Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - let me clarify. Something in the federal government or as a private consultant.
Where are the jobs where they stuck you in a basement next to a filing cabinet (before WFH) for five years unless a random comet is hitting the west coast and they need a report?
Your PM experience is totally irrelevant to what you describe.
No one is hiring someone who has no interest in collaboration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:sure... you can be a IT network engineer.
My DH is an IT systems architect for a government contractor and seems to spend a god awful amount of time on conference calls.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - let me clarify. Something in the federal government or as a private consultant.
Where are the jobs where they stuck you in a basement next to a filing cabinet (before WFH) for five years unless a random comet is hitting the west coast and they need a report?
Anonymous wrote:You and I should share a job. I just want to take depositions and negotiate. I never want to write a brief again as long as I live.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you! Working with other people is just exhausting. People are just angry and extremely sensitive these days. I would love to just sit in a room and research stuff and provide write-ups for others.
Me, too (or three). I'm a lawyer and would love to just do legal research and write briefs. I'd be happy sitting in a closet doing that.
Anonymous wrote:Patent examiner.
You and I should share a job. I just want to take depositions and negotiate. I never want to write a brief again as long as I live.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you! Working with other people is just exhausting. People are just angry and extremely sensitive these days. I would love to just sit in a room and research stuff and provide write-ups for others.
Me, too (or three). I'm a lawyer and would love to just do legal research and write briefs. I'd be happy sitting in a closet doing that.
Anonymous wrote:I hear you! Working with other people is just exhausting. People are just angry and extremely sensitive these days. I would love to just sit in a room and research stuff and provide write-ups for others.
Anonymous wrote:sure... you can be a IT network engineer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - let me clarify. Something in the federal government or as a private consultant.
Where are the jobs where they stuck you in a basement next to a filing cabinet (before WFH) for five years unless a random comet is hitting the west coast and they need a report?
I supervise people with jobs like that. They make $60-80k.
Yep. Just got one of these jobs—hallelujah—at $80k.
OP, not sure of the transferability of your degrees/experience, but look for things like policy analyst, legislative analyst, research analyst, etc.
I’m coming from 20+ years of people-intensive work and dreaming of a quiet little file cabinet myself. As far as I can tell, new job is 30% research, 30% writing, 30% tracking legislation and 10% peopling. I could not be happier and am gladly giving up the extra $20k that came from managing people, collaboration, and public interface.
Sounds like a dream. What type of employer is this — think tank? Trade org?