Corporate Leavers - The Cost of Employee Turnover Due to Unfairness

Stifled Growth

I was stressed me out beyond belief and eventually even pitted my coworkers and myself against each other a bit, because they were all trying to stay out of the new manager's firing range.


I am currently thinking about leaving the company due the Chief Operations Officer, who happens to be the sister of the company owner.


I left a corporate job to take a part-time job that's only guaranteed for 2 years. I've been downsized 3 times and this time I was fed up by being reorganized to a dead end, totally unsatisfactory position - and got tired of hearing "but in a year it could change.


Four years after coming out of college, I accepted a technical position with IBM where I spent the next 12 years.


The change in work assignments made me feel marginalized, demoralized, under-utilized and I felt that I had been put into a dead-end job that more than doubled my daily commute.


I could incorporate my need to make a difference while at the company. For example, I would like to create a corporate foundation, but that idea has been shot down multiple times.


As PR director for Schlumberger's $2 billion IT services division, I consistently collected substantial bonuses, and was given stock options, which the company only gives to top 5% achievers.


I worked at a law firm in San Francisco where one of the name plate partners, who had a fetish for Asian women (I'm a Latina), always excluded me from office lunches, activities, and was very rude to me.


It's difficult to assess what you're getting yourself into when you're applying for a job at any business, corporation, or law firm.