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ive been working at this place for a while and my boss is a real pain she never leaves me alone and she always makes me do the pointless things that new people should do but the problem is im not new anymore dose this mean she dosent take me seroicly?

2006-09-18 04:46:36 · 20 answers · asked by kayleay 1 in Business & Finance Careers & Employment

20 answers

She'd take your more serious if you used the damn spell check.

2006-09-18 04:54:28 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

If your spelling and sentence structure is any indication of how you do your job it could be that she thinks you can only handle the "pointless things". If you want to get ahead then you need to take pride in what you do and do the best that you possibly can in everything. The fact that you can't/didn't use spell check here gives me the impression that you are either lazy or not very bright. I can see where your boss may think the same thing.

2006-09-18 05:01:47 · answer #2 · answered by myste 4 · 0 0

Unfortunately, you will run into people everywhere you go, like this boss. If you leave your job because of another person, I guarantee you will find three more people like her at your next job. Instead of running from people and situations, try to find a way to resolve this. We cannot always change others, we can change ourselves. Try to do the best job you can do, do not let her ways get to you. Identify if she only trests you this way or if she treats others the same way. If it is only you, then plan on talking with her about it. Ask for a time to talk with her. When you go, tell her in a respectful way the situation. Leave out any emotional aspects and just focus on the facts. Write down the ways you feel you have been mistreated and take the paper with you. Do not be confrontational, be humble. Ask her if there is something you could do differently to improve your relationship with her. Tell her that you like your job and want to do it well. Ask her to give you some professional tips and specific course of action you could take to be a better employee. Write down the tips she gives you, and follow through with the suggestions. Never gossip at work or talk about your boss outside of work. Be respectful to her and your coworkers. Work at 100% and try to keep a positive outlook and be the one to encourage others on the job to be upbeat. Your boss will respect you for being respectful and for trying to improve yourself. Never accuse her or others, instead take the route of changing you. Pray about it too. Things will work out. Perserverance!

2006-09-18 04:56:13 · answer #3 · answered by Shayna 6 · 0 0

You could hang in there a little while longer, while working from home, being your own boss as Robert Kiyosaki suggests, from his Rich Dad Poor Dad book "The Business School". You can do that until you make enough to replace the income you're making at work now and you can finally walk away and say BYE! Check out our Proven Formula at http://www.mywayoutonline.com/ access code 108306 and watch everything unfold before your eyes how the business is done. It's incredible and worth a look see! Check it out with the BBB (better business bureau) as well! Do that with everything you look at!
Good luck on your endeavor!

2006-09-18 06:44:55 · answer #4 · answered by BevD 4 · 0 0

I would take your bosses actions as a compliment personally, she does take you seriously and gives you work to do to prove that.... your question about when to leave your job though is totally different, regardless of what others think of your boss treatment of you, it all boils down to what you think of your job. If it's gotten to a stage where you dread going in and call in sick for no particular reason, it's time to go, if you're bored or unchallenges I'd speak to your boss, ask her for 5 minutes of her time in private and have a word, you never know, it could trun out to be the job of your dreams!!!

Good Luck!

2006-09-18 04:56:55 · answer #5 · answered by Katie 4 · 0 0

when you're happy and as soon as you're opening the door to you job all of a sudden feel sick to your stomach, or as soon as you get there you have a headache that mysteriously disappears when you leave,and its back again the next day and gone when you're leaving,then its time to leave. be self employ, work to make yourself rich, not someone else,i work with a great company they help homeowners pull tens of thousands of dollars of interest savings out of their mortgage through a carefully controllled biweekly prepayment system(by dividing their monthly payment by 2). their services is so popular, they're saving homeowners BILLIONS of dollars! this is NOT something that homeowners can easily do on their own due to many hidden pitfalls.... homeowners pay you about $395 to sign up. 2 simple forms. NO refinancing is involved. you enroll the client. the company do evrything else. and YOU CAN POCKET 100% COMMISSIONS! call 1800-365-7550 ext 61583 and get free info, that will explain it in more details, or e-mail me at astride9@aol.com

2006-09-18 06:57:44 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's time to quit when:
1. Things you used to do are re deligated to a new comer.
2. You are assigned to meaningless projects.
3. Your boss does not meet eye-to-eye when she talks to you.
4. Your boss avoids having coffee/lunch etc.. that she once so willingly did.
5. You are not included in policy meetings.
6. Your opinions do not count in meetings even when you are invited to attend.
7. You are twiddling your thumb doing nothing all day. You used to be very busy.
8. Everything you say, do comes out wrong in their opinion.

Then, it is time to look for a job.

2006-09-18 04:57:56 · answer #7 · answered by Nightrider 7 · 1 0

My rule of thumb is stay at one job no longer than 5 years. It's the "single-source" theory (or don't put all of you eggs in one basket.)

The days are over where one job is going to carry you through to retirement...they'll just chew you up and spit you out when they're done with you. In this day and age, it's a good idea to begin anew on a regular basis...before you end up bitter, resentful, and discouraged for your entire middle-age through retirement.

The only exception would be if you are self-employed and/or own your own business.

2006-09-18 04:57:27 · answer #8 · answered by 4999_Basque 6 · 1 0

Sounds like a deadend. Look around for another job. It's always easier to find a different job when you already have one. No panic.

2006-09-18 04:56:10 · answer #9 · answered by 2hot 3 · 1 0

You should leave your when you feel you've had enough.When your satisfaction levels are way below and you feel that there is no work satisfaction!!Just kick your boss and stay in job or you resign..i feel its the ultimate you must do!!!

2006-09-18 04:58:18 · answer #10 · answered by dream_to_death 2 · 0 0

I don't take you "seroicly" either; but I do take you seriously.

If you no longer look forward to getting up and going to your job, then it's time to move on.

2006-09-18 04:48:54 · answer #11 · answered by The Baron 3 · 0 0

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