Without getting too detailed about my personal life....
I'm burnt out
Has anyone on CP ever had to do this? Did it work out for you? Is not having the extra money worth being happy? Is making alright money worth feeling like you have sold your soul?
Originally Posted by scho63:
When I would hire people I would look for 4 key characteristics:
1. Passion
2. Good integrity and reputation
3. Believed and shared in our companies vision and services/offerings
4. Shared the same vision and work ethic as me.
Rarely failed me and only did if I hired someone not having one of the 4 above.
My goal is to show them the process, get them to follow it and execute.
Good list, someone told me they look for aptitude and attitude when less experience is required, then add deep dive questions when a decent amount of experience is required.
I was pretty shocked at times with how much people could bullshit on a resume -- sometimes 4+ pages -- and then deflect and bullshit interviews without ever answering WTF they've done in the past or how shit works. [Reply]
Originally Posted by scho63:
My first management job in Silicon Valley I sucked big time at first.
My CEO got complaints, saw what was happening and helped me immensely.
Like many first time bosses, I was micro managing the shit out of people.
From the moment I changed and followed his advice, I became a boss that had employees calling me the best boss they ever worked for and giving me accolades and awards.
That's the thing - people want to respect their boss. People want someone they can trust to have the answers when they don't. At minimum people want to know you're also trying your best and not just CYA. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Chargem:
How do you tell if someone has these characteristics, before you hire them?
Early/start of career (at least for the IT world), I'll ask questions around what they do outside of school.. internships, building their own PC, figuring out operating systems that aren't Windows. Showing an interest in your major outside of the required classes.
More experienced, same idea, but side projects, optimizing and process improvement versus simply doing the job you're paid for, mentoring others, etc.
Originally Posted by :
...which observes that people in a hierarchy tend to rise to "a level of respective incompetence": employees are promoted based on their success in previous jobs until they reach a level at which they are no longer competent, as skills in one job do not necessarily translate to another.
Originally Posted by Bearcat:
It was named the Peter Principle.
This was done, on purpose, at my old job. The idea was to make sure that 2nd in command was fairly incompetent to ensure loyalty and dependence on their supervisor. [Reply]
Originally Posted by scho63:
When I would hire people I would look for 4 key characteristics:
1. Passion
2. Good integrity and reputation
3. Believed and shared in our companies vision and services/offerings
4. Shared the same vision and work ethic as me.
Rarely failed me and only did if I hired someone not having one of the 4 above.
My goal is to show them the process, get them to follow it and execute.
Not saying you wouldn't want all of these things, but it's also an excellent way to just hire in your image, and I'm not sure that's always ideal. I think good recruitment is about determining whether they can do the work well and possibly think creatively. Stuff like integrity you're probably only going to know once they've started. [Reply]
Originally Posted by The Franchise:
Ended up taking a lesser paying job and moving out of state. Around $1000 less a month. Turned out being the best thing for me because I spent 2.5 years there before taking a job working from home making around $1000 more a month then I made at the first job.
When one door closes, you just need to be ready to walk through a new door.
If the OP can handle it financially, if it's that bad, leave. [Reply]
Originally Posted by JPH83:
Not saying you wouldn't want all of these things, but it's also an excellent way to just hire in your image, and I'm not sure that's always ideal. I think good recruitment is about determining whether they can do the work well and possibly think creatively. Stuff like integrity you're probably only going to know once they've started.
That's an excellent point. A lot of managers end up just hiring themselves an echo chamber where outside perspectives aren't really heard or valued. That's not a good thing. [Reply]
Originally Posted by raybec 4:
That's an excellent point. A lot of managers end up just hiring themselves an echo chamber where outside perspectives aren't really heard or valued. That's not a good thing.
Originally Posted by Joe:
When one door closes, you just need to be ready to walk through a new door.
If the OP can handle it financially, if it's that bad, leave.
I set a (kinda half assed) financial plan to get myself out of all of my debt from the birth of my daughter and my credit cards.
Once my tax return hits my last credit card will be gone. I'm 99% sure I can survive the pay cut I will take. I feel a little weird being a responsible adult. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BDj23:
I set a (kinda half assed) financial plan to get myself out of all of my debt from the birth of my daughter and my credit cards.
Once my tax return hits my last credit card will be gone. I'm 99% sure I can survive the pay cut I will take. I feel a little weird being a responsible adult.
you know, any bill you pay off, is that money in your pocket [Reply]