Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
Factories
6 Answers
Great cathedrals of misery is what they are.
Tormented by managers all the time. Seems like most paople on here are office wallies and don't know how to get their hands dirty. Most, not all.
Take my hat off to the military ones though.
So, what do you think about factoriies?
Tormented by managers all the time. Seems like most paople on here are office wallies and don't know how to get their hands dirty. Most, not all.
Take my hat off to the military ones though.
So, what do you think about factoriies?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.i spent 17 years working in the laboratories of a paint manufacturing company.
left school, didn't know what i wanted to do in life but never really fancied office work as i couldn't stand the idea of being stuck behind a desk all day.
ideally i would have liked an outdoor job like gardening or country park ranger but i drifted into the paint factory because it was close to home, the hrs suited me and the money was good at the time.
work was fine for the first few years, it was a family run firm with a family atmosphere, very easy going, certainly not hard graft. over the ears though the family owners retired and more professional managers came in who changed the procedures and demanded more work for less money.
the company gradually went downhill due to bad management, we had no pay rise whatsoever for the last 6 years and the pension fund disappeared, redundancies started to be made and they then expected you to do the work of the missing people for no extra money, i was finally made redundant on xmas eve, 2005.
ive since retrained as a corgi registered gas engineer which i hope will lead to well paid and life-long career.
i thought a trade was the best option as i'm too old to get into office work (and i still think its boring) and factories are closing down every day, too scared to borrow money and start my own business, and i like the practical nature of the gas work and meeting people.
i know what you mean about office workers but i guess they can get stressed and overworked in their own right. my best mate worked in a call centre and he tells me they are known as the factories of the 21st century!
the feeling i did have when i worked at the factory though was that we were seen as the lowest of the low by other people, there was a time though when a skilled factory worker could earn really good money.
i sometimes think it would be nice to go to work in nice clothes and not get dirty, the
left school, didn't know what i wanted to do in life but never really fancied office work as i couldn't stand the idea of being stuck behind a desk all day.
ideally i would have liked an outdoor job like gardening or country park ranger but i drifted into the paint factory because it was close to home, the hrs suited me and the money was good at the time.
work was fine for the first few years, it was a family run firm with a family atmosphere, very easy going, certainly not hard graft. over the ears though the family owners retired and more professional managers came in who changed the procedures and demanded more work for less money.
the company gradually went downhill due to bad management, we had no pay rise whatsoever for the last 6 years and the pension fund disappeared, redundancies started to be made and they then expected you to do the work of the missing people for no extra money, i was finally made redundant on xmas eve, 2005.
ive since retrained as a corgi registered gas engineer which i hope will lead to well paid and life-long career.
i thought a trade was the best option as i'm too old to get into office work (and i still think its boring) and factories are closing down every day, too scared to borrow money and start my own business, and i like the practical nature of the gas work and meeting people.
i know what you mean about office workers but i guess they can get stressed and overworked in their own right. my best mate worked in a call centre and he tells me they are known as the factories of the 21st century!
the feeling i did have when i worked at the factory though was that we were seen as the lowest of the low by other people, there was a time though when a skilled factory worker could earn really good money.
i sometimes think it would be nice to go to work in nice clothes and not get dirty, the
gucciman - one of my sisters worked in the Lab of a well know paint manufacturing company for many years. Just wondering what part of the country do you live in?
Oakleaf - Me - I was what you refer to as an 'office wally', working as a Company Secretary for 26 years at the same firm. That 'office wally' job gave me an excellent salary, private health care, pension & company car which was given to me when I left. So I must have been doing something right!