Yes, we have one of these at work - my patience with her is worn almost to snapping point.
That's the 'Peter Principle"
every employee will rise or get promoted to his or her level of incompetence
Are you really sure you're not bitter?...and no matter that they aren't a team player, and fit work around their home life, like it's a hobby.....if you aren't fully prepared to bend over backward to accommodate their every need, you find yourself in the firing line....
Get away with absolutely anything....literally all their mistakes however HUGE either go completely unnoticed by your boss, swept under the carpet or laughed off. Talk to people like shit, if they can be bothered at all....but this is merely seen as 'their quirky little way'.
They are also the ones that get paid more than you, probably & never get any reprimand.....
....and then manage to get a promotion.
I'm not bitter, I keep coming up against this. It's just an observation.
Nope. Recruitment industry: if you're no good- fired. If you're really good, - paid shit loads. Nice and simple. Avoids the above situation completely.
Nope. Recruitment industry: if you're no good- fired. If you're really good, - paid shit loads. Nice and simple. Avoids the above situation completely.
Normally young hipsters who think they're something but in reality they're notEstate agency always looks like it's similar. Poor basic wages, but the sky's the limit, especially with SE England property prices and therefore commission.
But both sectors vulnerable to recessions as both house sales and recruiting grind to a halt.
Estate agency always looks like it's similar. Poor basic wages, but the sky's the limit, especially with SE England property prices and therefore commission.
But both sectors vulnerable to recessions as both house sales and recruiting grind to a halt.
What skills does one need to decide who will be best for a role they have never done?
That depends on what industry you recruit in. House sales always crash in recessions, recruitment isn't necessarily affected in some markets.
Love the assumption everyone works in a office
In recessions, in the professions I've come across, recruitment consultants got more pushy in recessions, as they competed for a cut of a very decreasing cake. For example, during the 2008 to 2012 recession, law, accountancy, finance, City, banking sectors contracted, VERY MUCH INCLUDING BRIGHTON AND CENTRAL LONDON/CITY, with employers going bust or holding onto to what they had. The temps side did give some steady recruitment income. I personally know quite a few recruitment consultancies that threw in the towel in that period, early retiring etc.
But overall, I agree that there's fantastic money to be made from recruitment.
I am nice to my boss, they are nice to me. I am nice to my assistant, they are nice to me. My immediate situation is all nice.
However, in the company I work in, there's all to much of what I describe happening around me. People who are just little weasels who talk absolute bollocks constantly, in the expense of those who actually put a good days work in, consistently for no reward.