Paul Reids Sock
Well-known member
Seriously, are you in the UK?
Yep, in Marlow
A very good company to work for and love it. But this has made me take a look at the people around me and see them in a totally different light
Seriously, are you in the UK?
Yep, in Marlow
A very good company to work for and love it. But this has made me take a look at the people around me and see them in a totally different light
He's been watching too much Mad Men and wants to be Don Draper. If he'd had whiskey in the glass then he might have got away with it. As it is, MASSIVE bell cheese.Wow, I'm torn.
On the one hand, that is obvious weapons-grade bellcheesery. On the other hand, it's so far off the scale that it might actually have swung round to impressive.
Edit: delighted to have got my 5,000th post in the bag on my favourite all-time NSC thread
And [MENTION=24975]St Leonards Seagull[/MENTION]
I'm not an NHS employee, but I'm interested to learn, approximately what percentage of replies were people replying to all with the fateful line 'Please remove me from this email'?
Or the other old faithful, multiple people trying to look important
'Guys, can we please stop the reply to all and asking to be taken off the list? You can ignore the conversation by following these steps...'
I previously mentioned the guy in front of me who has this annoying little cough. Well, the GREAT news is he now has a cold, so the cough has been turned up to ELEVEN.
Then the guy behind me seems to have STEPPED UP his constant foot tapping campaign.
Urgh, Mondays.
Considering there were hundreds probably thousands of them It went on for quite a while.
I worked for a big consultancy firm once, and one of the team in India sent a mail to 'everyone' about a charity cricket match. I think it went to around 55,000 staff. Basically nobody could use their email for a week due to the ridiculous number of 'reply to all' messages - with the two standard responses. The thing I liked the most was that after the dust had settled and we'd all deleted the several thousand messages we'd received, some imbeciles returned from holiday and kicked it all off again.
"What is this? I've got 2,000 messages from this. Please delete me from this thread"
"STOP SENDING ME THESE EMAILS."
"Please remove me as well"
"EVERYONE - stop replying to all"
"please remove me from email"
Etc.
I worked for a big consultancy firm once, and one of the team in India sent a mail to 'everyone' about a charity cricket match. I think it went to around 55,000 staff. Basically nobody could use their email for a week due to the ridiculous number of 'reply to all' messages - with the two standard responses. The thing I liked the most was that after the dust had settled and we'd all deleted the several thousand messages we'd received, some imbeciles returned from holiday and kicked it all off again.
"What is this? I've got 2,000 messages from this. Please delete me from this thread"
"STOP SENDING ME THESE EMAILS."
"Please remove me as well"
"EVERYONE - stop replying to all"
"please remove me from email"
Etc.
I suppose it could be used as a test to weed out all the morons working somewhere.
The fact I'm on NSC at the moment should tell you my current approach.
Nowhere near the same level but my boss just committed minor email bellcheesery. I handed in my notice last week and was told not to tell anyone until my client had been informed, which they still haven't as we're working on handover plans. Unfortunately he replied to one of my emails about this plan copying in one of the nosiest developers in the company. LITERALLY two minutes later I get an instant message from said developer which said "are you leaving then?"
Talking of notice what's the form here chaps. I've potentially got three months to serve. Obviously a true bell cheese would SWEEP DRAMATICALLY through the office, telling EVERYONE and making sure everyone knew how much the company would MISS them. I'm not doing that. But do you sit back and take it easy, giving your non-bellcheese colleagues more to do? Or try even harder in an effort to get everything professionally wrapped up, thus making you look like the kid who's trying too hard and also making everyone wonder why you're packing it in? The fact I'm on NSC at the moment should tell you my current approach.
But do you sit back and take it easy, giving your non-bellcheese colleagues more to do?
Nowhere near the same level but my boss just committed minor email bellcheesery. I handed in my notice last week and was told not to tell anyone until my client had been informed, which they still haven't as we're working on handover plans. Unfortunately he replied to one of my emails about this plan copying in one of the nosiest developers in the company. LITERALLY two minutes later I get an instant message from said developer which said "are you leaving then?"
Talking of notice what's the form here chaps. I've potentially got three months to serve. Obviously a true bell cheese would SWEEP DRAMATICALLY through the office, telling EVERYONE and making sure everyone knew how much the company would MISS them. I'm not doing that. But do you sit back and take it easy, giving your non-bellcheese colleagues more to do? Or try even harder in an effort to get everything professionally wrapped up, thus making you look like the kid who's trying too hard and also making everyone wonder why you're packing it in? The fact I'm on NSC at the moment should tell you my current approach.
Talking of notice what's the form here chaps. I've potentially got three months to serve. Obviously a true bell cheese would SWEEP DRAMATICALLY through the office, telling EVERYONE and making sure everyone knew how much the company would MISS them. I'm not doing that. But do you sit back and take it easy, giving your non-bellcheese colleagues more to do? Or try even harder in an effort to get everything professionally wrapped up, thus making you look like the kid who's trying too hard and also making everyone wonder why you're packing it in? The fact I'm on NSC at the moment should tell you my current approach.
I worked for a big consultancy firm once, and one of the team in India sent a mail to 'everyone' about a charity cricket match. I think it went to around 55,000 staff. Basically nobody could use their email for a week due to the ridiculous number of 'reply to all' messages - with the two standard responses. The thing I liked the most was that after the dust had settled and we'd all deleted the several thousand messages we'd received, some imbeciles returned from holiday and kicked it all off again.
"What is this? I've got 2,000 messages from this. Please delete me from this thread"
"STOP SENDING ME THESE EMAILS."
"Please remove me as well"
"EVERYONE - stop replying to all"
"please remove me from email"
Etc.
Ooooh. Did you get employee of the month last month? Hmmm? Did you?
I'm shirking from home today. So I can reply instead of just read
With regards to your predicament, I assume you are permanent, given your notice period - therefore I wouldn't worry all that much about doing the absolute best you can do - the onus is on the people you are handing over to, to ensure that they are happy with everything. And since no matter what you do, you are the scapegoat for at least two months after you've gone it seems silly to work tooo hard.
What this actually created was a maelstrom of auto answers over a two week period