In article <
tiu2j8lskcjkj76uu...@4ax.com>,
Kevin Goebel <kevin@at@
kevingoebel.dot.com> wrote:
><AOL>Me too!</AOL> After a few years of standard employee reviews by
>supervisors, our department went squirrely during our annual performance
>reviews.
Unfortunately, our whole university decided that this was clearly the
Modern and Standard Business Best Practice and it must be adopted
across the entire institution. Perhaps not suprising, because the
B-school bit is unreasonably effective at getting its bad ideas
adopted by Mahogany Row. They're the ones who are responsible for the
entire university moving to Exchange, so that they can send noxious
Outbreak calendar crap to all their correspondents. (Nobody cared so
long as it was limited to their own School, but they got this idea
that they could collaborate better with the School of Science and the
School of Engineering if they forced everyone to use it. Or something
similarly inane. Last I checked, more of our users used the horrid
Javashit app from that search-engine company than forwarded their mail
to the campus Exchange setup. (Which IIRC requires something like two
dozen servers to work right.)
>A minor silver lining of the bank/auto economic collapse was that with wages
>frozen by the company, they decided there was no need for annual reviews.
Sorry to hear that. We at least haven't lost ground, but the raise
pool this year was barely enough[1] to counteract the increase in
Social Security taxes this year.
-GAWollman
[1] As in, $7 and change a month for me, after taxes. They're
theoretically working on getting us real raises (I haven't had a
proper one since 2001), but I'll believe that when I see it --
particularly considering how "sequestration" is likely to affect our
budget if nothing is done before the next fiscal year.
--
Garrett A. Wollman | What intellectual phenomenon can be older, or more oft
wol...@bimajority.org| repeated, than the story of a large research program
Opinions not shared by| that impaled itself upon a false central assumption
my employers. | accepted by all practitioners? - S.J. Gould, 1993