themselves and wanted to contribute to the celebration. They went around and asked everyone for their requests. While their offer was generous and clearly well-intentioned, it made some of my coworkers uncomfortable. No one knew quite how to navigate this. Some were unsure if it was appropriate to accept, given the purpose of food stamps. Others didn’t want to hurt the coworker’s feelings by declining. It was a one-time occurrence, and I’d love your thoughts on how you would have navigated this as a coworker. It doesn’t feel right to escalate it to HR and even saying something to this employee, I believe, would cause them to feel a ton of shame and embarrassment. You’re right that it wouldn’t be appropriate to use food stamps to fund a company party — and it would violate the terms of the benefit. So: “You’re kind to offer, but we couldn’t accept that.” Or, “You’re kind to offer, but I don’t think they’re allowed to be transferred so we couldn’t accept that.” 3. We can’t use holiday party leave to do axe-throwing as a group My manager is a good guy but a bit of a pushover. We are at an office with very few perks, but every year at the holidays we are allowed half a day of leave to attend an office holiday party. This year my boss asked us if we would be interested in going to a local axe-throwing place (and paying our own way) during the workday as an office party. It is not mandatory, but we would be allowed to charge our “holiday party leave” time to attend. A sufficient number of people were interested so the party was booked. Now my boss’s boss has told us we can still attend the party but we would have to charge PTO as we are going someplace with “weapons” involved. As far as I know, this isn’t an office-wide policy, she just made it up this year for this particular event. She also complained that she wouldn’t be able to attend the party anyway because someone has to be in the office. We are all pretty bummed, but the bigger implication is she is just arbitrarily taking away our job benefits and we don’t think it’s fair. Do we have any recourse here? Should we throw axes in defiance of her edict? Eh. I see why it grates, but it’s also not inherently outrageous to say that the office won’t sponsor parties centered around weapons. And while you’re paying your own way, they’d be sponsoring it in the sense of giving you party leave to attend … which might be making her worried about issues of liability if something goes wrong. (Of course, something could just as easily go wrong if you went zip-lining or any number of the other off-site activities some offices choose. Axe-throwing just makes the risk feel more obvious.) You can certainly try to push back as a group on this type of thing, but ultimately it’s her call to make. 4. How to end a conversation after giving negative feedback I just gave some negative feedback to one of my direct reports, but I struggled with how to end the conversation. Basically, she failed to do a follow-up task as per procedure because she was too busy, and that resulted with some employees not getting a recognition in due time and in our org, those recognitions are very important. I told her it was unacceptable and to ask for help if she is overloaded. I was able to use an example of someone close to her to drive home the importance of not letting such things slip. She apologized and accepted the feedback and after that I had no idea how to close the conversation. Yes, I was not happy but it was not a life-or-death situation and other then her agreeing not to do it again in the future, there was no reason for me to prolong the conversation beyond that. The exchange was happening on a Teams chat. I had to pull away for a few moments to deal with an email, but after that I was able to come up with this: “I understand that you’ve been very busy while Varys is absent, but I cannot take action to help you out if I am not aware of what is going on. What is important going forward is that this doesn’t happen again. I will send the scrolls to the Wall via Raven.” Is there a general script that I can use to close such conversations? I didn’t want to harp on the issue but I didn’t want to close it by softening the message after she apologized with an “It’s ok” as I would if it was a minor issue. You’re overthinking it! It’s enough to just say, “Thank you.” When you’re delivering critical feedback, once it’s clear the person gets it (and, if relevant, is taking whatever action you need them to take), you don’t need to reiterate the message again … and in some cases, doing that can come across as berating them. In your mind you’re summing up the main takeaways, but to the person being criticized, hearing it repeated can feel like you’re hammering it in when they’ve already made it clear that they get it. That’s not a hard and fast rule; sometimes something is so serious that reiterating it in a summary at the end makes sense. But in this case, it sounds like you were really just looking for a way to close the conversation, and “thank you” (or “I appreciate it” or “I think we’re on the same page now, so thank you” or “sounds good, thank you” or similar) is a perfectly fine (and lower key) way to do that. Related: how to criticize someone’s work without making it awkward 5. Why did this rejection bother to say the job was already slated for someone else? I’ve been casually looking for a new job for the past year or more, and I encountered this line in what was otherwise a fairly standard “we’ll keep your info on file, please search our site for other positions” email response: “This role was specifically intended for transitioning one of our temporary contract employees into a full-time position at Company.” Is there a reason they would need to send this? I hadn’t interviewed or anything so it felt odd that they went into detail like that. I’ve certainly gotten enough “thanks, we’re going a different direction” messages that this one stuck out. Transparency! They didn’t have to offer it, but they did. They’re letting you know that the rejection wasn’t about your qualifications, but simply that they’d already selected someone for the position. (And yes, it’s a problem that they even bothered to post the job if people didn’t have a real shot at it, but some companies’ internal rules require them to do that … even though this is very much not in the spirit of said rule.) You may also like:my boss said my posture is too casual for the officeis sitting on a couch for video calls unprofessional?I'm supposed to share a bed with a coworker on a business trip { 367 comments }
weekend open thread – January 4-5, 2025 by Alison Green on January 3, 2025 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. You may also like:all of my 2023 and 2024 book recommendationsall of my book recommendations from 2015-2022the cats of AAM { 1,077 comments }
open thread – January 3, 2025 by Alison Green on January 3, 2025 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:my boss offered me money to film a sex tape with two coworkersmy coworker has started faking a British accentneed help finding a job? start here { 961 comments }
coworker keeps telling people she’s my boss, suspicious jewelry, and more by Alison Green on January 3, 2025 I’m on vacation. Here are some past letters that I’m making new again, rather than leaving them to wilt in the archives. 1. My coworker is wearing jewelry that signifies a dominant/submissive relationship I recently realized that one of my coworkers wears D/s jewelry every day. (Funny enough, I wouldn’t have recognized it had I not been a devout reader of your blog and read the letter from the person asking about wearing a collar to work!) Now that I’ve noticed the jewelry, I feel like I can’t un-notice it. I’m all for people living their own best lives, but overt sexuality at work makes me incredibly uncomfortable. (Can I blame my Catholic upbringing? Because I’d really like to blame my Catholic upbringing.) I work with this person regularly and am on friendly terms with them. We don’t discuss our personal lives with each other, so I would feel weird bringing up the issue of the jewelry. While we both work for a children-focused nonprofit, my coworker doesn’t interact with the public in any way. I think my concern is too petty and intrusive to bring to HR. Any tips on how to “get over“ the discomfort? You’re right that it’s definitely not something you should bring up with HR or raise with your coworker. I don’t know exactly what the piece of jewelry is, but there’s no guarantee that she’s wearing it to signify a dominant/submissive relationship! That stuff isn’t exclusively for D/s relationships, so it’s possible she just saw it and liked it. In fact, there were a bunch of commenters on that previous letter saying they owned similar jewelry with no symbolism attached. So to get over your discomfort, why not decide that’s likely the case here? There’s a decent chance it really is and that your coworker would be horrified (or just amused) to find out how you’re interpreting it. – 2019 2. My coworker keeps telling people she’s my boss I’ve worked on a small team in a large company for about ten years. I have two peers — same pay grade but different functional work — one of whom started after me, who I’ll call Jack, and one of whom has been there about 20 years, who I’ll call Jill. We have together been through a half dozen bosses. Both Jill and I have been encouraged to take the manager of the team position as our bosses have left, and both of us have repeatedly declined. I like the career I have and have no interest in converting to management. Jill seems to want the authority of being the manager without any of the responsibility. She frequently tries to assign work to Jack and me, repeatedly directly tells people inside and outside the company that we are her employees (in front of our current boss), and scolded our current boss because he “needs to clear changes to team assignments” with her first — which he immediately made clear to her that he does not need to do, as he is the boss. So far, I have simply ignored this, since I work at a different site and don’t see most of it directly, but I’m starting to run into issues because she’s told this lie to so many people that there is confusion among some vendors and the teams we work with, especially since we do change bosses frequently. Our current boss has called her out when she claims Jack and I are her employees, and she claims she “misspoke” or that our boss or other hearers “misunderstood,” so talking to her directly isn’t terribly productive. Is this something I should keep mostly ignoring and just correcting with individuals as needed? Given that she won’t own up to the fact she is doing this, I can’t think of any way to say, “Knock it off. If you want to be the boss, then take the job next time it comes up!” What do I say to someone when they have been directly told by Jill that she is my boss, and I have to correct that lie? It’s bizarre that she’s doing this in front of your boss, who would obviously know the truth. I think you do need to call it out directly, both on principle and because it’s causing confusion. It doesn’t matter that she’ll deny it; there’s value in calling it out and making it clear to her that you’re not going to tolerate it. You also don’t need to prove that she’s doing it in order to be able to speak up. It’s come up enough that you can safely say this to her: “Jill, why are you continuing to tell people that you’re my manager?” If she says she hasn’t and that people just misunderstood, then say this: “It’s happening frequently enough that if it’s a misunderstanding, it’s being caused by something you said. But to make sure we’re all on the same page, you’re clear that you’re not in fact my boss and that we’re peers, right?” Assuming she says yes, then say, “Okay. I’ll assume there won’t be further misunderstandings, but if there are, I’m going to ask (boss) to intervene.” Or you could skip that last part and go straight to your boss now, which would be more than reasonable. When you need to correct the facts with someone who’s been told Jill is your boss, you can just be matter-of-fact about it — “No, that must have been a miscommunication! Jill and I are peers. I report to Fergus.” – 2017 3. My mentor got fired and now I’m questioning what she taught me I started a new job in payroll last July and on my first day got paired up with Jane, a current employee. Jane had been handling most of my job for a few months and also had years of experience with payroll even though she was in a different department here. At the time, Jane was presented as an excellent resource for me to find out about the job and the company as a whole. We even were given an office to share, so she would be readily available to answer any questions that I had. We had many long conversations about her experience and opinions of the company and her input really shaped my impression of my job. Six months after I started, Jane was fired. Since then, I have heard snide remarks about Jane from others in her department that she was not a good employee. I have not been able to reconcile the first six months of working with Jane with this new information. Even though I didn’t take all of her advice, I did listen to everything she told me and believed much of it because of her experience. For instance, she told me a particular manager was terrible at his job (a position that she had before), yet I have heard positive feedback about him from others now. Should I forget everything that Jane told me? How should I filter out the good from the bad? Do what you would do if you’d never had those in-depth conversations with Jane: form your own impressions, based on your own experiences with people, and reserve judgment about people you don’t work with yourself. It’s possible that Jane’s impressions were all pretty right on. It’s also possible that they were way off, or somewhere in between. You’ll probably have a better idea of how you rate her accuracy once you start forming your own impressions and can check how well they line up with what she told you. You might find you come to similar conclusions, or really different ones. Stay open-minded and see what happens. One thing to think about though: If Jane was very quick to share negative opinions about others when you started, that’s actually a strike against her. People with good judgment usually don’t rush to dump negativity onto a new hire and will be more discreet. So if looking back, that’s what happened, I’d bring some additional skepticism to bear. – 2019 4. My VP insists on leaving papers in my chair instead of my inbox I’m the admin for a team of four in a large company. It’s an okay job and I’m an okay admin. It’s a step back for me but I need the money. We have a new VP who insists on leaving paperwork for me on my seat. This is a major pet peeve of mine. I have an inbox on my desk for a reason. I’ve told the new VP this several times but he refuses to use the box. He says he doesn’t want his work to be missed. I put his papers in the box, on the bottom. However I’m tempted to start chucking them out. An I overreacting or is he being rude? You are overreacting. Yes, ideally he’d comply with your request — but ultimately, as someone higher in the hierarchy than you, he can decide how he wants to do this. And who knows, maybe he works with other people who prefer urgent stuff go on their chair so they see it right away, and it’s not reasonable to expect him to track the inbox vs. chair preferences of everyone he works with. Or maybe it’s not that at all; maybe this is just his preference. It’s just not a big deal either way. And it’s definitely not a big enough deal for you to expend energy or capital on it. Pick up the papers, put them in your inbox, done. (And frankly, rather than sticking them in the bottom of the box, you should look at them to see how they need to be prioritized. You’ve got to prioritize doing your job well over getting petty payback to him.) I think you’re choosing to see this as some kind of power play. It’s not; it’s just a thing some people do. Let it go. – 2019 You may also like:coworker is wearing BDSM jewelry, employers wants to post photos of my kids, and moremy boss wants me to host a product party for her, I compared my interviewer to my dog, and moredo I wear too much black at work? { 405 comments }
updates: martial arts at work, coworker hates me, and more by Alison Green on January 2, 2025 Here are five updates from past letter-writers. 1. Is it weird to incorporate martial arts at my job? (first update) I’ve got one more update for you. You know how I mentioned contamination risks? We ended up having a contamination issue (unrelated to the question I asked) that took over a year to recover from. That, combined with a long commute, an average of 45 hour weeks with little notice when I’d have to stay late (including weekend shifts on a lot of the ones that exceeded 45), pressure to cut down on the overtime with no relaxation of deadlines to compensate, and quite a bit of personal stuff made for a really rough time. I was also stuck in the job for the duration due to the golden handcuffs of benefits that perfectly aligned with my needs for dealing with the personal stuff. I tried to somewhat tone down my martial arts influenced movements, but I was limited in how much I could since many of those movements could actually be adapted to really help my endurance while replacing everything in the building except most of the walls, performing a crazy amount of cleaning, and inspecting everything at the end to ensure the highest contamination risks had been addressed. (We had contractors for the wall replacement and other construction work but we had to do pretty much all the other labor.) I also needed to frequently stim to regulate my emotions during this stressful time (as I said in my update, I’m probably autistic, though I currently see little benefit to seeking a formal evaluation), so that also made it harder to tone it down. But that’s all leading up to some good news: I’ve left and am now at my first true office job! It’s great, with consistent 40 hour weeks, flexible hours, hybrid wfh, and work that I am passionate about and find interesting. Though I’m still sometimes tempted to do a stance or something at my sit-stand desk when my body is craving something more dynamic than sitting or normal standing, I’ve so far been able to limit it to being unusually smooth when I kneel down to get something from the low drawer in a filing cabinet (maybe happens a couple times a month) and occasionally (<1x/week) spending 5 minutes practicing a stance or other technique that won’t take up much room in the bathroom, as a break. Pretty soon my wfh will start and I’ll have a couple days a week to be as weird as I want when I’m not on a call, so I don’t forsee having any issues with coworkers seeing me the way that first comment section was worried about. 2. Why does my coworker hate me? Since writing that letter, things seemed to temporarily spiral with my coworker. I ignored her rude behavior and tried to focus on my other relationships, but ultimately, things came to a head when she accidentally sent me a Teams message that was intended for another coworker. The content of the message was gossip about me, which confirmed my suspicions that she disliked me. I stood up for myself by saying her that her message was unprofessional and disrespectful. I also went to my manager with screenshots of the unintended message, her rude interactions with me, and the job postings she sent. I told her that my colleague’s treatment of me needed to be flagged because she would treat the next person that she disliked this way, and it was interfering with my morale. Unfortunately, my manager seemed to brush it off — she framed it as a personality issue and ignored that it was beginning to interfere with work. That was also disappointing. Luckily, I got accepted to graduate school around this time. Additionally, my firm underwent some restructuring as several people had resigned. My coworker and I began working on separate teams, so we didn’t have to constantly collaborate anymore. I ended up really enjoying my last few months there! To this day, I am still unsure why my colleague disliked me. However, based on past interactions with her, I suspect she is an insecure person who had some sort of envy towards me. I don’t know what she would be envious of, but that’s my best guess. 3. Will having two two-year job stints damage my career? (#5 at the link) I am incredibly grateful for your decision to publish my letter. When I wrote it, I was feeling hopeless. Your advice and the supportive comments from readers have been a tremendous source of comfort. Many readers asked if a two-year stint is normal in my industry. Initially, I thought it wasn’t. However, after researching the LinkedIn profiles of industry veterans I admire, I discovered that many have had similar short-term positions. Some even had one-year stints and went on to prestigious roles. This revelation completely changed my perspective on my resume. I no longer feel ashamed or hopeless about my career. I had valid reasons for leaving my previous employer after enduring two years of workplace abuse. Despite the short stint, I still deserve a fulfilling career. 4. I’m the weakest link on my team Many thanks to you and to the commenters for such an encouraging response. I am still in my current position, but I feel better about it. As several commenters spotted, I have depression, and that was seriously coloring my perception of my place on the team. I’m not the weakest link. Like everyone on my team, I have areas of strength and weaknesses. I never complete the most work, but I don’t always complete the least. I lamented in my letter that a new hire was assigned to redo my work, but in retrospect that was because it was an easy task for her since my mistakes were minor. I’ve had some successful projects in the past few months and that has helped me recognize the value I am bringing. I’m solving my problems more independently and getting more comfortable asking about the things I still need to understand. It turns out other members of my team had many of the same confusions I had! That said, I’m still not really thriving in this position. My moody manager makes it hard to keep this positive mindset. Also, unusually for people in my field, I spend 20% of my time directly interfacing with customers and I still feel completely unprepared and unsuited for that. My friends echo your advice and urge me to apply to other positions where I’ll be happier. I’m not enthusiastic about the idea, because it was so hard for me to get to this place of confidence and I don’t want to start from scratch again! But I’ve committed to at least getting my resume in shape, so we’ll see. 5. Am I being a brat about not getting promoted? As the commenters suggested, I did go back to my boss to ask for more feedback and/or a plan for giving me more interesting work, as he had promised. He completely blew me off, which was pretty out of character for him after years of (I thought) supporting me, and only added to my confusion and disillusionment. It eventually came out that the person who was hired was a long-time friend of my boss, who had left a previous position after a high-profile spat with leadership and ended up in a new job she didn’t like. I think he was assuming I would get over it and keep doing my job without complaint, and he hoped the whole thing would just blow over. I had already started looking for a new job in earnest, and I got an offer one month to the day after I got the news about the promotion. Of course, my boss and grandboss were SHOCKED that I was leaving, especially so soon. After the announcement went out that I was leaving, rumors started to spread about the circumstances of the new person’s hire (which I did NOT start or encourage) and my departure was on kind of a sour note, unfortunately. I don’t think there was much I could have done to change that, but it was a bummer after years of good work. I’ve now been at my new company for a few months and it’s a breath of fresh air. The work is more interesting, I make more money, I have a much better title, and there’s SO much less drama. I talked to a former coworker recently and it sounds like the person who was hired is not doing great. She has a lot of experience with the general type of work, but not in the specific industry, and she keeps making bad decisions because she doesn’t understand the full context and apparently won’t listen to the people who do. As I’m writing this, I feel like it will seem made up because of the sheer number of AAM tropes involved, but it truly happened in the most stereotypical way possible. Ultimately, I know I dodged a bullet, and although it was a crappy experience I am grateful to have landed in a good place. Many thanks to you and the commenters for your advice and commiseration! You may also like:using martial arts at work, I saw my job posted online, and moreare two-hour commutes normal?my boss has violent tantrums and punches holes in walls { 85 comments }
how to fight for your job in a “hunger games” scenario by Alison Green on January 2, 2025 I’m quoted in this Bloomberg article about what to do if you need to interview for your own job: How to Fight for Your Job In a ‘Hunger Games’ Scenario Like at HSBC You may also like:boss organizes a poker game to determine end-of-year bonusesdealing with a problematic member of a board games grouphow honestly should you answer "what do you do for fun?" in an interview? { 86 comments }
how should I decorate my office? by Alison Green on January 2, 2025 It’s the Thursday “ask the readers” question. A reader writes: I have a fairly low stakes question for you now, but I am feeling a bit stuck. I’ve recently been promoted (yay!) and I have moved into a new office. It’s looking very bare to me, so I’d like to decorate it, but as it’s my first time having my own office, I’m unsure what to do. Some of my colleagues have a few decorations, and some none at all, so I’m not looking for anything excessive, just one or two things to brighten up the place. And as there’s no locks on the doors, I’m not inclined to bring in anything expensive. I’m a massive geek, so I’d like something leaning in that direction, but not so much that it’s a distraction (and I’ll be leaving my love of horror firmly at home, as I know not everyone wants such things in the workplace). Real plants are out due to allergies, and though I’m willing to consider fake plants, I’d like something a little unusual. I’m hoping your or your readers would have some suggestions for me, as I’m drawing a complete blank! You may also like:do I need to wear nylons to a job interview ... or are bare legs OK?Halloween decorations when you're video-interviewing, I snapped at a coworker, and moremy new hire is too attractive for me to manage her { 333 comments }