Planet Descent

Community => Mess Hall => Topic started by: Alieo on February 12, 2012, 09:15:23 PM

Title: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 12, 2012, 09:15:23 PM
Just to vent a little... I seriously almost walked out on my job today. I hung in there though. I am a floor manager at a grocery store, and it is UBER UBER stressful! I'm the guy that goes around and approves your checks, gives the cashiers/sackers breaks, overrides coupons, listens to customer complaints, etc. Today, in my over three years I've been at the company, and 10 years overall in the grocery business, I personally declare as THE hardest. It, for some F-ed up reason, was busier than the day before Christmas AND Thanksgiving COMBINED! It was pure horse manure I tell ya!

It's not that we don't have the help... We HAVE people (checkers and sackers) that want to work and complain they don't get enough hours, etc. BUT, upper management doesn't allocate enough hours to meet the demand, as per district management orders (and they're probably under divisional management orders). They wanna milk EVERY ounce of work out of the hourly employees that they can. It's a corporation; I understand that's how they make money; shooting for over 100% efficiency.

Still... as a floor manager, floor supervisor, manager's puppet, whatever the HELL you wanna call me, my job is to not be on a check stand, but to be out in the front "directing traffic" and jumping on a register and calling for backup when necessary. Jumping on when necessary... hmm... and it was necessary for me to be on the check stand for 6 straight hours today? No one could get their break! We NEEDED another checker, and we were denied that.

This company is unioned in the "right-to-work" state of Texas, so it isn't imperative that we be all union members. However, I am a union member, and I see it as a good thing. Having the union on your side is like having a personal attorney; they'll help out out if management throws their weight around unjustly, and it has happened to me an a few others more than once. But, because we are unioned, our wages suck. I've been there for over 3 years and I only get paid $9.65/hr as a supervisor, starting out at $8.50/hr. There is no raise for becoming a supervisor. The hope is you become a good enough supervisor, and you get to become the backup Customer Service Manager, who's the head of the front-end/customer service department. Their pay is set firm at $15.75 per hour. I've been staying at this for over 3 years now, and still no "recognition." At this company, it's not what you know, it's who you know, and I've seen some poorly qualified people become CSMs in no time, with less seniority than I. I'm not leaving any details out. I'm not lazy. I work HARD, giving it my all everyday.

On top of all this other crap, I gotta deal with unmotivated high schoolers who make $7.25 if they're a sacker, and $7.35 if they're a checker, earning a 25ยข raise every 6 months. It's ridiculous. But these unmotivated teenagers don't come in to work! They call in, say their tummy hurts, or that they can't come in because they sneezed. !@#$!!! As tightly knit as the schedules are, there is no room for missing personnel. And you can't work more than 8 hours a day or it's overtime according to the union rules. And you can't fire them because they have to call in 3 days IN A ROW before we can "legally" let them go! B***SH**! So, bless the union for protecting me, but damn them to hell for keeping the bad apples!

But as hard as I work, I feel like $9.65 per hour is severely underpaid. I'd rather take a one dollar pay cut and work at the mall! Or, I could go right over to this state-wide grocery chain (not unioned, mind you) and start at $10+ per hour if I wanted to, but I don't because, I'm always thinking, maybe that promotion is JUST around the corner! If I just hang in there a LITTLE bit longer, just MAYBE I'll get that promotion. But who am I kidding. I don't want to be the poor bastard who's old and crippled and preparing to celebrate 30 years with the company. What a f****** waste of life!

So... shall I stay or shall I go? Do you think I'm getting paid enough, or am I getting financially a** raped every day I go in there?
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Matthew on February 12, 2012, 11:26:54 PM
Union? What's that? ;)

I feel your pain though, companies always try to understaff as much as possible. For me, most of the day is too slow for the managers to have another person scheduled, but we always seem to be one short of where we should be when the lunch/dinner/snack rush comes around. And our location was specifically mentioned in the regional weekly summary mail as having too high labor, so it's only going to get worse until summer when business is steady enough to have the hands we need. On the bright side, the General Manager seems to have finally become aware that a couple of his personal favorites are druggie slackers who don't do anything all day and it's likely I'll be working with 1 or 2 less idiots soon.

On that note, we'll be 2 shift leads short of where we were last summer. One kid is almost certainly getting a promotion, but there's really nobody else mature enough for shift lead with the seniority he has. I'm personally hoping I might be able to pick up a promotion for the summer months, but I'm still a long way off as far as seniority goes.

Don't you guys have any rules regarding finding somebody to cover your shift when you call in? We can swap/drop/add shifts as we please, as long as we find somebody else to take our shift or take somebody else's.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: NUMBERZero on February 12, 2012, 11:43:13 PM
Key word for everything: Union

It's just like communism. It looks good on paper, but people begin to hate their jobs and would like to have "the other guy's" job. And then the regular workers hate the union. For example, to install a special "tool" at my Dad's work, the tool needs to be off-loaded from a truck, carted into the fab, installed into a station, and literally plugged in with an electric cord. It is so easy that one man can do it in under 30 minutes, but for the union it takes over an hour because they need to bring in an off-loader, a pushing cart guy, a mechanical engineer to install the thing, and an electrical engineer to plug the cord into the wall. That's right, THE CORD into THE WALL. If the mechanical engineer were to touch it, then he would have to be reported.

I personally think that the union has overstayed their welcome.

I think that you are being underpaid. After all, they don't have an army of floor supervisors like they do baggers n taggers, so they should at least bump your pay up to $11.xx.

I heard about someone fresh out of high school who got a job at a bank and was getting paid $20.00 an hour. I forgot what qualifications he had. I think he had at least a Marketing class and a solid resume.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 13, 2012, 02:20:36 AM
Don't you guys have any rules regarding finding somebody to cover your shift when you call in? We can swap/drop/add shifts as we please, as long as we find somebody else to take our shift or take somebody else's.

Because of the Union, employees are not required to do this. They are encouraged, but not required.

Oh, and I forgot to add up there, I'm working solid from 2/10-2/16. All 12-8 or 3-11. 7 days in a row. Next day off is Friday.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Scyphi on February 13, 2012, 06:36:38 AM
At least you have a job (unlike yours truly).
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: -<WillyP>- on February 13, 2012, 09:02:07 AM
You got that right, Scy.

Alieo, I would strongly urge you to find another job before you quit the one you have. You are much more likely to find a better job if you are looking for a better job, than if you are just looking for a job. Hiring managers today can afford to be very choosey as there are a lot of people out looking for work. Quitting a job, in their eyes, is very bad. Trying to better yourself by moving to a better job, however is a good thing.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: VANGUARD on February 13, 2012, 03:07:07 PM
Alieo, I would strongly urge you to find another job before you quit the one you have. You are much more likely to find a better job if you are looking for a better job, than if you are just looking for a job. Hiring managers today can afford to be very choosey as there are a lot of people out looking for work. Quitting a job, in their eyes, is very bad. Trying to better yourself by moving to a better job, however is a good thing.

I agree. Sucks more looking for a job when you're unemployed. At least with a job, you can still have that satisfaction of working at the end of the day. My last job SUCKED!!!!! And I was stuck there for 13 months, but still looking for a job.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 14, 2012, 01:46:24 AM
At least you have a job (unlike yours truly).

There comes a time that you have to ask yourself, "Is this really worth it?"

Alieo, I would strongly urge you to find another job before you quit the one you have. You are much more likely to find a better job if you are looking for a better job, than if you are just looking for a job. Hiring managers today can afford to be very choosey as there are a lot of people out looking for work. Quitting a job, in their eyes, is very bad. Trying to better yourself by moving to a better job, however is a good thing.

Would it be such a bad thing if I quit on good terms with a proper 2 week notice before finding another job? I've got income tax refund to hold me over for awhile, and have a backlog of projects to get done here at the house. All I know is I've GOT to get out of that place!

I believe that in every action we do, every product we buy, every job we go to is a vote; a vote FOR support of the things we do... and I do NOT support the business practices of my company. I'm not the only one feeling this way... the deli manager, who's been with the company for 10+ years walked out on the job this week after a confrontation with the district manager! Other long timers have quit too. Labor there is stretched ridiculously thin, and there is NOTHING anyone can do about it because you have both the district managers and the union working against the good guys -- the hard workers.

My thinking is, I want to quit "properly" before I get into another situation where I want to just walk out on the damn job. That way, I wouldn't burn any bridges and throw it away based on an inevitable emotional decision.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: VANGUARD on February 14, 2012, 04:38:40 AM
I admire the way you think. You could give two weeks, but end up unemployed for a while. I would say follow/seek the Lord, but I don't know where you stand with Him.

Times have changed. I guess back then, it was easier to give a notice and then end up with another job. Sad in a way, we can't have the sort of respect and responsibility like some people had before.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: -<WillyP>- on February 14, 2012, 05:20:24 AM
Would it be such a bad thing if I quit on good terms with a proper 2 week notice before finding another job? I've got income tax refund to hold me over for awhile, and have a backlog of projects to get done here at the house. All I know is I've GOT to get out of that place!

It would be pretty much the end of your career. You'd be lucky to get a job flipping burgers at McD's.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Scyphi on February 14, 2012, 06:25:49 AM
WillyP's right, because in my attempts at job hunting, I've come under the impression that in this job market, with good jobs being scarce-ish, employers aren't just giving them away to anyone, they want people they can count on for a long while to do the job good, and not only can it be hard to find good jobs (varies in degree on location it seems), but employers are less likely to hire those who have been unemployed (again, depending on how long they've been unemployed, but  the longer it is, the more likely this will be) because that suggests they don't have enough work ethic. Not to suggest that you don't, of course, but that's the impression employers will walk away with. Again, it depends on how long you've been unemployed. If you can get another job within only a couple weeks of being unemployed, then it probably wouldn't be too bad, but, and I hate being negative, but if you manage to land a good job like that in this job market, then luck must have been REALLY on your side (which, assuming you go through with this, I hope it is :)).

There is also the fact that if you leave your present job under bad terms, the less likely they're going to speak well of you to other employers following up on your references when you apply to them, so you should keep that in mind, too.

Basically what I'm saying is that before you do this, at least you be sure that you've got a good game plan figured out before you do it, and be prepared to deal with all the possibilities. But, whatever you decide to do, I wish you the best with your efforts. :)
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Kaiaatzl on February 14, 2012, 07:26:30 AM
I can't do anything but agree with everyone else's advice because I don't know much about how it works down in the States (where the recession hit much harder).

I just need to say that 9.65 / hour is below minimum wage here.  For the kind of work you say you're doing, you deserve better.  So definitely do this the right way, but I say do it.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: -<WillyP>- on February 14, 2012, 07:39:42 AM
If you are unemployed, prospective employers will think you are unemployable. And that you are desperately applying for any job just to have a job, that you don't really want to work, and aren't willing to work.

Whereas, if you have a good job, and are looking to better yourself, they will see that as a positive thing... It says you are smart, aggressive and ready to move up the food chain.

Your prospective employer will view your current job as an easy job compared to the one you are applying for and if you couldn't handle it why should you be considered for a more challenging position? Don't have the attitude that you are looking for a better paying, easier job, keep in mind that you are looking for a more challenging position, in order to expand your talents.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: VANGUARD on February 14, 2012, 04:10:48 PM
my old friend was unemployed for two years, and for all I know, still is. I was lucky to have gotten a job within three weeks after being laid off.
temp agencies can be nice.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Matthew on February 14, 2012, 08:49:21 PM
Protip for anyone looking for a job: I know all the Minnesota dairy queens are starting to look at hiring for the summer, and I'm sure they're not the only ones. Start putting in applications.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 14, 2012, 11:19:28 PM
Whereas, if you have a good job, and are looking to better yourself, they will see that as a positive thing... It says you are smart, aggressive and ready to move up the food chain.

While I do eventually "want" this, right now, I am so burned out and exhausted. I'm tired of coming home from work at $9.65/hr feeling like an 85 year old man at the end of the day. To be honest, I have zero drive and motivation and am in need of some serious time off. Furthermore, my right brain is VERY VERY thirsty.

I'm going to type up a resignation letter. I have been nothing but reliable, helpful and knowledgeable in my area of expertise, and am positive I could get a recommendation from any member of management from there if I leave on good terms. And if I'm on such good of terms with management and this burned out, I figure I should formally resign the right way before I go and blow it and walk out on the job.

As for what I'm going to do next? I just want to get a two year backlog of personal projects done. I live with my parents still, so my bills are minimal; all I have is car insurance and cell phone. I'd like to move out, but I'm not itching to get out; my dad and I are tight and he enjoys my company as I enjoy his.   I was hoping with this job that I would get moved up by now, be earning enough, and able to move out. I'm wasting my time at this company and I am just getting dicked around by empty promises. Enough is enough.

With as much drive and motivation I had when I started, I will be able to start elsewhere with the same drive and hit the ground running -- once I get my backlog of projects done. No job I will get is going to be a high paying job since I just have an Associate's Degree in Applied Science -- can't really do anything without a bachelor's.

All I know is, it'll feel good to be free... and that free feeling will springboard me into this "catching up with myself" cycle, and I shall come out of it refreshed and with a real game plan. Hell, there's even the possibility of starting my own business! Lotsa demand for electronic cigarettes nowadays!  ;)
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: -<WillyP>- on February 15, 2012, 07:58:40 AM
Well... I'll just say, Best of Luck to you, sometimes you do need to follow your heart, break the rules, paddle upstream without a paddle, or whatever clever witticism works for ya... ;)
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: VANGUARD on February 15, 2012, 03:09:05 PM
go against the grain,
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 15, 2012, 10:19:29 PM
Okay, I'mana do it! I'm giving them a resignation letter when I go in tomorrow. ESPECIALLY after today! Here's how today went... I was scheduled to be in the customer service booth today handling all the bill payments, Western Union transfers, refunds, etc. Stupid a** manager forgot to schedule someone knowledgeable to give me a thirty minute break from the booth. I ended up ordering a pizza and eating it in front of customers!

*NOM NOM NOM* "Will that be in US dollars or Nigerian Naira?" *NOM NOM NOM* :-P 

Usually, the supervisor on duty handles that, but my other co-supervisors have been spinning throughout a revolving door ever since I got there, they can't train enough of them on time until they quit or get fired! MAN! They're going to miss me! heh heh heh!! So, I guess tomorrow, they said they'll let me take an HOUR break! MAAAN! That's unheard of, and THAT is going to be fun!

And in two weeks, on March 1st, I'll be FREE!!! Other things I was thinking about doing was either opening my own electronic cigarette store or working at a car dealer. This is Houston; there are MILLIONS of things I could do, but I AM going to be enjoying me some time off for damn sure! Can't wait! Spring break the entire month of March! HAHA!
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: VANGUARD on February 16, 2012, 04:41:07 AM
Protip for anyone looking for a job: I know all the Minnesota dairy queens are starting to look at hiring for the summer, and I'm sure they're not the only ones. Start putting in applications.

The DQ outside of Mound, MN is opening up again, or is open. I could be moving to Mound, but don't know if I approve for the apartment.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 16, 2012, 11:14:40 PM
Well, it's done. I have handed in my resignation letter to management. We had a good talk. I explained that I disagreed with all the cutbacks they were making to the service department and that I was burnt out. They understood and were glad that I'll be sticking around a full two weeks to help train other employees. They also told me what an asset I've been to the front-end, and that they would be proud to put in a good word to any new prospective employer.

I feel good. Now... next two days off... it's time for some right-brained activity!!!
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Kaiaatzl on February 17, 2012, 04:16:15 AM
Multiplayer Descent is probably not a bad idea then...
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 17, 2012, 12:11:14 PM
Shoot, I'm afraid I'd be a sitting duck if I played multiplayer. My wireless keyboard doesn't allow for much movement. I can only bi-chord. If there was a keyboard that could quadra- or quintachord, that would be ideal. I've always played Descent on the keyboard and am pretty good at it, but lack of ability to at LEAST tri-chord has been my issue. I can't play on any levels harder than rookie because of this issue. It suuuuuuucks, maaaaaaan!
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Matthew on February 17, 2012, 05:19:34 PM
Joystick?
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: NUMBERZero on February 17, 2012, 08:52:20 PM
Use a joystick or a mouse and KB. Darc is one of the only few that I know of that can pull it off with a keyboard. It's talent.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Kaiaatzl on February 18, 2012, 09:46:18 AM
I can't trichord but I've beaten all the official campaigns (and several harder unnoficial ones) on hotshot...
So there.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 18, 2012, 03:01:32 PM
I can do it with keyboard. It's the only way I know how, but currently, I can only bi-chord with this setup.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on February 29, 2012, 06:35:37 PM
I'M FREEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: -<WillyP>- on March 01, 2012, 11:00:46 AM
Nothing in this world is free, your just a slave to a different master now. Hopefully one you like better than the last one. Good luck, my friend!
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on March 01, 2012, 03:00:32 PM
Oh, that's so true, but at least now I can be free of any said masters temporarily, and it feels nice!
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: NUMBERZero on March 01, 2012, 08:05:32 PM
Your avatar is so fitting with your scenario.
Title: Re: Job Burnout!
Post by: Alieo on March 01, 2012, 09:46:44 PM
THANK YOU! I'm glad someone finally noticed! Yeah, the whole reason I came up with NOK in the first place was because I felt trapped, and then ever since my 2 weeks notice at my job, cracks began to form on his "Dimensional Relay Tube." Then it exploded and he's free! Here's a GIF I've made over the past two weeks of NOK's final moments entrapped in the DRT: