Julius - Careers Advice program for 20s
Автор: Career Analysts
Загружено: 2015-07-09
Просмотров: 18
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http://careeranalysts.co.uk → See us for University choices and Careers guidance
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A short customer testimonial by one of our clients at Career Analysts, life-changing careers advice with 50 years experience.
Julius came along to Career Analysts for the Careers Advice program for the over 20s age group.
More than a third work longer to impress the boss and improve their career prospects.
More than a third of office workers deliberately spend longer hours in the office than needed in a bid to impress their manager in order to move up the career ladder, a new poll has revealed. However, this extra work does not increase productivity and can end up having a detrimental effect on home life.
The research, by officebroker.com, found that 39% of workers regularly stayed late or arrived early during the last year, in a bid to seem more dedicated to their career than their colleagues. Over a quarter (26%) said they consistently worked longer days than were actually needed to do their job effectively.
Employees are filling their time browsing the internet, emailing friends, filing and doing menial, non-urgent tasks. They are more likely to stay longer at work when a new boss had been appointed, a pay and career review was imminent or redundancies were expected.
Those employees working extended hours were found to be committing between an hour and two hours extra a day, adding a minimum of half a day extra to their working week, solely to impress others and help their careers.
A spokesman from officebroker.com says the ‘faking it’ office phenomenon has poor long term implications both for the employee and their employer.
He said: “The general consensus is that many workers across the country are putting in longer office hours than ever before. What our research has found however is that many are doing it in a bid to improve their office image and win favour to improve their careers, rather than because their workload demands it.
“People are sitting idle in their office in a bid to stand out from the colleagues and impress their bosses. This means a poorer work life balance and ultimately no productivity gains for the firm - just increasingly tired workers - which benefits nobody.
“It was also interesting to note that workers were planning when to put in the longer hours, choosing to spend more time in the office when a pay rise, redundancy or new appointment was on the horizon.”
Careers could be a risk with this strategy however, as management become aware of this tactic and crack down on unproductive tasks in the workplace.
http://careeranalysts.co.uk → See us for University choices and Careers guidance
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