canpakes wrote:Interesting. I didn’t figure that call center work was so geographically limited.
I don't think that's the point. The only real value you have to offer a corporation is your time. Without it, they can't function. At all. Your time is literally yours and their money.
Never, ever trust them. Never. Always have at least a few jobs on your radar. Always keep your resume up to date. Always know your top 5-10 targets if you have to leave in a hurry. And if you're really on point you'll interview periodically just to keep things fresh.
Too many employees either view employment as an equitable trade for their time in exchange for some money, or have a misplaced sense of loyalty. An employer is a cash machine to be milked for every penny you can. If you can make more elsewhere, leave and don't spend a second thought on how much it hurts them.
They wouldn't bat an eye at crushing you and your family for profit and you shouldn't blink before damned them over for cash. If that's bothersome to you, remember that corporations started this. They invented and perfected the game of screwing people over. Wage gaps, pay grade information asymmetry, holiday firing, pregnancy firing, you name it, they'll do it.
by the way, I don't pass a value judgement on any of it. All of it is what it is. It's how things are and the burden of protecting you is 100% on you.
Anyway, people who work for corporations are free to keep trusting them. Me? Unless they are offering a compensation that works for me or a stake in the company (and I mean a real one, not some BS non-voting, 10-years-'til-fully-vested stock that isn't traded), it's your duty to yourself to try to swing that balance in your favor at every possible opportunity. Unless they show actual loyalty toward you, it is perfectly reasonable to walk the “F” out at the drop of a hat, for any reason at all that benefits you. Executives would almost certainly do the same to you in a heartbeat.
Life is a tough go. And the tough get goin'.
- Doc