Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:…
We're in our early 40s with young kids. My spouse has been an SES for about 5 years, and I was recently asked by leadership if I might want to make the jump to SES. …
Try to make it clear that it might be the right job, but maybe just not the right time. Don't close the door if you'd want that opportunity 5 years from now.
You’re young so this last point maybe the most important. I’ve been a GS15 for almost 15 years and am mid-50s now. We have about two dozen people like me in our division. At a meeting about staffing this morning someone brought up the lack of SES opportunities. Leadership responded that someone would probably retire in the next five years and so there’d be one spot. We looked at each other and someone said “but half of us are eligible to retire by then as well, so you’re saying there’s no path to move up left in our careers.”
A reason to consider this opportunity is that it can be worse to stagnate than to be challenged.
Is it so terrible to stagnate though? You have a challenging, rewarding job with flexibility and seniority. I know so many 15s in this position. What is the harm in being satisfied with what you have? I struggle with this too but I also work to live no live to work and have to remind myself of that
PP. a fair question, and the answer is “it depends”. Where I am it took most of us years of sustained high levels of effort to get the positions we’re in, and yes, it’s great to be a non supervisory GS15. But the characteristics that got us where we are doesn’t let us sit on our laurels for twenty years.
I don’t know what your job is like but for me the reason we have non-sup 15s is because the work is really important and challenging.
I’ve been a 15 for probably a decade and I’m not “sitting on my laurels” — I’m working as hard as I’ve ever worked on really significant projects.
Being SES isn’t harder or more important work than what I’m doing— it’s just different. I applaud the poster who is keeping up morale for 60 people while managing politicals but I am happier doing the substantive work as SME.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:…
We're in our early 40s with young kids. My spouse has been an SES for about 5 years, and I was recently asked by leadership if I might want to make the jump to SES. …
Try to make it clear that it might be the right job, but maybe just not the right time. Don't close the door if you'd want that opportunity 5 years from now.
You’re young so this last point maybe the most important. I’ve been a GS15 for almost 15 years and am mid-50s now. We have about two dozen people like me in our division. At a meeting about staffing this morning someone brought up the lack of SES opportunities. Leadership responded that someone would probably retire in the next five years and so there’d be one spot. We looked at each other and someone said “but half of us are eligible to retire by then as well, so you’re saying there’s no path to move up left in our careers.”
A reason to consider this opportunity is that it can be worse to stagnate than to be challenged.
Is it so terrible to stagnate though? You have a challenging, rewarding job with flexibility and seniority. I know so many 15s in this position. What is the harm in being satisfied with what you have? I struggle with this too but I also work to live no live to work and have to remind myself of that
PP. a fair question, and the answer is “it depends”. Where I am it took most of us years of sustained high levels of effort to get the positions we’re in, and yes, it’s great to be a non supervisory GS15. But the characteristics that got us where we are doesn’t let us sit on our laurels for twenty years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Career-SES for over a year. Just turned 40. I have 2 kid who are 5 and under. The culture of the agency matters as does the assignment. If you have good leadership skills and know how to effectively delegate, you'll be fine and you'll find a work/life balance. If you don't know how to trust your staff or delegate, you will always be working. Apply and see what happens. The hardest part of being an SES is the getting through the application and selection process. However, doing the application and preparing for the interviews helps you understand if it is truly what you want. But don't be the person you says they could have been an SES if they only they submitted an application. That is a cop out.
+1. I’ve been career SES for 4 years now. It’s not sunshine and butterflies, but it doesn’t suck either. I trust my people and I employ a participatory approach to governance. I monitor for signs of burnout and push back when politicals come with craziness. But my pushbacks aren’t emotional. I use data and other information to make my case. Sure, I’ve had political (particularly under Trump) not be super happy with me, but they understood and we worked together to determine what was reasonable. I had one instance where the political insisted. Instead of forcing my people through that hell, I took it on to protect their sanity. Plus, I came up with a good workaround that really wasn’t too hard to execute once I figured out the path. A good SES is strategic and politically savvy. Morale in my unit of 63 people is second highest (consistent mid 80 percentile) and My division EXCEEDED our all 5 of our key performance metrics. I regularly work 50 hour weeks, but I NEVER do more than 60 (ever). Last year I worked 60 hours 3 out of 52 weeks. And I was still able to take 22 days of annual leave.
This sounds terrible.
Not for SES. It's called Senior Executive Service for a reason. You're an executive leader, just like in the private sector, so you work executive hours. As the poster indicated, you have to manage political leaders who change every 4 to 8 years, as well as strategic planning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:…
We're in our early 40s with young kids. My spouse has been an SES for about 5 years, and I was recently asked by leadership if I might want to make the jump to SES. …
Try to make it clear that it might be the right job, but maybe just not the right time. Don't close the door if you'd want that opportunity 5 years from now.
You’re young so this last point maybe the most important. I’ve been a GS15 for almost 15 years and am mid-50s now. We have about two dozen people like me in our division. At a meeting about staffing this morning someone brought up the lack of SES opportunities. Leadership responded that someone would probably retire in the next five years and so there’d be one spot. We looked at each other and someone said “but half of us are eligible to retire by then as well, so you’re saying there’s no path to move up left in our careers.”
A reason to consider this opportunity is that it can be worse to stagnate than to be challenged.
Is it so terrible to stagnate though? You have a challenging, rewarding job with flexibility and seniority. I know so many 15s in this position. What is the harm in being satisfied with what you have? I struggle with this too but I also work to live no live to work and have to remind myself of that
PP. a fair question, and the answer is “it depends”. Where I am it took most of us years of sustained high levels of effort to get the positions we’re in, and yes, it’s great to be a non supervisory GS15. But the characteristics that got us where we are doesn’t let us sit on our laurels for twenty years.
Anonymous wrote:I have been a GS-15 manager for almost 10 years, since age 35. You could not pay me to take an SES job and in fact I have turned down several (non-career) that were offered, and declined to apply to the career SES spots to open up. I have seen the position descriptions and performance appraisals and they are a ton of bs leadership wordspeak on top of actual job duties. “Leading change” my arse. I am very happy as a first line supervisor and subject matter expert. I also like to fly a little under the radar. The SES pay is more but I am making plenty as it is. I don’t need more money, I need more time to spend with my kids - and SES is the last place I’d look for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Career-SES for over a year. Just turned 40. I have 2 kid who are 5 and under. The culture of the agency matters as does the assignment. If you have good leadership skills and know how to effectively delegate, you'll be fine and you'll find a work/life balance. If you don't know how to trust your staff or delegate, you will always be working. Apply and see what happens. The hardest part of being an SES is the getting through the application and selection process. However, doing the application and preparing for the interviews helps you understand if it is truly what you want. But don't be the person you says they could have been an SES if they only they submitted an application. That is a cop out.
+1. I’ve been career SES for 4 years now. It’s not sunshine and butterflies, but it doesn’t suck either. I trust my people and I employ a participatory approach to governance. I monitor for signs of burnout and push back when politicals come with craziness. But my pushbacks aren’t emotional. I use data and other information to make my case. Sure, I’ve had political (particularly under Trump) not be super happy with me, but they understood and we worked together to determine what was reasonable. I had one instance where the political insisted. Instead of forcing my people through that hell, I took it on to protect their sanity. Plus, I came up with a good workaround that really wasn’t too hard to execute once I figured out the path. A good SES is strategic and politically savvy. Morale in my unit of 63 people is second highest (consistent mid 80 percentile) and My division EXCEEDED our all 5 of our key performance metrics. I regularly work 50 hour weeks, but I NEVER do more than 60 (ever). Last year I worked 60 hours 3 out of 52 weeks. And I was still able to take 22 days of annual leave.
This sounds terrible.
Not for SES. It's called Senior Executive Service for a reason. You're an executive leader, just like in the private sector, so you work executive hours. As the poster indicated, you have to manage political leaders who change every 4 to 8 years, as well as strategic planning.
All about ego
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Career-SES for over a year. Just turned 40. I have 2 kid who are 5 and under. The culture of the agency matters as does the assignment. If you have good leadership skills and know how to effectively delegate, you'll be fine and you'll find a work/life balance. If you don't know how to trust your staff or delegate, you will always be working. Apply and see what happens. The hardest part of being an SES is the getting through the application and selection process. However, doing the application and preparing for the interviews helps you understand if it is truly what you want. But don't be the person you says they could have been an SES if they only they submitted an application. That is a cop out.
+1. I’ve been career SES for 4 years now. It’s not sunshine and butterflies, but it doesn’t suck either. I trust my people and I employ a participatory approach to governance. I monitor for signs of burnout and push back when politicals come with craziness. But my pushbacks aren’t emotional. I use data and other information to make my case. Sure, I’ve had political (particularly under Trump) not be super happy with me, but they understood and we worked together to determine what was reasonable. I had one instance where the political insisted. Instead of forcing my people through that hell, I took it on to protect their sanity. Plus, I came up with a good workaround that really wasn’t too hard to execute once I figured out the path. A good SES is strategic and politically savvy. Morale in my unit of 63 people is second highest (consistent mid 80 percentile) and My division EXCEEDED our all 5 of our key performance metrics. I regularly work 50 hour weeks, but I NEVER do more than 60 (ever). Last year I worked 60 hours 3 out of 52 weeks. And I was still able to take 22 days of annual leave.
This sounds terrible.
Not for SES. It's called Senior Executive Service for a reason. You're an executive leader, just like in the private sector, so you work executive hours. As the poster indicated, you have to manage political leaders who change every 4 to 8 years, as well as strategic planning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Career-SES for over a year. Just turned 40. I have 2 kid who are 5 and under. The culture of the agency matters as does the assignment. If you have good leadership skills and know how to effectively delegate, you'll be fine and you'll find a work/life balance. If you don't know how to trust your staff or delegate, you will always be working. Apply and see what happens. The hardest part of being an SES is the getting through the application and selection process. However, doing the application and preparing for the interviews helps you understand if it is truly what you want. But don't be the person you says they could have been an SES if they only they submitted an application. That is a cop out.
+1. I’ve been career SES for 4 years now. It’s not sunshine and butterflies, but it doesn’t suck either. I trust my people and I employ a participatory approach to governance. I monitor for signs of burnout and push back when politicals come with craziness. But my pushbacks aren’t emotional. I use data and other information to make my case. Sure, I’ve had political (particularly under Trump) not be super happy with me, but they understood and we worked together to determine what was reasonable. I had one instance where the political insisted. Instead of forcing my people through that hell, I took it on to protect their sanity. Plus, I came up with a good workaround that really wasn’t too hard to execute once I figured out the path. A good SES is strategic and politically savvy. Morale in my unit of 63 people is second highest (consistent mid 80 percentile) and My division EXCEEDED our all 5 of our key performance metrics. I regularly work 50 hour weeks, but I NEVER do more than 60 (ever). Last year I worked 60 hours 3 out of 52 weeks. And I was still able to take 22 days of annual leave.
This sounds terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Career-SES for over a year. Just turned 40. I have 2 kid who are 5 and under. The culture of the agency matters as does the assignment. If you have good leadership skills and know how to effectively delegate, you'll be fine and you'll find a work/life balance. If you don't know how to trust your staff or delegate, you will always be working. Apply and see what happens. The hardest part of being an SES is the getting through the application and selection process. However, doing the application and preparing for the interviews helps you understand if it is truly what you want. But don't be the person you says they could have been an SES if they only they submitted an application. That is a cop out.
+1. I’ve been career SES for 4 years now. It’s not sunshine and butterflies, but it doesn’t suck either. I trust my people and I employ a participatory approach to governance. I monitor for signs of burnout and push back when politicals come with craziness. But my pushbacks aren’t emotional. I use data and other information to make my case. Sure, I’ve had political (particularly under Trump) not be super happy with me, but they understood and we worked together to determine what was reasonable. I had one instance where the political insisted. Instead of forcing my people through that hell, I took it on to protect their sanity. Plus, I came up with a good workaround that really wasn’t too hard to execute once I figured out the path. A good SES is strategic and politically savvy. Morale in my unit of 63 people is second highest (consistent mid 80 percentile) and My division EXCEEDED our all 5 of our key performance metrics. I regularly work 50 hour weeks, but I NEVER do more than 60 (ever). Last year I worked 60 hours 3 out of 52 weeks. And I was still able to take 22 days of annual leave.
Anonymous wrote:Career-SES for over a year. Just turned 40. I have 2 kid who are 5 and under. The culture of the agency matters as does the assignment. If you have good leadership skills and know how to effectively delegate, you'll be fine and you'll find a work/life balance. If you don't know how to trust your staff or delegate, you will always be working. Apply and see what happens. The hardest part of being an SES is the getting through the application and selection process. However, doing the application and preparing for the interviews helps you understand if it is truly what you want. But don't be the person you says they could have been an SES if they only they submitted an application. That is a cop out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:…
We're in our early 40s with young kids. My spouse has been an SES for about 5 years, and I was recently asked by leadership if I might want to make the jump to SES. …
Try to make it clear that it might be the right job, but maybe just not the right time. Don't close the door if you'd want that opportunity 5 years from now.
You’re young so this last point maybe the most important. I’ve been a GS15 for almost 15 years and am mid-50s now. We have about two dozen people like me in our division. At a meeting about staffing this morning someone brought up the lack of SES opportunities. Leadership responded that someone would probably retire in the next five years and so there’d be one spot. We looked at each other and someone said “but half of us are eligible to retire by then as well, so you’re saying there’s no path to move up left in our careers.”
A reason to consider this opportunity is that it can be worse to stagnate than to be challenged.
Is it so terrible to stagnate though? You have a challenging, rewarding job with flexibility and seniority. I know so many 15s in this position. What is the harm in being satisfied with what you have? I struggle with this too but I also work to live no live to work and have to remind myself of that