Principal Financial-Remote work

I tend to go off on tangents every once in a while. Today was one of those instances. I stand by my comments as I truly feel hard working people are far better off non-unionized. That’s my opinion. But I understand it’s not shared by others.

With that said, I’m taking my own advice I offered here a long time ago. It’s time to take a break from social media. Social media can bring out the worse in people sometimes. When that happens, it’s time to step back and have conversations with people you can physically talk to, not through a keyboard

Go cyclones!
Maybe take time to study how Unions helped bring better working conditions and wages to the U.S. economy. Maybe they have strayed from their original intentions, but they changed the working man’s lot.
 
Maybe they'll move to the Principal model of just getting rid of the employee opinion survey.

Wait ... seriously?

For reference, my question wasnt about making false statements.

I too, am a PFG employee, and have heard of mass exceptions being provided, based on an employees role within the company.
I have been told this as well, but only verbally. Have yet to see anything in writing.
 
It kind of reminds me of the place in Des Moines that always portrayed itself as fun place to work. "We have a free keg on Friday night" "We order in free pizza". Listen *****, I have no urge to be working at 7pm on a Friday night for free Michelob Ultra. I think this may have been Business Solver but not 100%. I just looked at their Glassdoor and it looks like at least they allow their employees to work from home.

Not quite how it was pre-COVID, but yes, the company is now 100% remote. Those in the DSM area are still welcome to go into the office, but almost no one does. I don't see that policy changing anytime soon.

Pre-COVID they would offer a catered lunch on Wed, apps on Fri afternoon, and there was a keg (Coors Light IIRC) and wine available daily after 4pm. There was also a shuffleboard table and ping pong table along with free breakfast items (cereal and oatmeal), snacks and soda available on each floor. This is all obviously gone now since no one is really working in the office.

It can be a hard place to work, and plenty of people get burned out in a couple of years, especially those in the client support roles. I've been there 7+ years now, and know quite a few in the 5-10 year range, so it's not all doom and gloom. Like most companies, it has it's warts, but at times, it can be a pretty fun place. Lot of great people there and some of the smartest people I've ever met.
 
on the hotel room policy, could an employee just refuse to state their gender and threaten to go to HR if they force you into rooming with someone?
Fair question. I don’t know that anyone tried that specific case. But it did raise huge HIPPA issues. For example, if you had some medical issue that you needed a private room to deal with, how do you tell your employer you need your own room without divulging medical info? I know you could just call it a “private medical issue” but even that sort of lets people know you have something going on.
 
Fair question. I don’t know that anyone tried that specific case. But it did raise huge HIPPA issues. For example, if you had some medical issue that you needed a private room to deal with, how do you tell your employer you need your own room without divulging medical info? I know you could just call it a “private medical issue” but even that sort of lets people know you have something going on.

Now you have me brainstorming for a medical issue that would require you to have your own room. LOL
 
Within the same company or changing companies? Seems almost impossible to get that kind of increase by staying put.

Changed twice. But the stop in the middle was short and did nothing to help me for where I am. I could have gone from 1st job to 3rd job. Original would give 3, maybe 4% on outstanding reviews and expect you to be thrilled.
 
Admittedly, I did not read the article, but those numbers sound realistic if you factor fuel, parking, maintenance costs, etc. I have a 100% WFH job with a very small company (<15 people). I don't mind the idea of getting back to some office time, personally. Our CEO is known for making decisions without consulting anyone on the team and we just have to react. I've heard murmurings that he's looking at office space in Ames. That's a 100-mile commute for me round-trip. At the federal rate of $0.655/mile, it would cost me around $13,000/year. It's $5,000/year in fuel alone. If he goes forward with that, I will have a hard time accepting it.
 

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