You put your best foot forward during your job interview. You wear
your costliest formal shirts and make impeccable claims to sell
yourself. Once you’ve been working at a place, you get a little more
comfortable.

Did it ever occur to you that employers might also
be hiding their true colours during an interview? The dream job with
the friendly boss who has an open-door policy might turn into a
nightmare as soon as you sign the offer letter.

Here are six true-life signs that you shouldn’t stick around at your new job.

• You hint to your new boss for office perks and you are handed stationary - 
nothing else

Not
every company has the budget to give you an expense account, a
BlackBerry and a cutting-edge laptop, but you should be equipped with
the tools necessary to perform your job. A company experiencing
financial troubles might be so stingy with supplies that you spend more
time worrying about the company books than working.

• You were shown your space on your first day of work, given a company manual 
and you haven’t spoken to anyone since

Any
good employer trains new hires during their first few days on the job.
Although you might have years of experience, each company has its own
procedures and expectations that you won’t magically know without some
instruction. From the first day, your new employer should make it clear
that you have a network of support ready to help you and answer any
questions.

• You get the same reaction every time you tell someone about your new job and 
employer

Raised eyebrows and “Really? … Good luck with that.”

You
know better than to believe gossip, but sometimes a company’s
reputation speaks too loudly to ignore. If friends, colleagues and
people in the industry consistently give negative feedback about the
company, there’s probably a legitimate reason. At the start of your job
search, research which companies have the best reputations and which
have the worst.

After two weeks on the job, you are already halfway to becoming the employee 
with the most seniority.

One
of the reasons the country’s top companies have employees who have been
around for years is that people will stay where they’re appreciated and
treated well, and they’ll leave when they’re not.

• Your company secretary gets calls from collection agenicies

While
this sounds unbelievable, this actually happened to one worker, who
said other employees at the company were eventually instructed to not
answer the phones! If you see any signs that your company is in real
financial or legal trouble, don’t wait for layoffs; get your rsum back
out on that job site.

• You regularly notice people coming out with grim expressions from your boss’s 
office

Finally,
about the person who hired you. Not every boss is the kind you want to
be best friends with, but you should show each other respect. If you
can’t have a conversation with your boss without being yelled at, don’t
feel obligated to stick around. A good company uses open communication,
not fear and intimidation, to get results.

It may take a few
days, weeks or even months to realise the new job isn’t right for you.
The key is to recognise the signs and leave when you can. 
Group Moderator for  
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  
Connect your World with Us join Now - 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dimpill_gang/join  
  
Affiliated group from dimpill_gang for Only Adult Mails - 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/fantazies/join 
 
Affiliated group from dimpill_gang for Only Health and Food Mails -  
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Health_and_Gourmet/join




      Forgot the famous last words? Access your message archive online at 
http://in.messenger.yahoo.com/webmessengerpromo.php

Reply via email to