Tell me about jobs you've had, Eyeson.
Here's the scoop: I'm working for a sinking ship retailer and they're cutting my hours all over the place. So I'm currently looking for another job.
I have no experience with anything aside from retail and as such I'm kind of scared to apply for anything that isn't, well, retail. But I don't want to start applying for a bunch of jobs at random with no idea what I'm getting myself into. So what I'm asking for is this: what sorts of jobs have you had in the past? What were they like? Were they easy to get into? Etc. Hearing other peoples' experiences might give me a better idea of what to look for or consider. Thanks in advance, friends <3
Oh, and I know this is General Chat, but let's try to keep this one at least marginally on-topic, shall we? :greenie:
Steve, I beat your tl;dr BS whenever I talk about myself
If your background is in retail and you are trying to branch elsewhere, try to highlight your soft skills and then frame your hard skills to be 'this is what I know but I'm eager to learn'
Every time somebody talks about getting a job or interviews or resumes I post this. My idiot friend swore in the image so I won't hotlink it (he said the s word)
I should edit that word out, but i can't be bothered. OKAY my job history.
telecommunications installerWhen I was 16 years old and had absolutely no job experience I was hired by the company my dad worked for as a contractor during the summer. The company was a telecommunications installation corporation (I don't bloody remember the name - I know my dad used to work for Riser (like the term for a closet, iirc)) and my job basically was involved in terminating telephone (voice) and RJ-45 (data) cables once they were pulled and run into the office furniture position. Everything was taught to me on-site and I helped with some of the small stuff like pulling 100s of feet of cable all over the place. Man memories. I don't even know what happened to those guys bc my dad doesn't talk to them any more.
I made 10$ an hour. I had no expenses. I blew 100$ a day at the arcade like the middle east probably spends America's allocated wealth when it buys oil (omg so much money let's just throw it into Dubai)
....Anyway I did this job for a couple of years, and every year my dad would increase my wage. I eventually maxed out at 18$ an hour after 3 or 4 years, which was when my dad quit his job as he was expecting layoffs and took with him several clients.
wendy's and um...some pharmacyAnyway after high school I worked a short 2 month stint at Wendy's. I helped set up a new store and was a burger guy after I was trained to do everything else. The only thing I can say about a burger place is don't work there unless you have to - it's incredibly stressful during rush hour. However it was my first job where, for a lack of better words I was basically a robot. You want to be a robot, right? I love robotic work - when a system is set up that is streamlined by role, you can min/max your performance to reap optimal gainz.
Basically I'm saying I was an awesome goofball who made wendy's burgers.
After I switched majors from some sort of programming, I took a 3 week contract at a pharmacy. Nothing complicated - they needed us to repaint some several dozen racks that hold merchandise, then install the stuff. I got to spend 8 hours a day with 3 other azn (lol) kids - one was older than I was by quite a bit. I think this was when I subconsciously realized not to stick with blue collar work lest I end up like him. I mean he was awesome but like the guy who trained me in Wendy's he was in his 20s or late 20s or something and had no escape plan.
I'm telling you to look for a new job as an escape plan. Always move up.
I took the Wendy's job for 7.25 an hour and this pharmacy job for 7$ an hour. The pharmacy job was because a friend of my mom asked her - both times I worked those jobs because there wasn't enough work for the telecom installer.
When I was in my younger 20s I learned the rest of the telecommunications installations stuff. There's two ends to everything. One is in a big cool room where these metal stands are mounted to the ground and we terminate piles and piles of cables in an orderly manner. My dad is excellent - he taught me to run cables so that they don't end up tangled, and everything is fed in a specific manner to be very clean. I have seen some very sloppy crap in my day, and I can assure you my work never looks like that.
I'm now telling you that the work you leave behind should be a representation of you
I also learned how to terminate fiber optic cables! Man was that fun!
hong kongAnyway that job didn't go anywhere long term as you probably know. I spent a summer in Hong Kong where I worked as an auditor - very junior, time wasting nonsense. My uncle got me to make sure that the reported records sent in by his customers added up to what they claimed, and I was basically there to keep busy. They paid me the equivalent of about 800$ a month (a stipend) which I spent in the weekend drinking and being a huge slut.
Basically the best job ever. No I'm kidding. It was just fun.
Also you should note in this long winded story that I've never done a job that required a college education. The telecommunications installer job was a godsend in the sense that normally an accredited installer required a week long crash course in a program that costs about 3 grand.
It covered (loosely) how do physically do everything I already knew, plus the specifics of planning that I didn't (how far away our cables had to be from everywhere else, how far away from the switch room cables could be dragged before signal strength was too attenuated to be efficient (hey allies I used a physics term!)) - but was loosely familiar with in the testing process (oh so that's what those words meant!)
IBMUm...so that takes me to being 25 or 26 years old. At that time I came back, and was just bumming around the house. I thought about going back to Wendy's at some point (NOOOOOO) when I was shown this advertisement for a contracting company (Kelly Services). KS was hiring people to contract out to IBM for a new contract they had acquired. Bascially AT&T's internal helpdesk is (was..i'm pretty sure it's 'is' but I'm not 100%) contracted out to IBM where we acted as the level 1 helpdesk for problem description and hopefully first point resolution for their nonsense. omg outlook doesn't work. omg how do i use excel. omg windows. That sort of thing. If you think that's easy it's because it was. While we started with like 100 agents in order to basically maintain an acceptable initial level of performance, we eventually thinned out the ranks until 100 became...um...10. And the 10 of us took 75% of the calls every day. The rest eventually went to India.
Um..the summary here was that I helped people do desktop stuffs. Again all was trained on the spot. You could do this job Pike. You could do any of my jobs, actually.
After 2 years of this I was hired to do something else within the AT&T helpdesk umbrella. If you remember AT&T history they merged with (this was when I was hired btw, or around then) um... SBC [actually SBC bought out AT&T) and Bellsouth and some company that started with C or something I can't confirm in wikipedia. So they needed us to merge BellSouth's all wonky internal active directory (the system that manages users, computers, network drives, printers, etc) with the existing system that we were able to convince the other companies to follow. I was hired to basically do activations and changes to that system. We processed by my calculation something like 15 thousand (that's with 3 zeros) orders per month. I eventually quit that job for two reasons: the first was they kept cutting my wage, and the second was that I was basically goofing around for 6 hours every day because I was able to do 150 tickets in 2 hours, and it basically gave me ... 26 hours to do the next ticket (the turnaround time expected was 24 hours per ticket, so I was a thief and a jerk and a whatever and realized that I could work based on the assigned ticket's entry date, rather than work the whole day). Eventually they caught on when they ran the metrics and I was like well um er I just close tickets fast I guess??
Anyway I was going to be let go in a year anyway - the initial contract was for 5 years and there's zero reason to hire a contractor as an IBM employee to do a job that a contractor at contract wages was working.
Royal BankThat's when I go this current job which I'm STILL trying to escape. Now I work for the largest bank in the country basically telling commercial customers how to push money around. I sometimes streamline casual conversations to say that all I do is support some user-based java program that functions like a web banking interface, but it's so much more than that. Payroll, direct debits [automatic clearing house] , Positive Pay, Disbursement Auditor, wholesale lockbox, arg my head hurts I can't itemize it. If I have to update my CV i'm just going to ask my supervisor to send a link to my own job description.
The point though is even this job was taught on the fly. I spent like 2 months training until my brain was stuffed and i was passing out during the day when stuffed to capacity.
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So that's that. Right now I'm still at my last job, functioning at roughly the best agent on the desk despite being a new hire. That's only because my supervisors demand high turnover for their best performers. Everybody I look up to has been promoted, and since I came back from vacation I have been using the bank's internal self study programs to refresh myself on things like windows servers, and then later I'll refresh on active directory and the like. My friend (who got me this job) just got hired to do another job that sounds much easier than this job with more pay. This is my last bit of advice: I'm a lazy bastard so FIND A JOB THAT IS EASIER BUT PAYS MORE Don't tell me that they don't exist - there's CEOs that do nothing but have control over a bunch of stocks which they do insider trading or whatever to control prices to go up and down. That's like the super easiest job ever. Even easier than the time I wrote an essay lambasting globalisation just to get laid. So yeah easy jobs - go get one.