Pluspunten
Many opportunities to get your hands on new projects/grow your resume.
Minpunten
I recently read an article titled "12 Signs You are Working in a Toxic Office" (by Miriam Salpeter). My former colleagues and I were so stunned by number of boxes that Sourcebooks can check off this list, that I felt compelled to post it here. I hope outsiders and Sourcebooks Management alike will read the following list carefully. Here are some of the signs you work in an office with a poor work culture, as stated in the article, that truly apply to Sourcebooks. 1. Your boss is a recognized bully. (Sourcebooks' CEO has been known to humiliate and berate her employees, often publicly.) 2. It's not unusual for co-workers or your boss to take credit for your work. (This happened on numerous occasions across the company throughout the duration of employment at Sourcebooks). 3. The boss is ineffective or absentee. 4. Poor performers never seem to lose their jobs, while strong workers are fired. (The turnover rate at Sourcebooks is unprecedented. Every year, many good workers fear for their jobs while poor performers continue to coast by on the efforts of others). 5. Everyone operates under different rules. (This is particularly true for managements' "pets." Office policy does not apply to all.) 6. There is a lack of formal training plans or programs. (For every Sourcebooks employee, the first few weeks is utter chaos. You are thrown into the fire with little training. This causes quite a bit of "brain drain," meaning every time someone quits (which is often), critical information/processes are lost and have to be started from scratch.) 7. People are promoted in random, seemingly illogical ways. (In many cases, promotions mean nothing. There is no "ladder" to be climbed at Sourcebooks. Your responsibilities do not grow to match your forward progress.) 8. Supervisors don't communicate expectations well. (Not only do they not communicate expectations, but they also don't have solidified expectations to communicate. The company/CEO is constantly dropping projects on a whim, wasting countless hours of employees' time.)