When they drag customers down the aisle.
They talk. I wish they'd stop.
I work for a growing engineering firm (Zweig Hot List, ENR Top 500, etc.) In the last 5 years, my previous company merged with the firm I'm now with, and we've bought out two other firms, with a few more acquisitions in the works.
One of the acquired firms was a small family owned architecture firm, and the entire staff merged into our operation. The principal of that firm, to this day, emails the entire company when he is going to be out of the office on vacation. Okay, dude. You used to work in a single-discipline office where everyone of the 30 employees interacted with you directly at some point during the week. You're now part of a multi-discipline, multi-office firm with a couple hundred employees. There are over a hundred people who have never met you, and will never interact with you. They do not give two flying ducks about whether or not you're on vacation. Have you not noticed that you are the ONLY person that sends out company-wide emails to announce your vacation plans?
Yes, what a novel idea. It's even company policy that we use auto-reply. But this @$$clown still feels the need to broadcast it.Setup auto-reply in Outlook. that will let those who try to get ahold of you know you're not around and will leave everyone else the hell alone
Co-workers? I'm self-employed. My boss is a jerk.
Mark
Personally, I HATE using auto-reply. I make it a point to never talk about my vacations or travel plans on social media, etc. for the express purpose of not advertising when I'm not home. And then my job forces me to broadcast to every spammer that happens to hit my email address that I'm not in the office (so probably on vacation and not home).
Our company prides itself on being responsive to clients, so the auto-reply is as much, if not more, for people outside of the organization than it is inside. Anyone inside can look at our Skype app and see that I haven't been at my desk for 4 days.Why do you hate it so much? Outlook gives you the option of only auto-replying to folks within your organization. Also, you don't have to specify why you're out of the office. My standard out-of-office message is "Hello and thank you for your email. I am currently out of the office with limited email access. I will respond to your message as soon as I return [sometimes I'll list the return date]".
Boom, done. You could be at home sick on the couch or in the jungles of Belize. No one knows why you're gone but at least they know you're gone and aren't left hanging.
We had one of those at the office for a while. I had to avoid the lunchroom whenever he was in there. Made me nauseous.Lady at work is possibly the loudest eater in the history of humanity.
I mean sweet Jesus close you damn mouth when you eat.
Sounds like a nat geo special on primates across from me.
And before anyone even says anything no shes not black that was not a joke I was making. We descended from apes.
Also has the most irritatingly consistent morning yogurt ritual.
Queue spoon on plastic cup.
Schhh schhh schhh eat
Schhh schhh schhh eat
Lady at work is possibly the loudest eater in the history of humanity.
I mean sweet Jesus close you damn mouth when you eat.
Sounds like a nat geo special on primates across from me.
And before anyone even says anything no shes not black that was not a joke I was making. We descended from apes.
Also has the most irritatingly consistent morning yogurt ritual.
Queue spoon on plastic cup.
Schhh schhh schhh eat
Schhh schhh schhh eat
automatic transmissions get better gas mileage than those with standard transmissions
Does she eat salad at lunch every day and attack her plate of greens like they were trying to escape?
We had one of those at the office for a while. I had to avoid the lunchroom whenever he was in there. Made me nauseous.
Hah! just found this thread... I need this outlet.
I work for a small company - about 15 employees. We hired a new guy in January straight out of college. We had interviewed 2 applicants, liked the other one better, but she accepted another offer...
It became clear within his first week that he had misrepresented his qualifications at the interview, but the consensus was that he was fresh out of school, and to let him grow into the position. One of the first things that he told me on his first day was that he was "really, really smart", which I took as a sign of someone who is not actually so. We share an office, and he talks constantly, and when he isn't talking he is whistling. I've taken to wearing large headphones when I need peace and quiet.
He doesn't take direction well, and has tried to reinvent the wheel on a myriad of issues - forgetting (or ignoring) that everyone else at the office has years of successful experience at this. He regularly bites off more than he can chew, and projects and deadlines suffer for it. He refuses to work off the shared server, preferring to save his work locally, and putting it on the server when he is "done", despite repeated requests to not do so. He is nearly always the last one in, and first one out, claiming that he is working from home through the VPN, but anything that does happen from home usually requires major revision, or he has some story about software not working for him, etc. For various reasons, I have had the pleasure of working with him on most of his projects.
We had a summer intern, and several times she came to me saying that the new guy was trying to foist his work off on her. She also told me that he claimed, as a 75% deadline was coming up on a project she was working on, that he liked to be at 100% at the 75% deadline. My reply was "he doesn't know what it feels like to be at 100% at the 75% deadline". She hinted to me that she liked the work we were doing, but wouldn't accept an offer if she had to work with this guy.
He is also an expert on just about everything (just ask him). He spent a 2 hour car ride with me one time trying to convince me that vehicles with automatic transmissions get better gas mileage than those with standard transmissions (I drive a standard, he drives an automatic). Besides saying that I didn't believe that to be the case as he first mentioned it, I just let it go. He would not drop it, and had all sorts of reasons why he was right, including something about the computers in the standard vehicles activating the brakes automatically when the gears were shifted.
Unfortunately, we are super-busy, and relatively short staffed. We cannot afford to give him the boot at the moment.
/ Rant over
He refuses to work off the shared server, preferring to save his work locally, and putting it on the server when he is "done", despite repeated requests to not do so.