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Reply to: @#@#@ stupid permies....
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Previously on "@#@#@ stupid permies...."
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostAll that may benefit the company, but Francko's point was that they have shafted themselves in the process (or at least deprived themselves of an opportunity to acquire a more lucrative skill).
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostAll that may benefit the company, but Francko's point was that they have shafted themselves in the process (or at least deprived themselves of an opportunity to acquire a more lucrative skill).
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostSo they chose a well-tested, stable, well-documented technology rather than being locked into some expensive proprietary system which hardly anyone knows how to use and would require extensive, expensive training for a few people who then screw the company up if they leave.
What a bunch of morons.
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"Employees our most valuable asset"
Yes that phrase is a load of nonsense ... they really mean the exact opposite.
The other good one is "we value training as a centrally important aspect for our employees" or words to that effect. The more a company states that phrase the more you know that what they really mean is "turning our employees into non-thinking company robots".
"Customer facing". The more that and similar phrases are used, the more you know the extent to which they couldn't care less about after sales customer service and/or are infinitely more likely to hide behind statements like "nothing I can do - it's company policy" as if company policy is the holy shroud that must never be challenged or questioned. Of course robots wouldn't do that anyway.
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So they chose a well-tested, stable, well-documented technology rather than being locked into some expensive proprietary system which hardly anyone knows how to use and would require extensive, expensive training for a few people who then screw the company up if they leave.
What a bunch of morons.
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostIt's amazing how many permies in large companies actually swallow all that guff about employees being the company's most important assets.
I think they are somewhere just above the bog roll - not yet met a permie whose boss has wiped his @rse on them.
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my experience is
companies do not respect software unless it is extremely expensive
once the cost is painful, then they want to get the value from it
a self professing spiral
Milan.
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Originally posted by Francko View Postvery expensive, very much requested by the market, good for building skills to market in the future and eventually go contracting, very little chance of being outsourced
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Originally posted by Francko View Postthey suggested Y in the hope that the company will recognise their dedication to business and the money they managed to save.
Sad to say that when things are cheap and money is saved, it's perceived as worthless. Whereas expensive stuff is perceived as critical to the business.
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It's amazing how many permies in large companies actually swallow all that guff about employees being the company's most important assets.
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@#@#@ stupid permies....
They really are...
Ok they have the option to use technology X, very proprietary, very expensive, very much requested by the market, good for building skills to market in the future and eventually go contracting, very little chance of being outsourced (at least in the short term) and technology Y, lots of documentation available, easy to learn so not markeatable at all, easy to be outsourced.
And.... they suggested Y in the hope that the company will recognise their dedication to business and the money they managed to save.
Note.... the company is making a lot of people redundant right now. Guess which ones will be next... They do definitely deserve that, no other explanation...Tags: None
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