One of the best threads I've tracked on TexAgs in a while! Often times in learning or receiving advice, I takeaway much more from how I would NOT want to do something, than how to do it. Kudos to you all for showing both.
Ag92NGranbury said:
we'll agree to disagree... time will tell and i'll keep this post bookmarked...
my advice to others that i know that are WFH, as the market softens is to get your butt back in the office, be visible and keep those blinders on...
one more piece of advice... at 7.5 posts a day... just remember that marketing goes first :-)
Ghost of Bisbee said:Ag92NGranbury said:
we'll agree to disagree... time will tell and i'll keep this post bookmarked...
my advice to others that i know that are WFH, as the market softens is to get your butt back in the office, be visible and keep those blinders on...
one more piece of advice... at 7.5 posts a day... just remember that marketing goes first :-)
https://cnn.it/3VCnjQH
Read it and weep!
JDCAG (NOT Colin) said:
Per this article - https://edition.cnn.com/2022/10/04/business/four-day-work-week-risk-takers/index.html - it looks like it's a reduction of hours, not just a day...so 4x8 vs 4x10.
43. not sure if that qualifies.Charismatic Megafauna said:
Sorry brother, unfortunately i know the feeling. Hopefully you feel good about the severance, if not (or maybe anyway) and you haven't signed anything, you might discuss your situation with an employment atty. I don't know how old you are but at a previous employer i was aware of a successful age discrimination suit that sounds a lot like what you described (laying off experienced employee after asking them to train young/cheap person).
Leeman said:
The "find another job in the company" is a joke. Never happens.
Of course it is. If she even comes back. So by firing you they are going to knowingly lose at least 1 year of work from your role by doing this by backfilling you with her.El Chupacabra said:43. not sure if that qualifies.Charismatic Megafauna said:
Sorry brother, unfortunately i know the feeling. Hopefully you feel good about the severance, if not (or maybe anyway) and you haven't signed anything, you might discuss your situation with an employment atty. I don't know how old you are but at a previous employer i was aware of a successful age discrimination suit that sounds a lot like what you described (laying off experienced employee after asking them to train young/cheap person).
Training a younger, cheaper, pregnant female that is going to take another 4 months off in 4 months.
And she is my friend, a ChemE that wants to get into process engineering but is being forced into logistics and planning.
Also, f* HR. If I was CEO, the first thing I would do is fire every HR position possible that wasn't a show stopper to meet a federal mandate or wasn't specifically working 100% of their time filling open roles. Any other HR job is not necessary. Any of these layoffs currently underway nationwide need to be including as many HR people as possible.El Chupacabra said:
I was recently laid off. 16 years with the same company. I was called in, my boss' boss and the HR rep from my BU were present. I was informed my position was not longer available due to company transformation and that my last day would be 12/31.
Then the boss lady left and HR explained severance and and a few other things.
They both informed me that if I was to find another position in the company, I could apply for those and they would support me moving elsewhere.
And 'my position going away'? Well, actually, I'm currently training my replacement.
This all happened on 10/25.
On 10/27 I applied for 3 internal positions. 2 I was highly qualified for, 1 not so much. The job postings closed 11/4. On 11/12 I got notice that I did not get the 1 position I wasn't as qualified for.
Since then, I've heard nothing. HR won't tell me what's up, the hiring manager hasn't answered or returned calls, my boss won't spend 5 minutes to help me out.
Bexar Ag said:
do you own a business?
Quote:
August 8
Tyson Foods said it would close four poultry facilities in Arkansas, Indiana and Missouri, affecting thousands of employees, including nearly 2,200 at two sites in the cities of Noel and Dexter, Missouri, according to a WARN noticea Tyson Foods spokesperson told Forbes all affected employees are "encouraged to apply for open, posted roles within the company."
Ghost of Bisbee said:
On remote work, the days of going into the office the majority of the week are waning. You're fighting an uphill battle, a battle which the majority of millennials and Gen Z workers are staunchly against.
On the other side, your assumption is 4 day workweeks mean you work less than a 5 day workweeks. That's not accurate.
Here's one example from Microsoft linked here. 40% boost in productivity in a country whose people define their identity by their work arguably more than any other country in the world. https://www.npr.org/2019/11/04/776163853/microsoft-japan-says-4-day-workweek-boosted-workers-productivity-by-40
Facts are facts. If you can't acknowledge that, I can't help you
Keep an eye on this too, massive 4-day workweek experiment happening over the summer in the UK:
https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/newyork/news/worlds-largest-4-day-workweek-experiment-launched-in-uk/
YouBet said:Of course it is. If she even comes back. So by firing you they are going to knowingly lose at least 1 year of work from your role by doing this by backfilling you with her.El Chupacabra said:43. not sure if that qualifies.Charismatic Megafauna said:
Sorry brother, unfortunately i know the feeling. Hopefully you feel good about the severance, if not (or maybe anyway) and you haven't signed anything, you might discuss your situation with an employment atty. I don't know how old you are but at a previous employer i was aware of a successful age discrimination suit that sounds a lot like what you described (laying off experienced employee after asking them to train young/cheap person).
Training a younger, cheaper, pregnant female that is going to take another 4 months off in 4 months.
And she is my friend, a ChemE that wants to get into process engineering but is being forced into logistics and planning.
Sorry you are going through this. Complete crap.
El Chupacabra said:YouBet said:Of course it is. If she even comes back. So by firing you they are going to knowingly lose at least 1 year of work from your role by doing this by backfilling you with her.El Chupacabra said:43. not sure if that qualifies.Charismatic Megafauna said:
Sorry brother, unfortunately i know the feeling. Hopefully you feel good about the severance, if not (or maybe anyway) and you haven't signed anything, you might discuss your situation with an employment atty. I don't know how old you are but at a previous employer i was aware of a successful age discrimination suit that sounds a lot like what you described (laying off experienced employee after asking them to train young/cheap person).
Training a younger, cheaper, pregnant female that is going to take another 4 months off in 4 months.
And she is my friend, a ChemE that wants to get into process engineering but is being forced into logistics and planning.
Sorry you are going through this. Complete crap.
She's pregnant again. Taking another 4 months off in about a month. If she keeps having babies, she'll never have to work she hates the job she was put into anyway).
Ag92NGranbury said:
Might be a 1 day work week once AI rolls out completely :-)
As economic conditions change, I do expect that a majority of WFH experiments will have ended. I also suspect that 4 day work weeks will be pushed back into 5 days. Just my opinion, but the pickup of ending WFH is a lot faster than I thought it would be.