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Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
I befriended a kid at chess club in the city. I then became friends with his dad and somehow his work came up and he said that he had summer positions available at his portfolio management. We talked and arranged an agreement where I would come to work for him where I would do some grunt work and learn about the field in return. I would also get paid a little bit, but probably not more than minimum wage.
For the summer I worked for this office doing everything from filing to writing and designing fixed income reports for the more needy clients. This was a huge pain in the ass because I had to look up all of their fixed income holdings and write up a schedule of what they would receive each month and when the principal would be paid for the next 5 years. This doesn't sound too bad but with many clients with many millions of dollars and tons of different holdings, it really sucks. Anyway, I do crap work like this most of the time and get in on some meetings and learn some basic stuff, which is mostly procedural, uninteresting, and unhelpful to me. I had talks with my boss who was very nice with me and repeatedly promised that I would learn more. At that point I thought I was interested in this field and stock valuation, etc. so I was excited about the opportunity. However, projects frequently came up that had to be done immediately and the learning part of the agreement was never fulfilled in my opinion. Anyway, after I worked full time in the sumemr like this, I worked half days while in school for a couple weeks. I had one more discussion with him during the school year about my need to learn (because obviously 5$/hr is not enough to be paid for this crap, especially when you consider that after BART every day it works out to ~4/hr) to do this job. Another project came up and I basically decided it wasn't worth the hassle and quit. By quit I mean that I stopped showing up. I felt that I didn't owe this bastard any professional courtesy because he did not live up to his end of our agreement, and in effect, wasted my summer. Do I owe him the courtesy of showing up and telling him face to face that I quit? |
#2
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
well it was probably worth giving him notice simply to have a good reference in the future.
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#3
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
Will you ever have any need to use this position on a resume? If so, mistake I think. Either way, I don't really understand why you handled it the way you did. Seems you answered your own question already, though.
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#4
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
Don't burn bridges.
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#5
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
send him a singing telegram. include something about him grabbing his own ankles from now on.
In all seriousness, I think you should've quit the traditional way. |
#6
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
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#7
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
you handled it in the most idiotic and immature way possible.
You had an amazing opportunity to network and get known with a business and industry. In the finance industry people are extremely busy and dont have time to sit there and teach you. Coming from such an industry I can't begin to tell you how huge of an opportunity you [censored] up. When you think that all you had to do was show up, be dependable and build relationships to provide yourself with a significant advantage in getting a job over other graduates it becomes clear of just how big of an idiot you are. |
#8
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
[ QUOTE ]
you handled it in the most idiotic and immature way possible. You had an amazing opportunity to network and get known with a business and industry. In the finance industry people are extremely busy and dont have time to sit there and teach you. Coming from such an industry I can't begin to tell you how huge of an opportunity you [censored] up. When you think that all you had to do was show up, be dependable and build relationships to provide yourself with a significant advantage in getting a job over other graduates it becomes clear of just how big of an idiot you are. [/ QUOTE ] <peep> it was just a summer job @ min wage </peep> but yes this situation was not handled optimally |
#9
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
[ QUOTE ]
<peep> it was just a summer job @ min wage </peep> but yes this situation was not handled optimally [/ QUOTE ] Freshman year of school I got a minimum wage part time job in a very small tax preperation office. My duties were answering the phone, making copies, filing etc. Overtime I built a relationship with the manager of the office and impressed him with my work ethic and desire to go above my required duties by trying to improve the efficiency of the office. At the end of the year he retired, he was so impressed with me he convinced the owner to pay for me to get my license and take over the office for him. My sophmore and junior year I ran the office. The summer of my junior year had an offer with the 2nd largest accounting firm in the world a year before graduation, primarily because of that experience which started as a minimum wage part time job. |
#10
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Re: Do I owe this employer professional courtesy?
[ QUOTE ]
you handled it in the most idiotic and immature way possible. You had an amazing opportunity to network and get known with a business and industry. In the finance industry people are extremely busy and dont have time to sit there and teach you. Coming from such an industry I can't begin to tell you how huge of an opportunity you [censored] up. When you think that all you had to do was show up, be dependable and build relationships to provide yourself with a significant advantage in getting a job over other graduates it becomes clear of just how big of an idiot you are. [/ QUOTE ] You are very harsh, fucker. I appreciate your honesty. Given what you said, I should reply that I'm 17 and have no idea what I want to do with my life. I thought finance might be an area I was interested in, and it turns out that it's not. I have college ahead of me to figure out what it is that I want to do but I can say that I am pretty sure I don't intend to go into finance. I took the job to find out whether or not I wanted to pursue the field. Making connections, etc. was just a bonus. I guess I should call the boss in case I need a referral though. Mostly I was just pissed that he wasted my summer and didn't live up to his end of our agreement. He got a competent, fast worker to do stuff for him dirt cheap. Everything that I did he would have had to do, so I saved him an incredible amount of money. |
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