Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're still being paid, then yes.
that's when you catch up on medical appointments with any sick time you have left
Anonymous wrote:My job has been eliminated and my entire department is gone including vp of our department.
Now they transitioned everything to different department and we have a little bit of transition period. The person who got my duties demanding I train her and walk trough how I do my job.
Am I legally obligated to do this? I mean they eliminating my position do I have to give her all the details how I run my program?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer your question...no you are not at all "legally obligated."
To answer the question you did not ask....you should spend a good portion of the time you are still getting paid to perform work for that company helping out the new person. That is a human who did not wrong you in any way, and if you can make their life easier why wouldn't you?
Seriously? I have to give away my strategy to make someone’s life easy? I have many years of experience to learn what I know and now I just have to give it away to make someone’s life easier?
Yes. This is a normal and reasonable business request.
Actually it is not. OP this is the time you use your PTO days. And I am amazed that the company allowed you to stick around. Typically laid off employees are given severance, but not allowed to remain on the premises for fear of the laid-off employee corrupting filed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer your question...no you are not at all "legally obligated."
To answer the question you did not ask....you should spend a good portion of the time you are still getting paid to perform work for that company helping out the new person. That is a human who did not wrong you in any way, and if you can make their life easier why wouldn't you?
Seriously? I have to give away my strategy to make someone’s life easy? I have many years of experience to learn what I know and now I just have to give it away to make someone’s life easier?
Yes. This is a normal and reasonable business request.
Anonymous wrote:My job has been eliminated and my entire department is gone including vp of our department.
Now they transitioned everything to different department and we have a little bit of transition period. The person who got my duties demanding I train her and walk trough how I do my job.
Am I legally obligated to do this? I mean they eliminating my position do I have to give her all the details how I run my program?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did they give you any details about what you're supposed to teach her? There's a difference between teaching someone the basics of the job and teaching them your personal strategies.
Right? OP is yammering on about their "strategies," but if the program or function is being moved to a different department, expecting someone to train you on that program or function is 100 percent reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer your question...no you are not at all "legally obligated."
To answer the question you did not ask....you should spend a good portion of the time you are still getting paid to perform work for that company helping out the new person. That is a human who did not wrong you in any way, and if you can make their life easier why wouldn't you?
Seriously? I have to give away my strategy to make someone’s life easy? I have many years of experience to learn what I know and now I just have to give it away to make someone’s life easier?
Anonymous wrote:Did they give you any details about what you're supposed to teach her? There's a difference between teaching someone the basics of the job and teaching them your personal strategies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer your question...no you are not at all "legally obligated."
To answer the question you did not ask....you should spend a good portion of the time you are still getting paid to perform work for that company helping out the new person. That is a human who did not wrong you in any way, and if you can make their life easier why wouldn't you?
Seriously? I have to give away my strategy to make someone’s life easy? I have many years of experience to learn what I know and now I just have to give it away to make someone’s life easier?
Glad you're not my co-worker.
Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn't you? Spite isn't a great reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer your question...no you are not at all "legally obligated."
To answer the question you did not ask....you should spend a good portion of the time you are still getting paid to perform work for that company helping out the new person. That is a human who did not wrong you in any way, and if you can make their life easier why wouldn't you?
Seriously? I have to give away my strategy to make someone’s life easy? I have many years of experience to learn what I know and now I just have to give it away to make someone’s life easier?
They paid you for those many years of experience you spent learning your strategy, right? They're paying you for these last few days, right? You don't need to go above and beyond or anything, but yes, you should work for the time you're getting paid, and if your assignment is to train someone, then that's your assignment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer your question...no you are not at all "legally obligated."
To answer the question you did not ask....you should spend a good portion of the time you are still getting paid to perform work for that company helping out the new person. That is a human who did not wrong you in any way, and if you can make their life easier why wouldn't you?
Seriously? I have to give away my strategy to make someone’s life easy? I have many years of experience to learn what I know and now I just have to give it away to make someone’s life easier?