So unironically I’ve managed people that should have done what anon is doing.
Some people never fucking say no to work tasks and they waste all their time on the overhead and adhoc crap instead of actually doing their work.
I bet OP actually spends more time doing their job now, even with the fewer hours, because the secondary stuff doesn’t matter at all.
This is pretty succinct. It’s so easy to get bogged down answering questions that people can find themselves, helping with random shit, getting a pointless ad hoc report together so you know what you’re talking about in an email.
Honestly I spend so little time doing my actual job because of this extraneous shit I need to focus more.
Happened to me. I was passed over for a promotion to a position I was already filling in for years ago. So I stopped being helpful. I found another job. During my exit interview I was told that if I had been doing what I did during my last two weeks I would have gotten the position months before. It wasn’t the only reason I left, but it was definitely the straw that broke the camel’s back.
But once I left they gave the position to someone who, like me, had institutional knowledge and was disgruntled about a lot of things happening. But that person had no managerial training or experience so they ended up bleeding all their techs because he kept making bad decisions.
I think they got scared he would leave too. And he did. A year later and they only had one employee below the director who had been there longer than a few months. All that at least partly because no one would look at me and tell me to chill the fuck out and just do the job rather than doing all the jobs. They sure liked me doing all the jobs when I was just another guy in the bullpen.
Congrats Dutchman. You have won the rare " good boss". The boss is aware of your drop in productivity, and is assuming you need a vacation or something, but you are just doing less work instead. He sees that as a good thing.
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I managed to complete Starfield during my work hours with no complaints. It’s nice reaching the point in a job where you figure out how much you’re actually expected to do.
What job?
Starfield QA Tester.
Isn’t that just everyone who bought the game?
Dev/SysOps, because if you build shit that doesn’t collapse then you can spend time experimenting with improvements instead of babysitting application clusters.
How is that? I’ve had at least one friend in the Dev space recommend DevOps to me because of the way I contextualize systems, but I’m worried the work requires technical expertise and I’ve stubbornly refused to learn any programming
Less programming, more file templates. I did more scripting as Desktop Support than I do as a DevOps engineer. Most of the automation is handled by existing software. The main job is figuring out how to install software in an environment, then making templates that can replicate the install with different parameters and minimal effort.
I came into it with a CS degree as a graduate but I learnt most of it on the job.
So you Office Spaced yourself? Seems like a win.
6 hour shift happened
You’re now ready for upper management. The last step is to start drinking a little bit on the job.
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