- Mar 1, 2014
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Yeah, not actually sure if the guy applied for the job or if the temp agency just threw his resume to us hoping it would stick. Yes we hire through temp agencies. Pretty damn stupid if you ask me.
It's definitely ridiculous. She's an accountant but hadn't worked in the field in 10+ years (managed a gym for a while, stay at home mom for a while), so she was behind the curve from the get-go. Plus her previous accounting experience was the "sit in a cubicle, do your work, never see the client" kind, and this job requires interfacing with the clients. Ironically that's her best asset, she's great with clients and every one she takes on absolutely raves about her. I expected her to get at least a 20% raise but they showed very clearly that they don't value her hard work.LMAO @ staying somewhere for more than a year working 70+ hours a week and not getting paid for it.
No offense but sounds like a total pushover.It's definitely ridiculous. She's an accountant but hadn't worked in the field in 10+ years (managed a gym for a while, stay at home mom for a while), so she was behind the curve from the get-go. Plus her previous accounting experience was the "sit in a cubicle, do your work, never see the client" kind, and this job requires interfacing with the clients. Ironically that's her best asset, she's great with clients and every one she takes on absolutely raves about her. I expected her to get at least a 20% raise but they showed very clearly that they don't value her hard work.
One of her clients recently tricked her into going to dinner, where there were 7 other business owners in the same industry who were begging her to hang her own shingle and take the 8 of them on as clients. She'd make as much money as she does now, and only have one week per month of heavy work (so one week of 70+ hours, and three weeks of ~10). Somehow the ethics of this bother her even though (a) the client has already left her current firm and the others are not with them, and (b) her current firm has stolen a lot of time from her for over a year now.
IMO, the workplace has changed. There used to be a sort of loyalty from both sides - employers would try to help their employees get better and employees would stick with their employer even through bad times. Now each side just wants what is best for them.
My wife is currently with a shitty employer. There is an implied expectation of 70+ hours per week (piling more and more time-sensitive work on everyone's plate), and while she came into her job at under market value, her 70+ hours netted her a laughable raise after her first year (less than 5%). She billed over 8x her salary during that year so it's not like there was no room for a decent bump. But she won't look for another job right now because she doesn't want to be seen as a "job-hopper". She used to be a recruiter and still has that mentality. She has done such a good job for her clients that she has received 6 job offers from them. She has promised to start looking in mid-November but she really needs to be looking now.
Funny side-note: they just handed out revised employee agreements, asking them to sign a document that says the employee owes the employer $35,000 if they leave for any reason - including being terminated. I may blow that place up after she finally quits.
No offense but sounds like a total pushover.
The reason there are so many of these poorly ran companies is because people in general are dumb and would rather work at a place they are comfortable with while being unhappy, instead of going out and finding a new job that will actually make them happy.
As far as I know, no one has signed that document. She sent it to her sister who is an attorney in another state and should hear her response next week. One of her co-workers said there's no way in hell he'll ever sign it.That sounds illegal. Please tell me she didn't sign it.
No offense taken, and it's obviously true.No offense but sounds like a total pushover.
About the ONLY thing she enjoys about her job is the client interaction and the fact that she deals with so many of them. She's a bit worried that going to a "normal" 9-5 office job would bore her to tears.Why doesn't she take a job offer from a client?
I'm with you, but there is a certain amount of normalcy to these expectations in the public accounting world. However it's supposed to only be Jan-Apr and Sep-Oct. They are extremely understaffed so "tax season" ended up being Jan-Oct. They lost an accountant a few months ago because they literally worked him to death (heart attack at age 45 I think). The person she replaced a year ago literally went crazy (mental hospital and all) after working 100+ hours a week, completely screwing up the clients' books in the process which my wife has had to correct. And they've fired a couple of accountants as well.I'll never understand people who think regularly working 70+ hours per week for someone else with ZERO additional compensation is a good idea.
It truly is not about the money for her. Unfortunately, they have failed her in many more areas than just salary, especially quality of life and flexibility. She loves the client interaction and that's about the only positive this place offers. She's also learning a lot, as end-to-end handling of her clients is something she's not been able to experience previously.I guess your wife doesn't like money
IMO, the workplace has changed. There used to be a sort of loyalty from both sides - employers would try to help their employees get better and employees would stick with their employer even through bad times. Now each side just wants what is best for them.
My wife is currently with a shitty employer. There is an implied expectation of 70+ hours per week (piling more and more time-sensitive work on everyone's plate), and while she came into her job at under market value, her 70+ hours netted her a laughable raise after her first year (less than 5%). She billed over 8x her salary during that year so it's not like there was no room for a decent bump. But she won't look for another job right now because she doesn't want to be seen as a "job-hopper". She used to be a recruiter and still has that mentality. She has done such a good job for her clients that she has received 6 job offers from them. She has promised to start looking in mid-November but she really needs to be looking now.
Funny side-note: they just handed out revised employee agreements, asking them to sign a document that says the employee owes the employer $35,000 if they leave for any reason - including being terminated. I may blow that place up after she finally quits.
To answer the OP...it really depends how much time it takes for someone to be productive in your environment. If it's a multi-month learning curve then you can't afford a guy who's leaving in 2 years. If they can come in and be productive in a week and it won't take a ton of your time to train him, then if he's good and has excellent references, I'd give him a shot.
LMAO @ staying somewhere for more than a year working 70+ hours a week and not getting paid for it.
That document is not legal. An employer can not charge someone for termination of employment.
That's not really true. I could write on a napkin that if you sign your name you owe me $1,000,000. Just because you sign it doesn't mean I can enforce it.They can do what they want if you sign it, which you have to do to get the job, and often you don't really have time to read stuff like that. It's usually something like "ok welcome board, oh here just sign this, ok so I'm going to show you around". For agreements that are after the fact you normally have to sign it too. You can delay it for as long as you want but eventually you'll be forced to sign it.
To answer some of the questions, we are a specialized manufacturing facility. Don't want to say what type, they don't know the moniker Stopsignhank and I would prefer to leave it that way. This is also a maintenance position, there really is no job growth or expansion. You come in, do your job, get paid on Friday, rinse and repeat. I am not interested in someone who wants to move up in the organization, because it is not going to happen. So the job I am hiring for is really a different mind set than the ATOT crowd. For instance the guy I am looking for wants to work on Saturday so he can get OT. I would prefer NOT to work on Saturdays.
Because you work for a good place. After 2008 most employers started treating everyone like trash. Sounds like even if your company was stressed, it didn't just directly lash out at its employees. Alot of places did and continue to do so at their detriment.If you don't mind me asking, why? I obviously do not do that. I am fifty something and have only had 2 jobs after college.
My line manager at IBM actually said this phrase to me: "in sisteen years i have never taken a day off".
Why doesn't she take a job offer from a client?
I'll never understand people who think regularly working 70+ hours per week for someone else with ZERO additional compensation is a good idea.
I'm with you, but there is a certain amount of normalcy to these expectations in the public accounting world. However it's supposed to only be Jan-Apr and Sep-Oct. They are extremely understaffed so "tax season" ended up being Jan-Oct. They lost an accountant a few months ago because they literally worked him to death (heart attack at age 45 I think). The person she replaced a year ago literally went crazy (mental hospital and all) after working 100+ hours a week, completely screwing up the clients' books in the process which my wife has had to correct. And they've fired a couple of accountants as well.
