Some of my biggest frustrations at work include:
1.) Upper level supervisors and vice presidents who by-pass my boss to hand me assignments directly. These people tend to dump loads (and I mean big loads) of work on my desk and then expect me to ignore everything else until these "priority" projects are completed.
2.) Unions. They are are an antiquated form of worker representation that protect the dead wood and hold back the useful and productive employees. I just returned from working a strike at one of our sister plants. I hope to never cross another picket line again. My next position will be in a non-union facility, god-willing.
3.) Arbitrarily lax rules that are used to discipline employes due to their personal connections, race, and/or gender. I have seen employees commit acts of deliberate sabotage on specific projects and others who have physically threatened co-workers. Such acts would have certainly lead to my immediate termination had I committed them. Yet these people continue in their jobs without even a reprimand.
4.) No raise for the last three years running, even though I have rated near or at the top in the performance reviews for my department. And if raises are ever handed out, we will all recieve exactly the same percentage, irrespective of our individual performance.
5.) Being told that I'm overqualified. When I was a student
![[smarty] [smarty] [smarty]](/data/assets/smilies/smarty.gif)
I never imagined that a Ph.D. would become such a handicap in the workplace, but at least 90% of the hiring managers in companies where I have applied have given me this response.
6.) The difficulty in finding another job that pays at least as well as the one I have now. It's hard to believe that there aren't more of them out there. If you review the salary charts posted by any of the engineering societies, I fall below or just barely within the average pay range for my discipline, taking into account my degree level and years of experience.
7.) The statement by upper level management that we must change the way we do things to become more cost competitive, while at the same time receiving no support from these same individuals when we run into roadblocks while attempting to implement these changes.
8.) Pointy-haired bosses. Scott Adams had it right - they're everywhere.
Maui