TE
科技回声
首页24小时热榜最新最佳问答展示工作
GitHubTwitter
首页

科技回声

基于 Next.js 构建的科技新闻平台,提供全球科技新闻和讨论内容。

GitHubTwitter

首页

首页最新最佳问答展示工作

资源链接

HackerNews API原版 HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 科技回声. 版权所有。

People are feeling stuck in their jobs

30 点作者 borisk10 个月前

9 条评论

neonate10 个月前
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.md&#x2F;e4dpa" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.md&#x2F;e4dpa</a>
jacknews10 个月前
And it&#x27;s even worse being stuck out of a job.<p>It seems like such a crazy dynamic at the moment, there must be some sage economic&#x2F;social&#x2F;network theory that helps explain what&#x27;s going on.<p>Perhaps it&#x27;s just a case of &#x27;social collusion&#x27; in finance; I&#x27;m sure it has a better name. Excuse my memory, but I recall with the dot-com bubble a particular financial analyst, I can&#x27;t remember her name, called out the emperor&#x27;s lack of clothes, and very shortly after the market crashed. This time, again forgive the memory lapse, a financier targeted Google and tech wages, even though I&#x27;m not sure wages can ever really be in a bubble, and seems, along with or just signalling, the fed&#x27;s machinations, to have triggered this wave of layoffs, etc.
评论 #40897066 未加载
评论 #40896914 未加载
ChrisMarshallNY10 个月前
One thing that we have, these days, is the luxury of believing that we have a right to be happy in our jobs. Tech people have this in spades. I love working in tech. It inspires and motivates me. I like it so much, I kept doing it, long after I no longer needed to.<p>I think that&#x27;s actually a fairly recent thing (like leisure time, which was really something only rich people had, once upon a time). There&#x27;s still plenty of jobs that people have to do, that they don&#x27;t look forward to, and are waiting for retirement. Some, pay quite well, but they aren&#x27;t fun.<p>It&#x27;s great to make a good living, and have a vocation that energizes and motivates us. We spend the majority of our time at our gig, so it makes sense that we should be happy, there. Employers want us to be happy, so we&#x27;ll spend more time with them.<p>But there&#x27;s a price to be paid for being relaxed and happy. I find that I need pressure, to get stuff shipped. These days, I do it for free (retired), and have to provide my own pressure. It works. The trick for most managers, is to be able to keep the pressure up, without making life miserable for their employees, because miserable employees are not productive ones.<p>I knew a very well-paid Derivatives Analyst (so you know this was a while ago). She used to work for a major bank, and told me how they would bring catered meals to her desk, and provide complimentary limousine drives home, if she stayed past train time. They also had world-class daycare.<p>She was pretty happy with her job, and stayed, until the bottom fell out of the market. I didn&#x27;t have much contact with her, at that time, but I know she bounced around a bit. Not sure what she&#x27;s up to, nowadays. I&#x27;m sure that she was under a tremendous amount of pressure, but some folks thrive on it. I know that she made a shitload of money, for a while.
评论 #40897193 未加载
评论 #40897756 未加载
评论 #40897390 未加载
评论 #40901368 未加载
评论 #40897352 未加载
parpfish10 个月前
One solution:<p>Let employees earn the ability to take a low-pay sabbatical once they get an itch to leave and&#x2F;or burnout. Companies make extended absences work for parental leave, so just do that for more people more often
评论 #40897109 未加载
firesteelrain10 个月前
Neat program of internal try before you buy job rotation program. Even internally, employees have feel like they can leave or they never will. It helps both the employee and company grow.<p>Never a fan of constant job hopping myself - I think you need time to grow and that doesn’t mean chasing salary for your entire life. It’s important to settle somewhere for a while and learn&#x2F;grow.<p>So it’s good if a company is big enough to find creative ways to keep employees engaged
评论 #40897121 未加载
评论 #40897320 未加载
评论 #40897283 未加载
评论 #40896949 未加载
_-_-__-_-_-10 个月前
I work in education. More specifically, primary education. I chose the field because I was passionate about wanting the change the landscape and modernize teaching practices. But, it was also very in-demand in my area and easy to get a job in the field. I live in a former large manufacturing hub for the auto industry. Working in publicly funded education, we have strong union protections, pensions, healthcare and life insurance. In large part because of the past gains from the manufacturing sector. The job comes with security and a set salary on a defined grid.<p>This past year marked my tenth full-time year in teaching. I&#x27;ve been reflecting often on my career thus far. When I started out, I wasn&#x27;t sure that I would continue teaching primary school. I promised myself that I would do it for five years and keep savings high to allow myself to return to studying if I wanted to change fields. Most of my fellow graduates work now in government or education. Ten years in, I have a competitive salary that allows me a good standard of living. I didn&#x27;t return to school. Although, I did upgrade courses to allow me to change roles. And, I&#x27;m now on the edge of starting a family. The career that I was fortunate and lucky enough to start is actually a perfect fit for having children.<p>The thing is I do feel stuck. There aren&#x27;t many other career paths that would give me the same salary and job-security. I&#x27;m decent at the job. But, I&#x27;m not enjoying it. It&#x27;s ridiculously stressful. Doesn&#x27;t feel as fulfilling as it did. And, there is a culture of working on your off-hours to do the tasks that we aren&#x27;t actually remunerated to do. Being a government employee, you often feel that your working environment is changing at the whims of politicians.<p>Because I&#x27;m passionate about technology. That&#x27;s why I read hn. But, my only experience in tech was seeing entry-level help-desk workers and area tech support consultants. It seemed like miserable work. I was told my many respected adults, that technology could continue to be my passion and major hobby. It&#x27;s true, my standard of living does allow me every tech toy I could have ever wanted and new computers I could only dream about. I&#x27;m weighing the positives and negatives.
评论 #40897403 未加载
generic9203410 个月前
From the article:<p>&gt; The challenge for companies, executives say, is how to find ways to create growth opportunities even if that doesn’t mean a substantial pay raise or a title change.<p>I do not think this is new. In the company I am working for this happens at least since the early 00s. For most employees it only works for some years, though.
mouzogu10 个月前
&gt; &quot;I’m at a point where I want to start looking at the next step, the next level within our company, the 46-year-old said. “I’m learning every day.”<p>i realised recently that covid has made me un-hireable.<p>this type of thinking, i can&#x27;t do it anymore. i&#x27;ve tasted freedom and i saw how short life is to waste in a office.
kkfx10 个月前
Honestly I feel to be stuck in a society who reject evolution... Witch is worse because changing job is hard, changing society well... FAR harder...