Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I've worked for companies as small as 20 and as large as 100,000. I'll take the small company almost every time. The only two drawbacks I've seen from small companies is they typically don't/can't pay as well and if someone near the top sucks, it's probably going to suck. A small company with decent people to work with is definitely preferred in my book. I can't stand corporate culture. It's nauseating.I worked for a small company for a short period of time and hated it. I’m convinced the best options are own your own company or work for a large corporation.
the only person I've met higher up is my manager's manager (aka skip meetings). Every company should have them. It's once every couple of months but at least you can talk about your manager face to face with his manager.That's interesting, I wonder how they determine that. If it's a big company, do those people even know who you are?
everyone should have 1 or 2 questions about the company at the end. That question is a good one or something related to the culture of the company.Absolutely this. One of the best questions I heard from a candidate in an interview was "Tell me about a time when the company made a significant change due to employee opinion/feedback." It starts a conversation and gives the interviewer an opportunity to show off some company culture wins. Red flags should be easy to spot as well.
I've actually incorporated it into my own bag of tricks when I am interviewed. There's always that "Ok do you have any questions for me?" portion of the interview that can be awkward if you don't have anything prepared.
LinkedIn has a lot of overachievers...if you can believe what they have written.just go on LinkedIn if you want enough corporate cringe for a lifetime
I've worked for companies as small as 20 and as large as 100,000. I'll take the small company almost every time. The only two drawbacks I've seen from small companies is they typically don't/can't pay as well and if someone near the top sucks, it's probably going to suck. A small company with decent people to work with is definitely preferred in my book. I can't stand corporate culture. It's nauseating.
Agreed that frequent leadership changes and reorganizing can be a big detriment at larger organizations. Don't get me wrong, they're bound to happen sometimes, and they don't have to be bad, but re-orgs, when they occur too frequently or are poorly planned, can result in significant disruption.That's been my experience too. Small companies run at the whims of 1 or 2 people so you have to deal with that. But in some degree that happens in big corporations I've been at too. The one thing I've experienced at every big company is upper mgmt gets "reassigned" after missing too many sales goals, they bring in some new flunkey who immediately changes the org chart so they can take credit for the same work that's been happening for years, rinse and repeat.
this is a really good point. thus far in my career i've worked in 4 units across 2 companies (all large corporations) and i've never had anything more than a brief intro to anyone above my manager's manager. in all cases there would be benefit from having the "skip meetings" you describe. issue I see is the manager two levels up committing to the time to meet with the ~60 employees individually.the only person I've met higher up is my manager's manager (aka skip meetings). Every company should have them. It's once every couple of months but at least you can talk about your manager face to face with his manager.
I feel seen! I've worked at companies with 5,000+ employees, 500 to 1,000 employees, and now work for a firm that has 12 employees. Left my last job for this one because the founder sold me on being a "partner" in building the business. 14 months in and I'm just another employee/profit center.I've worked for companies as small as 20 and as large as 100,000. I'll take the small company almost every time. The only two drawbacks I've seen from small companies is they typically don't/can't pay as well and if someone near the top sucks, it's probably going to suck. A small company with decent people to work with is definitely preferred in my book. I can't stand corporate culture. It's nauseating.
this is a really good point. thus far in my career i've worked in 4 units across 2 companies (all large corporations) and i've never had anything more than a brief intro to anyone above my manager's manager. in all cases there would be benefit from having the "skip meetings" you describe. issue I see is the manager two levels up committing to the time to meet with the ~60 employees individually.
https://www.reddit.com/r/LinkedInLunatics/just go on LinkedIn if you want enough corporate cringe for a lifetime
I once had a job where I had two titles on 2 different levels. I would have had to talk about myself.Skip meetings can be effective if everyone is on the same page.
Some skip meetings aren't given the time or preparation necessary to be a true benefit.
Like most everything else, a check the box process does very little.
I once had a job where I had two titles on 2 different levels. I would have had to talk about myself.
I inherited a group that non stopped complained. They would go to my boss because they thought if they didn’t see me i wasn’t working. CEO always told me about them, I was the largest profit center by 3-4x anybody and had to help oversee 6-8 other areas. So I was usually at one of those when I wasn’t in my main office.It would be next level if you could have a skip level and wedge the cost into an expense report.
That's going to be a time suck.https://www.reddit.com/r/LinkedInLunatics/
If you want to see cringe, check out that reddit thread. It's one of my favorites.
I didn't know that subreddit existed. Thank you!https://www.reddit.com/r/LinkedInLunatics/
If you want to see cringe, check out that reddit thread. It's one of my favorites.
I didn't know that subreddit existed. Thank you!
I read /r/antiwork which has plenty of horror stories on its own, but I suspect a lot of it is made up. A lot of the stories on there follow the same template. "I'm great at my job, but overworked. My A-hole boss made a ludicrous/impossible demand, so I quit on the spot. Now I have a job making double what I did before. My old boss begged me to come back and now he's fired/the company went out of business."
They're entertaining stories, but I put about as much credence in them as I do Penthouse Forums.
But most people can imagine themselves in one of these.I didn't know that subreddit existed. Thank you!
I read /r/antiwork which has plenty of horror stories on its own, but I suspect a lot of it is made up. A lot of the stories on there follow the same template. "I'm great at my job, but overworked. My A-hole boss made a ludicrous/impossible demand, so I quit on the spot. Now I have a job making double what I did before. My old boss begged me to come back and now he's fired/the company went out of business."
They're entertaining stories, but I put about as much credence in them as I do Penthouse Forums.
I'm sorry, but if it's still a dream after 14 years, it's probably never going to happen.Why do you have to crush my 14 year old dreams?