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IN NEED OF IDEAS

I started a new job about 2 years ago that lately has me feeling overworked, under-compensated, undervalued, under-appreciated, and in general, like I am being taken advantage of most of the time. I never received appropriate training, have to use inefficient, outdated, and often faulty IT, and in general have not been given the resources, authority, or support I need to do my job well.

On the other hand, the company is very laid back, gives me a pretty great degree of flexibility, and is one of the most ethical employers I have ever worked for (which is absolutely critical in my profession). I have a nice corner office with windows, can work from home if/when I want to, have an excellent retirement plan, and truly believe in the company's mission.

However, as already stated, I am just not happy in general anymore, and my situation has been getting more and more untenable by the month. I have tried several times to open a dialog with my boss (the CFO), but he either can't take a hint, is too busy, or just plain doesn't care. Much of the problem is my compensation (it is significantly below the average salary for my position), the lack of support and proper resources to do my job, that I do not have the necessary authority that my responsibilities require, and that I am treated poorly by a couple of key personnel who are part of what I call the "legacy crowd" (a rather exclusive core of people who have been with the organization since it opened in the 1970's).

I really do not want to leave and have to start new again somewhere else (especially at my age), and I would think the company would also want avoid having to find a suitable replacement, too - especially in today's employee job market.

So how, exactly, do I go about a) getting my boss's attention, and b) appropriately communicating that I am nearing the end of my rope, and why? And at what point does one have to simply say "screw it" and just start updating his resume?

Piratefish 7 Sep 6
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3 comments

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2

Is there any chance you d get ahead at your current company? If you're always going to be 3 rungs down on the ladder, underneath the "legacy" crowd, you're kinda screwed. Then again, you might be a couple retirements and broken hips away from a huge promotion. Is that an option?

When they brought me aboard 2 years ago, it was to be the current CFO's successor when he retires in 2022. Which I think might be why a couple of people from the legacy crowd have been treating me like shit.

@Piratefish it sounds like "MeanGirls" from HS, are you on good terms with rhe CFOs boss?

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If your doing your job at or above your employers expectations then in thier opion you have enough training, resources, authority, and support to accomplish your job - because you are.

...has me feeling overworked, under-compensated, undervalued, under-appreciated, and in general, like I am being taken advantage of most of the time.
Sounds like capitalism to me.

Don't drop hints and hope your boss picks up on them - won't happen. Do you have a formal review proccess, annual, biannual?

1of5 Level 8 Sep 6, 2019

Not having those things, but doing a good job despite them, is why I am starting to think about leaving. I do not get compensated nearly well enough to keep doing this for much longer. And they will have the same issue with whoever comes in behind me. In many aspects, the place is still stuck in the 1980's - especially with IT and pay rates for certain positions. They have let the HR manager make most of the compensation decisions and policies, and she is an idiot with no idea. She put herself at the very top of the heap and set compensation for professionals like they are admin assistants - unless you are her friend. Worse, she has never worked anywhere else, so she has no idea of what is going on in the business world today. For her, it is the same as when she graduated and started with the company in the early 80's.

@Piratefish what I'm trying to say is if you're doing your job to thier satisfaction - despite you not being fully trained (in your opinion) - would make them think you are trained well enough. They have no reason to invest more time/energy/money in you to get more out of you.

You can't fix HR. Look for work elsewhere, and be honest but not brutal when you give notice.

0

Have you considered that they or maybe just your boss is trying to push you to quit? If that's the case, how does that change the situation?

I doubt it. I would not be easy to replace at all.

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