a stable and healthy career includes obtaining desired skills that are hard to replace.
Not even necessarily hard to replace, just not easy.
Show up, do good work. Occasionally you'll get screwed, but if you really do good work, you'll generally land on your feet...and your ex-boss will probably suffer under a string of subhuman retards he tried to replace you with.
and your ex-boss will probably suffer under a string of subhuman retards he tried to replace you with.
My experience is that the ex-boss in this scenario is also a subhuman retard and will learn nothing because he wouldn't know a good worker if it bit him in the ass. Your advice is still good. It's ultimately on the worker to a place that's well run.
Not even necessarily hard to replace, just not easy.
Show up, do good work. Occasionally you'll get screwed, but if you really do good work, you'll generally land on your feet...and your ex-boss will probably suffer under a string of subhuman retards he tried to replace you with.
My experience is that the ex-boss in this scenario is also a subhuman retard and will learn nothing because he wouldn't know a good worker if it bit him in the ass. Your advice is still good. It's ultimately on the worker to a place that's well run.
yep. it's amazing how rare the "actually doing the work" and "endeavoring to do good work" skills are.