The funniest thing about this whole comment is that she considers 3-4 hours of light social media work each day to be 'unacceptable.'
Bitch if you can't do a couple of fucking tik tok videos and social media posts in an entire workday you should not be working. Marry someone and start a family because complaining publicly about so little work is pathetic to everyone who actually has to put in a real day's work.
Insane. What is that like maybe an hour of work a day? I assume it's just stuff like "hey look what project Linus and the tranny is working on, click the link for the whole video. Oh and here buy some shit!"
Even if the expectation is a high presentation value that's nothing. I bet I do more work on a single day-to-day project than she does on that stuff in a week, and I'm expected to deliver a couple hundred such items a year on top of other work. I have a pretty cushy job too where I rarely require an 8 hour day.
Lots of red flags with this chick that make me think it's all exaggerated.
I think the difference here is when you're posting on behalf of a company, it becomes a different beast entirely.
Anything public facing usually needs to go through multiple levels of reviews / approvals, which can mean many rounds of changes and resubmission as they try to craft the perfect statement or message.
This also makes anything with video production typically work intensive (even for TikTok). You can potentially spend hours going through b-roll footage to distill something down to a 30 sec clip. And again, because it's the public face of a company, it will likely go through multiple reviews and changes before you actually get to the point of posting it.
And good luck trying to coordinate availability of people for new footage, especially if the staff are very overworked as the current controversy seems to indicate.
I've had to work with marketing teams for certain companies in the IT industry and have seen this first hand,
However, having said that, it seems pretty clear that a lot of the issues this girl was having were of her own doing...
If you're called into a meeting for drama after being in the role for 1 month, chances are that you're the issue.
If you're successfully pissing off everyone around you, it's probably you. To quote a line from the show 'Justified' - "If you run into an asshole in the morning, you ran into an asshole. If you run into assholes all day, you're the asshole."
And then there's this gem: "I purposefully cut my leg open so badly I would have to go to the ER to get it stapled back together." This isn't even close to a sane response to workload pressures - she probably had mental health issues coming into the role IMO.
The funniest thing about this whole comment is that she considers 3-4 hours of light social media work each day to be 'unacceptable.'
Bitch if you can't do a couple of fucking tik tok videos and social media posts in an entire workday you should not be working. Marry someone and start a family because complaining publicly about so little work is pathetic to everyone who actually has to put in a real day's work.
yeah, sounds really entitled
Zoomer generation in a nutshell from what I've seen online.
Time Blindness girl was the cherry
Insane. What is that like maybe an hour of work a day? I assume it's just stuff like "hey look what project Linus and the tranny is working on, click the link for the whole video. Oh and here buy some shit!"
Even if the expectation is a high presentation value that's nothing. I bet I do more work on a single day-to-day project than she does on that stuff in a week, and I'm expected to deliver a couple hundred such items a year on top of other work. I have a pretty cushy job too where I rarely require an 8 hour day.
Lots of red flags with this chick that make me think it's all exaggerated.
To be fair if I had to post on twitter for a living I'd want to kill myself too.
I think the difference here is when you're posting on behalf of a company, it becomes a different beast entirely.
Anything public facing usually needs to go through multiple levels of reviews / approvals, which can mean many rounds of changes and resubmission as they try to craft the perfect statement or message.
This also makes anything with video production typically work intensive (even for TikTok). You can potentially spend hours going through b-roll footage to distill something down to a 30 sec clip. And again, because it's the public face of a company, it will likely go through multiple reviews and changes before you actually get to the point of posting it.
And good luck trying to coordinate availability of people for new footage, especially if the staff are very overworked as the current controversy seems to indicate.
I've had to work with marketing teams for certain companies in the IT industry and have seen this first hand,
However, having said that, it seems pretty clear that a lot of the issues this girl was having were of her own doing...
If you're called into a meeting for drama after being in the role for 1 month, chances are that you're the issue.
If you're successfully pissing off everyone around you, it's probably you. To quote a line from the show 'Justified' - "If you run into an asshole in the morning, you ran into an asshole. If you run into assholes all day, you're the asshole."
And then there's this gem: "I purposefully cut my leg open so badly I would have to go to the ER to get it stapled back together." This isn't even close to a sane response to workload pressures - she probably had mental health issues coming into the role IMO.
Though the recent drama is caused by them having a lack of review or approval so that doesn't hold up