sup bro? had no idea you're on cf.net actually drakkar noir (mon-thurs) and I make Fridays special with Night magic evening musk
I've voted a 2. I work at Auto Zone, and actually try to do it well and help the people. It's very easy to work there, but its not easy also have the willingness to help the people. Everybody wants Freon installed right now, I will show you how to do it, but I do not install Freon, please don't ask. lol
3/5 Nothing I do is hard, but it requires a lot of learning. Sitting in on information sessions, having people from other disciplines teach me a little something that they do, taking classes (ranging from day-long to two-week-long). I then take what I've learned and, depending on what it is, either teach our team of 60+ people about it, teach just a handful of them about it, or implement new procedures. And though that is an accurate job description, my job isn't even as difficult as that sounds. I'm at work for 40 hours a week, but I actually work for about 20 hours a week. The rest of the time I'm on CF or wandering the halls looking for free food.
My job isn't difficult. Just requires a lot of communication and reading. Rule number one is to NEVER ASSUME and work only with absolutes. (Learned the hard way.) Now work load, that's a different story. Not so bad right now, I have five open positions. Should have them all filled by next week. However, in a few weeks my colleague and I may be looking at about 150+ open positions.
I'd be curious to see how the much people correlated the difficulty of their job to how much they make? Do you give yourself a higher grade because you make good money and figure it has to be decently hard, otherwise everyone else would be doing it?
I make **** money compared the workload they give me. I almost have to go overtime every day to finish things up. It's not difficult, but just a crap load of stuff to do. I work in a team of 4 and we all had to stay way overtime.
Inside sales for an industrial/rigging supply house. Workload never ends! I voted a 3 though, because it is not rocket science.