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golfhack
golfhack

Do Any Of These Apply To Anyone Here?

16 comments, 252 views, posted 4:03 pm 16/09/2011 in Useful by golfhack
golfhack has 8897 posts, 3367 threads, 673 points, location: Next To The Bacon
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At one time or another, we have all known at least one person who has hated his or her job. That person may have suffered silently or vented constantly, but at the end of the day there was no question this person was truly unhappy with where they spent at least 40 of his or her waking hours every week, for 51 weeks a year.

The reasons for job dissatisfaction vary. Low pay, irregular hours, and lack of a window seat are all assumed to be culprits, and to be sure they can all contribute to a bad attitude on the job. These are actually not the primary factors driving a worker to regard tomorrow morning at 9 o’clock sharp with dread and ill will, however, according to one resource.
CareerBliss is an online resource that bases job satisfaction on multiple factors, including workplace culture, coworkers, and the boss.
According a survey of hundreds of thousands of employees conducted in 2011, CareerBliss determined the 10 most hated jobs, rated on a scale of 1 to 10. In almost all cases, respondents reported that the factors causing the most job dissatisfaction were not lousy pay or a desk near the bathroom. CareerBliss found that limited growth opportunities and lack of reward drove the misery index up more than anything else.
Below are the 10 jobs with the highest levels of employee unhappiness. The results may surprise you.

10. Marketing Manager
A marketing manager is responsible for overseeing advertising and promotion. This involves developing strategies to meet sales objectives, based on the study of such factors as customer surveys and market behavior.
According to CareerBliss, respondents in this position most often cited a lack of direction as the primary reason for job dissatisfaction. The most optimistic respondent described it as “tolerable,” and gave it the faintest praise possible by saying, “It’s a job.” (In this labor market, that's not such a bad thing.)

9. CNC Machinist
CNC machinists operate computer numerical control machines. For the uninitiated, this is a machine that operates a lathe or a mill. On the upside, it renders obsolete processes that used to be performed by hand, at a slow pace and with high risk to the operator’s life and limb.
Now that the CNC operator has had most of the physical hazards of manufacturing replaced by a machine, there’s not a lot to do but push buttons and perform equipment inspections to make sure the coolant is at a safe level. Since it’s a specialized skill, the job offers no room for advancement, which caused respondents to report a high degree of dissatisfaction.

8. Technical Support Analyst
Technical support analysts help people with their computer issues. This typically amounts to calmly communicating technical advice to panicked individuals, often over the phone, and then going on site to find the client simply hadn’t turned the printer on.
Technical support analysts often work in a variety of environments, and they may be required to travel at a moment’s notice, sometimes on holidays or weekends. After all, there’s no telling when a client’s computer-whiz nephew might make a minor tweak to his machine, with disastrous results.
In the words of one of the respondents, “You can do better, really.”

7. Law Clerk
Clerkships are among the most highly sought-after positions in the legal profession. A law clerk assists judges as they write opinions, and the ones who get the job are almost always near the top of their class at law school. Six justices of the U.S. Supreme Court, including Elena Kagan and current Chief Justice John Roberts, were all law clerks early in their careers.
The job clearly beefs up a resume. Yet law clerks still report high levels of dissatisfaction. The hours are long and grueling, and the clerk is subject to the whims of sometimes mercurial personalities. The Bureau of Labor Statistics also reported the job brings in a median salary of $39,780 a year—not exactly striking it rich—and those looking for advancement within the position simply will not find it.

6. Electronics Technician
Electronics technicians maintain, troubleshoot and collect monthly measurement data for electronic systems. They work in every sector and can be employed with the phone company, a chain of fast-food restaurants, or the U.S. Navy. Whatever the case, technicians work on-site and off-site, have constant contact with clients, and must have an ability to quickly solve complex technical problems under intense pressure.
Employee dissatisfaction in this job is attributable to several factors. One respondent complained of having “too little control,” while another had a litany of complaints: “Work schedule, lack of accomplishment, no real opportunity for growth, peers have no motivation to work hard, no say in how things are done, hostility from peers towards other employees.”

5. Technical Specialist
A technical specialist “leads the analysis, definition, design, construction, testing, installation, and modification of medium to large infrastructures,” according to CareerBliss. This means that if a company wants to design a project, the technical specialist evaluates it to see what’s possible and what isn’t.
The job is a lead position that requires intimate knowledge of engineering; familiarity with Linux helps, too. However, technical specialists reported that for all their expertise, they were treated with a palpable level of disrespect. They cited a “lack of communication from upper management” and felt their “input was not taken seriously.”

4. Senior Web Developer
Senior web developers design, maintain, and develop applications for the Internet. With every business expected to have some kind of Internet presence these days, developers are found working in every type of company, in a full-time, part-time, or freelance capacity.
A senior developer is expected to be fluent in client-side and server-side contexts, and know his or her way around Python, Ruby, or whatever other arcane technology requires taming. Senior developers reported a high degree of unhappiness in their jobs, attributable to a perception their employers are unable to communicate coherently, and lack an understaning of the technology.

3. Product Manager
”Product manager” is a wide-ranging job title that takes on many meanings, depending on the company and its sector. In some cases, the job requires simply evaluating what products are best suited to a company’s business model, and in others marketing, resource management, and scheduling are involved.
The level of job dissatisfaction was very high for this position. One respondent complained that it restricted growth, saying that it was “very hard to grow up the ranks.” Another was less polite and said “the work is boring and there's a lot of clerical work still at my level.”

2. Director of Sales and Marketing
A director of sales and marketing plans implements efforts to promote companies and generate business. Responsibilities often include budget management, public relations, and employee training.
Sales and marketing directors reported the second-highest level of job dissatisfaction of all survey respondents. The majority who responded negatively cited a lack of direction from upper management and an absence of room for growth as the main sources of their ire.

1. Director of Information Technology
For all the press that teachers and nurses get for their long hours, low pay and thankless tasks, it may be surprising to see the most hated job was that of information technology director, according to CareerBliss. After all, the salary’s pretty good and with information technology such a prevalent part of everyday business, an IT director can hold almost as much sway over the fate of some companies as a chief executive.
Still, IT directors reported the highest level of dissatisfaction with their jobs, far surpassing that of any waitress, janitor, or bellhop. Of those who responded to the survey, one simple, five-word response summed up the antipathy very well: “Nepotism, cronyism, disrespect for workers.”

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Comments

0
4:04 pm 16/09/2011

Cnik

#4....

0
4:06 pm 16/09/2011

golfhack

In your opinion is it worthy of being ranked 4th most hated job?

3
4:16 pm 16/09/2011

Cnik

I go home nightly wanting to kill most of our users....

1
4:17 pm 16/09/2011

evolution

I've already resigned to the fact that I'll probably never find a job that I love. My goal in life is simply to find a job that I hate the least.

0
4:24 pm 16/09/2011

Viscera

I haven't been in any of those professions, but I can tell yu that my job as a rest mgr was fun most of the time, except when presumptuous assholes decided to show their power by mistreating the staff because of the premise that the "customer is always right" attitude that really was prevalent in NYC and here on Cape Cod. Entitlement attitudes made the job frustrating

1
4:27 pm 16/09/2011

golfhack

The customer is always right probably worked better when we had a more civil society; now it's just license to be an ass or assette.

1
4:42 pm 16/09/2011

FlyOnTheWall

As an IT Consultant working for a company supporting SME's , I do #1, #5, #8.

What makes it worse is that as a consultant, most of the clients think you make suggestions to improvements only to try and make money, even though their kit is comparable to a WW2 biplane, but they expect a F22 Raptor's performance from it!

1
4:43 pm 16/09/2011

Viscera

Of course in the end the customer isn't always right, although you can't express that to them. But especially in NYC, it was so apparent that these people were flexing their muscles to compel people to obey them because in the rest of their lives they were powerless. But it's hard to juggle the responsibility to the job and the defending my staff

1
5:18 pm 16/09/2011

Quaektem

Quote by evolution:
I've already resigned to the fact that I'll probably never find a job that I love. My goal in life is simply to find a job that I hate the least.



Lol, if you loved doing it they wouldn't need to pay you to do it!

1
6:13 pm 16/09/2011

blackspy

I'm a senior dev, and have been hating every second of it for the last few months lately.

2
6:16 pm 16/09/2011

Cnik

We have a problem where our sales team sells our application to new sites and promises them that it can do things that it cannot do.
This makes it so that we have to do last minute improvements (usually badly written patches to already badly structured code) all the time.

1
6:16 pm 16/09/2011

Lavane

#6, one year was all i could handle.

0
7:05 pm 16/09/2011

z0phi3l

I used to be #8

The lack of proper venting caused massive migraines, will not let that happen again

1
7:08 pm 16/09/2011

backroom

Quote by Quaektem:
Lol, if you loved doing it they wouldn't need to pay you to do it!


That explains what I make.

1
8:42 pm 16/09/2011

Quaektem

Well there ya go! I could make more than what I do as well, but I can't work in misery any longer. It's too destructive to those around us when we go home.

I make enough to support what we have and do extra work for the extras. If I don't love my job I am content with it and that makes me very happy I have it.

1
8:45 pm 16/09/2011

backroom

I will not say I love my job.

I love what I do for a living.

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