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  3. Best job in the world...except you have no life

Best job in the world...except you have no life

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  • N Not Active

    Nishant Sivakumar wrote:

    I am not sure if excessive work helped improved productivity though.

    That's point. There are more reports of how productivity decreases the more hours your work rather than increases.


    only two letters away from being an asset

    B Offline
    B Offline
    Bijesh
    wrote on last edited by
    #20

    Mark Nischalke wrote:

    There are more reports of how productivity decreases the more hours your work rather than increases.

    Certainly true from my experience. People are prone to make more errors when they work crazy hours. A lot of time is then spent fixing those...

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • N Nemanja Trifunovic

      This exempt[^] business makes no sense, IMHO. I talked to an electrical engineer that works at a construction company - they actually need a written permit to work overtime because they are paid hourly; in fact most of them like to have a few extra hours a week and a few extra dollars in their pockets. However, I've never met a "non-exempt" software engineer :~


      Programming Blog utf8-cpp

      T Offline
      T Offline
      TJDEV
      wrote on last edited by
      #21

      "However, I've never met a "non-exempt" software engineer" Sure you have. They're called "self-employed" software engineers. And they will usually work even more than 48 hours per week. However, they're working for themselves, not someone else's wallet which definitely helps in the moral department. When I first began writing code for a living 25 years ago, I was non-exempt. A large project on the drawing board required a LOT of OT from everyone. The team was a mix of exempt and non-exempt coders with the non-exempt being primarily very young, single folks with small outside commitments (i.e. no wife/husband, kids, their own parents were younger and didnt need assistance from them, etc). As this project went on, the OT went up naturally and after it was implemented the non-exempt (myself included) were giving "promotions" to exempt status. Why? Well, not only were we decent coders but management no longer HAD TO pay us that OT. I know that I earned nearly 80K that first year of work - most of it was OT since my starting salary was 26K. My boss was actually pissed because it was well more than he was earning. I learned, immediately, via that experience AND from discussing it with a contractor in another department that I either go into contracting or die in the company. Contracting COULD lead to self-employment (back then). Today one can become self-employeed much via much simpler means. I took his advice. I will never, ever, ever work in a cube-farm, 8-6, with idiot managers who know 1/2 of what I know but get paid 2x what I do because they screwed up somewhere else in the company and were shuffled around, the re-orgs, the politics, the as*-kissing, the nuances of cubical living and having to fit my creativity within certain hours only AND having to sign agreements that anything I create or even think of is property of some other entity. Sorry. Get out if you can folks. 48 hours a week is nothing when you work for yourself but you enjoy every second of it! :) A horrible day being self-employed is far better than the best day at captive employment!

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • N Not Active

        I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


        only two letters away from being an asset

        B Offline
        B Offline
        brianwelsch
        wrote on last edited by
        #22

        He literally was calculating how you spend your personal time? I think that alone would have been enough of a red flag to decline the position. Even if you spend 30 hours per week watching Seinfeld reruns. That's hardly the company's business.

        BW


        Quick to judge, quick to anger, slow to understand.
        Ignorance and prejudice and fear walk hand in hand.
        -- Neil Peart

        J 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • N Not Active

          I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


          only two letters away from being an asset

          C Offline
          C Offline
          Chris Austin
          wrote on last edited by
          #23

          Good for you with sticking to your guns. Seriously, we need more of this attitude in our industry to bring it to a more mature profession. I'm with Marc on this....what is wrong with the company that they mandate 48 hours a week. Sounds like poor management or under-staffing for their commitments.

          My Blog A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects. - -Lazarus Long

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • B brianwelsch

            He literally was calculating how you spend your personal time? I think that alone would have been enough of a red flag to decline the position. Even if you spend 30 hours per week watching Seinfeld reruns. That's hardly the company's business.

            BW


            Quick to judge, quick to anger, slow to understand.
            Ignorance and prejudice and fear walk hand in hand.
            -- Neil Peart

            J Offline
            J Offline
            James L Thomson
            wrote on last edited by
            #24

            Agreed. I'd say that was the point where he graduated from pointy haired boss to creepy employee stalker.

            P 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • N Not Active

              I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


              only two letters away from being an asset

              D Offline
              D Offline
              Duncan Edwards Jones
              wrote on last edited by
              #25

              Am I missing something? No - but they are.

              '--8<------------------------ Ex Datis: Duncan Jones Merrion Computing Ltd

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • N Not Active

                I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


                only two letters away from being an asset

                N Offline
                N Offline
                Not Active
                wrote on last edited by
                #26

                http://www.igda.org/articles/erobinson_crunch.php[^]


                only two letters away from being an asset

                P 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • N Not Active

                  I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


                  only two letters away from being an asset

                  T Offline
                  T Offline
                  ToddHileHoffer
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #27

                  Wow, that is insane. I'd never ever work 48 hours a week. Not for double my pay. Damn, I don't even have kids yet and I wouldn't consider it. Not to mention that you can't possible code that much. That's a 9.5 hour work day. Holy S batman, they are insane! Life isn't all about work.

                  GameFly free trial

                  S 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • N Not Active

                    I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


                    only two letters away from being an asset

                    P Offline
                    P Offline
                    Paul Conrad
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #28

                    Doesn't sound like a very family-friendly company.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • N NormDroid

                      40 hours is the absolute maximum I would be prepared to work full time in a given week, Ok there are the odd occasions which require working the odd evening or weekend, but that should be few and far between and should be rewarded with a day in lieu or some finacial recompense.

                      Mark Nischalke wrote:

                      Am I missing something?

                      No but it looks like that company is!

                      P Think of the environment; please don't print this message unless you really need to.

                      L Offline
                      L Offline
                      leckey 0
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #29

                      norm .net wrote:

                      and should be rewarded

                      and not just with pizza!

                      ______________________ stuff + cats = awesome

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                        This exempt[^] business makes no sense, IMHO. I talked to an electrical engineer that works at a construction company - they actually need a written permit to work overtime because they are paid hourly; in fact most of them like to have a few extra hours a week and a few extra dollars in their pockets. However, I've never met a "non-exempt" software engineer :~


                        Programming Blog utf8-cpp

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #30

                        Nemanja Trifunovic wrote:

                        However, I've never met a "non-exempt" software engineer

                        I'm one... I am a permanent full time employee (22 years so far) working as a software engineer. I get paid by the hour including overtime.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • J James L Thomson

                          Agreed. I'd say that was the point where he graduated from pointy haired boss to creepy employee stalker.

                          P Offline
                          P Offline
                          Paul Conrad
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #31

                          James L. Thomson wrote:

                          he graduated from pointy haired boss to creepy employee stalker.

                          :laugh: That's creepy, alright, when you think that he would look into a prospective employee's business outside of work...

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • N Not Active

                            http://www.igda.org/articles/erobinson_crunch.php[^]


                            only two letters away from being an asset

                            P Offline
                            P Offline
                            Paul Conrad
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #32

                            Interesting link. Definitely good ammo against the boss :-D

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • T ToddHileHoffer

                              Wow, that is insane. I'd never ever work 48 hours a week. Not for double my pay. Damn, I don't even have kids yet and I wouldn't consider it. Not to mention that you can't possible code that much. That's a 9.5 hour work day. Holy S batman, they are insane! Life isn't all about work.

                              GameFly free trial

                              S Offline
                              S Offline
                              Shog9 0
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #33

                              ToddHileHoffer wrote:

                              Not to mention that you can't possible code that much. That's a 9.5 hour work day.

                              Yowza! What would i ever do with the other 8.5 hours?!

                              ----

                              Yes, but can you blame them for doing so if that's the only legal way they can hire programmers they want at the rate they can afford?

                              -- Nish on sketchy hiring practices

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • N Not Active

                                I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


                                only two letters away from being an asset

                                L Offline
                                L Offline
                                Le centriste
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #34

                                I used to work for a consulting company. They were sending us to clients, and clients were sometimes requesting us to work more time. When this happened (and it happened a lot on a project I worked), the company I was working for (this company name is Avanade, a joint venture between MS and Accenture, formerly Anderson Consulting) was charging the extra hours to the client, but we were never paid for overtime. I think this is pure robbery. Needless to say, I didn't not work for them for a long time and I stressed that reason for me leaving them.

                                ----- Formerly MP(2) If atheism is a religion, then not collecting stamps is a hobby. -- Unknown

                                D 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • N NormDroid

                                  40 hours is the absolute maximum I would be prepared to work full time in a given week, Ok there are the odd occasions which require working the odd evening or weekend, but that should be few and far between and should be rewarded with a day in lieu or some finacial recompense.

                                  Mark Nischalke wrote:

                                  Am I missing something?

                                  No but it looks like that company is!

                                  P Think of the environment; please don't print this message unless you really need to.

                                  P Offline
                                  P Offline
                                  Psycho Coder Extreme
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #35

                                  norm .net wrote:

                                  Ok there are the odd occasions which require working the odd evening or weekend, but that should be few and far between

                                  Where I work we are expected only 40 hours, now some of us work from home on weekends or evenings because we love what we do and have deadlines looming but my PM has made it perfectly clear he doesnt not expect/require it.

                                  "Okay, I give up: which is NOT a real programming language????" Michael Bergman

                                  "Well yes, it is an Integer, but it's a metrosexual Integer. For all we know, under all that hair gel it could be a Boolean." Tom Welch

                                  "Let's face it, the average computer user has the brain of a Spider Monkey." Bill Gates

                                  N 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                                    This exempt[^] business makes no sense, IMHO. I talked to an electrical engineer that works at a construction company - they actually need a written permit to work overtime because they are paid hourly; in fact most of them like to have a few extra hours a week and a few extra dollars in their pockets. However, I've never met a "non-exempt" software engineer :~


                                    Programming Blog utf8-cpp

                                    S Offline
                                    S Offline
                                    Stuart Dootson
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #36

                                    Nemanja Trifunovic wrote:

                                    I've never met a "non-exempt" software engineer

                                    I'm one! And not a contractor. My salary is based on a 38 hour week, then I get paid "time and a half" (1.5 * hourly salary) for hours I work beyond that. So, if I work 43 hours in a week, I get 38 hours pay (the basic salary) plus another 7.5 hours pay (1.5 * the 5 hours overtime I worked) on top. The company I work for doesn't take people on as "non-exempt" any more, though.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • N Not Active

                                      I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


                                      only two letters away from being an asset

                                      L Offline
                                      L Offline
                                      Leon Segal
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #37

                                      I know what you mean - keep looking and you'll find a job that you'll love doing and doesn't interfere with your private life... .leON.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • N Not Active

                                        I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


                                        only two letters away from being an asset

                                        Mike HankeyM Offline
                                        Mike HankeyM Offline
                                        Mike Hankey
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #38

                                        At least they told you up front. I've gotten into situations where the management was so crappy we had to work overtime to compensate. I helped start up a garbage burner in Virginia with Beta software. It took 5 months of 80-120 hours/week to straighten the mess out. I left the company soon after the job ended! Mike

                                        Caution - Be sure to put brain in gear before putting mouth in motion

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                                        • N Not Active

                                          I went to an interview yesterday, a full day of meeting people, lunch with the VP, tour of the facility, etc. This was after two phone interviews, about 1.5 hours each. After the phone interviews I was excited to see the place and talk with the people and all through the day I saw some place that could be a very interesting environment to work in with great people. The day ended with an HR person who explained the benefits and compensation arrangement. Everything sounded great, then the ball was dropped. Everyone here works 48 hours a week she says. It wasn't, we have a lot to do so everyone puts in some extra time, it was 48 hours per week is mandatory and the minimum acceptable for a salaried employee. When I said I couldn't work 48 hour weeks she asked, in a stunned voice "Why not?". I explained that I have a family and outside activities, including pursueing a higher degree (which would add value to me as an employee) that I would like to continue enjoying. She sat there for a moment and I could see the confused look of "How can one have a life outside the company" on her face. I also explained to her the I am currently working at a position with similar duties making the same pay and only working 40 hours a week. There was disbelif on her face that such a place exsisted. The final meeting of the day was with my potential boss and he asked what I thought about the position. I said I thought it was a great opportunity and beleived I could add real value to the company, however, I can't work 48 hour weeks. Again the questions was "Why not?". I explained to him also about family and having an outside life. He asked about my activities and began calculating the hours it took up each week, then said "I think you have a conflict." So my life is a conflict of work. I was really disappointed as this was a great company but just don't understand how they can seemingly be so out of touch with reality. The company is my life attitude vanished a long time ago. Given equal duties, pay, communting time, etc. why would anyone chose to work longer hours? Am I missing something?


                                          only two letters away from being an asset

                                          M Offline
                                          M Offline
                                          Member 96
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #39

                                          That's too funny. 48 hours a week. Clearly all they really want to hire are very junior, raw talent that they can take advantage of until those people leave for real jobs elsewhere where they are treated with respect.


                                          "110%" - it's the new 70%

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