 |
|
|
|
 |
Jon_Snow
Guest
Registered: Not Yet
Location:
|
|
|
Aug-26-2014 14:39
|
|
|
 |
 |
OrangestO
–30–

Registered: Feb 2010
Location:
|
|
|
I quit my job last week because of management.
Here's what I was going to post about the company on Glassdoor, but I decided to just email the CEO instead.
| quote: | Company built on empty promises.
Let me preface this by writing I loved working at XXXXX once upon a time ago. I felt there was a purpose for my hard work. I thought it mattered in the grand scheme of things. I believed in my CEO’s vision. The keyword there: thought. My year and a half at XXXXX has been filled with empty promises. The CEO promised ESOP by mid 2014; it never happened. I was offered a promotion; it never happened. I was offered a new position where my skills would be better utilized; it never happened. Hell, the CEO ran a contest and announced the winners would be taken to Bern’s Steakhouse; needless to say, I won and – you guessed it – it never happened. The last four months have been a living hell for me professionally. It’s because of this so-called great company to work for. If you want your hard work and talent to go unnoticed, apply for a position here. If you want to constantly feel like an outsider because there’s a best friends club at the top of the food chain, apply for a position here. If you’re a male and don’t want to step up the ladder professionally, apply for a position here. Once upon a time ago, this company had a vision and had the people to get it there. Well, had. Now it’s just there. If you want to earn a measly paycheck creating mediocre content, look no further. At the end of the day, working at XXXXX is just a job – nothing more, nothing less. The CEO might have you think you’ve just stumbled upon the greatest opportunity – actually, never mind. That was the old CEO. He was passionate; he had company meetings in which he inspired people; he cared about the people who worked for him. That was before the company chose to take the path to the left instead of choosing the right direction. As hard as it was to cut ties with this company and the group of people I loved working with, I’m happy I finally did. My career and future depended on it.
|
Tl;dr version. The CEO made some impulsive decisions hoping he could profit more and faster. He hired two shady yuppies who had no part in helping grow the company from its roots. The COO (he knew his shit and was cool as fuck) knew it was a bad move and resigned. The company hasn't been the same since. Morale has flatlined. The company now cares about earning profits instead of refining its product beforehand. Oh well.
|
|
Aug-26-2014 21:29
|
|
|
 |
 |
Spacey Orange
still loves trance.

Registered: Jul 2004
Location: California
|
|
|
Aug-26-2014 22:58
|
|
|
 |
 |
Jon_Snow
Guest
Registered: Not Yet
Location:
|
|
|
Your letter could use some editing. If you were going for whiny, sour grapes, you nailed it. The CEO probably hit the delete key after the second sentence. Waste of time complaining to someone who you think doesn't care. IMHOP exit interviews are the proper place to give constructive feedback. Btw, you weren't offered a promotion, you were promised a promotion.
Last edited by on Aug-27-2014 at 01:14
|
|
Aug-26-2014 23:02
|
|
|
 |
 |
djshire
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Dec 2010
Location: Detroit, MI, USA
|
|
|
I had two jobs at a mall. My main was at Glow Golf, glow-in-the-dark mini golf. I spent most days not doing much, since the weekdays for that mall were dead. I could play whatever music I wanted, as long as it couldn't/didn't offend anyone. So I played house and trance. For getting minimum wage, I was doing way better than other people at other minimum wage jobs.
My secondary was at Taco Bell in the food court. I took that job because I really needed the money to fix my car, a 2nd gen Dodge Neon, which was a piece of shit that was falling apart. I only needed to do that job long enough til I got an inheritance (fathers estate, he died of brain cancer years before) so I could just get a new(er) car. I did keep the option open to stay at that job if it wasn't horrible, because extra income would be nice, even with what I was getting from inheritance (which was finite).
I quit that job two weeks, to the day, from when I got that inheritance. I worked it for a little over 8 months. It was shitty in the way that all food related jobs can be, but I was good at it. People even asked if I had worked for Taco Bell before, I was that good. No, it was the store manager, who was a horrible c*nt of a woman. Beyond being a total bitch, she was not very understanding. See, if I didn't eat with certain frequency, my blood sugar would crash. Now, at Glow Golf this wasn't ever really a problem, since I was sitting around doing nothing most of the time. Even standing, helping customers, that was ok, because it was never fast-paced. But at Taco Bell, it was. So when I'd ask for a break to get food because I fucking needed to, she would refuse. It would require several tries to get a break, and even then, it was only given begrudgingly. In the time I worked there, 6 people quit because of that manager.
Several months after I quit, she was fired for not just employee turnover being quite high (even for a place like Taco Bell), but also for being intoxicated on the job (which made sense in retrospect). I later found out that she was an alcoholic.
___________________
| quote: | Originally posted by Halcyon+On+On
djshire don't give a fuck. |
| quote: | Originally posted by Intellekshual
Rave to the grave. |
| quote: | Originally posted by wotyzoid
djshire, you're a cool nigga. |
| quote: | Originally posted by Taipan
Agreed. You da man! |
|
|
Aug-27-2014 00:30
|
|
|
 |
All times are GMT. The time now is 18:36.
Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not edit your posts
|
HTML code is ON
vB code is ON
[IMG] code is ON
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contact Us - return to tranceaddict
Powered by: Trance Music & vBulletin Forums
Copyright ©2000-2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Privacy Statement / DMCA
|