- Joined
- Jul 31, 2018
- Messages
- 11
Hey guys! So to cut to the chase, my SD sat me down and buttered me up with how well I've been performing in my area, where I've grown this past year, the usual stuff. He went above and beyond in recognition (which has never been a strong quality in him), and then stated "I need to know why you updated your resume on Indeed."
I was in shock. I didn't have words for him. Was me logging in and updating a profile that, for goodness sake, I don't even have a headshot uploaded such a big deal that a regional HR business partner had to investigate and send my boss an email telling him to "figure out what is going on?"
This was too much. I cried. I wasn't mad at my SD, but I was furious. This felt... wrong. So, so wrong. And if someone in HR was concerned for my well being and retention, why weren't they reaching out to me directly?
To put it frankly, I had a bad few weeks, and pushed through them. My SD even commended me on how well I ran the store while he was out on vacation. I have never once made anyone think I am unhappy here. Stressed sometimes, yes. And after that stressful week, I humored myself an hour after work one day and logged into Indeed to see what's out there and attach a resume that was (in all ways) better than my old college-student profile.
[Truthfully, if there is anything that makes my job frustrating it's the lack of support, direction, and the constant "I'm never good enough" feeling I get from my SD. There's more, but that's enough itself. And yes, my HRBP knows how I feel.)
Now at this point, I feel trapped. I get that "the company wants to protect itself from potential sudden loss" but I also feel like this was very extreme, and quite honestly, I feel super violated with this breach of privacy. I feel that I should be allowed to investigate other venues of employment without Spot being nose-deep in what I am doing. And if I'm that valuable, why is the one person who is responsible for the dissatisfaction I have in my job doing the investigate work and not a HR representative?
Thoughts?
I was in shock. I didn't have words for him. Was me logging in and updating a profile that, for goodness sake, I don't even have a headshot uploaded such a big deal that a regional HR business partner had to investigate and send my boss an email telling him to "figure out what is going on?"
This was too much. I cried. I wasn't mad at my SD, but I was furious. This felt... wrong. So, so wrong. And if someone in HR was concerned for my well being and retention, why weren't they reaching out to me directly?
To put it frankly, I had a bad few weeks, and pushed through them. My SD even commended me on how well I ran the store while he was out on vacation. I have never once made anyone think I am unhappy here. Stressed sometimes, yes. And after that stressful week, I humored myself an hour after work one day and logged into Indeed to see what's out there and attach a resume that was (in all ways) better than my old college-student profile.
[Truthfully, if there is anything that makes my job frustrating it's the lack of support, direction, and the constant "I'm never good enough" feeling I get from my SD. There's more, but that's enough itself. And yes, my HRBP knows how I feel.)
Now at this point, I feel trapped. I get that "the company wants to protect itself from potential sudden loss" but I also feel like this was very extreme, and quite honestly, I feel super violated with this breach of privacy. I feel that I should be allowed to investigate other venues of employment without Spot being nose-deep in what I am doing. And if I'm that valuable, why is the one person who is responsible for the dissatisfaction I have in my job doing the investigate work and not a HR representative?
Thoughts?