When to Leave That First Tech Job
An anonymous reader writes "Chris Wilson has an interesting piece about a scenario all CompSci/Engineering students dread, getting a job out of college and having it quickly turn sour. He writes: 'The first layoff is tough. After bending over backward, after being a loyal employee, this is the reward? To summarize how I felt: Disillusioned.' He discusses warning signs you should look for in your own work environment that point toward "Getting out". An interesting read, especially for aspiring engineers or engineers out on their first job."
...when your web server dies even before a Slashdot 'First Post'
When you're leaving your job, stay late on the last day.
Then, when everyone else has gone, start a fire.
"Why did they cancel my favorite Sci-Fi show? I downloaded ALL the episodes!"
When you're sitting in meetings thinking "I would cheerfully shoot any one of you fuckers in the face to get my last job back", it's probably time to move on.
I've worked in 4 companies which have bitten the dust in the last 10 years, some good indicators of problems are:
* Paying you in pizza and food stamps
* Managers being overly nice to everyone in meetings while looking very nervous
* 'Minor unexplained troubles' when pay fails to make it to the bank on time
* Large men standing at the doors of the company in pinstripe suits telling everyone to go home for the day
* Leaving the office late in the evening, seeing the company accountant loading what seems to be company property into the back of his SUV
* The CIO borrowing lunch money from you
* Sudden and unexplained 'asset stocktake' undertaken by little men you've never seen in the company before, calling themselves 'administrators'.
* You get an e-mail alert from the stock exchange warning you that your company has announced that it has been placed into liquidation.
Task Mangler
5. Management wants to use .Net in the nuclear power industry.
Run for the hills (literally), and try to get 100 miles from their nearest customer.
No, no. That's the article.
When you're the IT guy for a company and you visit the page and see...
Service Unavailable
...and about 50,000 references to 'slashdot.org' in your log files.
That's when you quit. Let some other schmuck take care of that mess of melted aluminum and plastic on the floor.
"What do you despise? By this are you truly known." --Princess Irulan, Manual of Muad'Dib
/)
> > After bending over backward, after being a loyal employee, this is the reward?
>Hint: don't bend over backward.
An excellent point. Bending over forward works much better, as it allows you to at least rest on the desk (table, etc) with minimal stress.
As a bonus (?) this position gives management easier access to your rear entry, thus expediting the procedure.
.NET Ninjas
I don't think that I've bumped into any of those, are they like Tae Kwon Do-Dos?
OMG, a 24-year old almost straight out of college who knows EVERYTHING! I've never encountered one of those before!
-----
PGP Key ID 0xCB8FF658
Hey, look. A manager from EA has posted.
Was wondering when they would come by.
1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcf