Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happened to me and I quit after six weeks. But I was in person, and alone. I wasn’t allowed to read a book or look at my cell phone even though no one who didn’t work at the office could see me. It was so boring to sit for 8 hours a day and have maybe 15 minutes of work.
I was single and young so quitting was a no brainer. If I worked from home I’d probably have milked it more.
What kind of job was this?
Anonymous wrote:yes fed for 20 years. nothing ever to do. finally put out of misery by Trump this year
Anonymous wrote:This happened to me and I quit after six weeks. But I was in person, and alone. I wasn’t allowed to read a book or look at my cell phone even though no one who didn’t work at the office could see me. It was so boring to sit for 8 hours a day and have maybe 15 minutes of work.
I was single and young so quitting was a no brainer. If I worked from home I’d probably have milked it more.
Anonymous wrote:I started a job earlier this year that I was really excited about. Long story short, I’m about eight months in now and there is very little work to do. At first, I was constantly raising my hand to get additional tasks, but at a certain point this got demoralizing. Now, I do the limited work I do have on my in office days and on my WFH days, study for a certification and apply for other jobs. I’m always available if someone needs help and offer to help when requested, but I can’t just make up work to do.
I’m grateful to have a job, but it’s kind of discouraging and very boring.
Has anyone else had an experience like this, and what ended up happening?
Anonymous wrote:I started a job earlier this year that I was really excited about. Long story short, I’m about eight months in now and there is very little work to do. At first, I was constantly raising my hand to get additional tasks, but at a certain point this got demoralizing. Now, I do the limited work I do have on my in office days and on my WFH days, study for a certification and apply for other jobs. I’m always available if someone needs help and offer to help when requested, but I can’t just make up work to do.
I’m grateful to have a job, but it’s kind of discouraging and very boring.
Has anyone else had an experience like this, and what ended up happening?
Anonymous wrote:I started a job earlier this year that I was really excited about. Long story short, I’m about eight months in now and there is very little work to do. At first, I was constantly raising my hand to get additional tasks, but at a certain point this got demoralizing. Now, I do the limited work I do have on my in office days and on my WFH days, study for a certification and apply for other jobs. I’m always available if someone needs help and offer to help when requested, but I can’t just make up work to do.
I’m grateful to have a job, but it’s kind of discouraging and very boring.
Has anyone else had an experience like this, and what ended up happening?