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The devil wears asda
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Second that if nobber wasn't involved in hiring, had this a few times. If they have hired you, often get more leeway as they want to justify their decision. If imposed on them it can be a problem, have to convince from scratch, might have totally diff ideas about what's needed.
Got hired for one job, walked off another one (yeah I know, just too good to turn down). I get there and hiring chap is no longer there, new chap comes in first day and says - I don't know what you are doing here, I wouldn't have hired you and I should have been consulted about it happening.
I said - 'I hope I can change that opinion' and I did see out the contract but the relationship with nob features did not improve from this point but at least I knew from day one and could make sure I managed him accordingly.
I also deliberately stayed till the bitter end even though the 2 people I was covering came back from mat. leave early. I can be very stubborn and they were paying a lot of money !Comment
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Originally posted by norrahe View PostAm trying to adjust accordingly but difficult when you don't know what to expect. I can brace myself for meetings, but when they come to your desk unexpectedly or grab you in the corridor you can't prep for that.
Coupled with the fact this person is not the brightest spark and paranoid to book and has pissed off several members of senior staff.
Good luck norPractically perfect in every way....there's a time and (more importantly) a place for malarkey.
+5 Xeno Cool PointsComment
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostCould be "constructive dismissal" behaviour i.e. deliberately making it impossible to do your job.
In my 20 years in various so called blue-chips I've seen that often enough.
In fact when it comes to management it's usually that or sheer incomepetence.
Poor guy is probably insecure. You've pitched up and seem to be competent, and worse still, you're a woman!
Either:
Play the game and get him on side - make out like you think he's the bees knees and knows lots of stuff
Or:
Tell him to do one.
Depends how much you need the gig.Comment
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Originally posted by mudskipper View PostShe's not permie.
Poor guy is probably insecure. You've pitched up and seem to be competent, and worse still, you're a woman!
Either:
Play the game and get him on side - make out like you think he's the bees knees and knows lots of stuff
Or:
Tell him to do one.
Depends how much you need the gig.
I leave him to it, and avoid him if at all possible. He seems to think there's a lot more involved in my role, but I'm supposedly backing him up, and his role involves feck all as well.
I'm looking for a new gig, but the cloggy market is carp, if you're not fluent in cloggy ( believe me I'm getting a hell of a lot of practice in atm). I have a good personal warchest, but the company warchest isn't brilliant ( cloggy limiteds do not work the same way as UK, you have to pay a proper salary and appropriate taxes, you cannot take a salary break, if I do I lose my expat discount tax ruling, which I do not want to).
Looks like I'll put my head down and try not to kill anyone until summat comes up.Comment
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