Showing posts with label unemployment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unemployment. Show all posts

Monday, March 15, 2010

Is it Monday?

When you're out of the workforce for a long period [going on nine months for me] you tend to forget about the days of the week.

Finished the Feinstein book—it was not as good as I thought it would be, but I finished it Saturday night [it was not very long.] The problem may have been that he was trying to tell the story of too many individuals so only a couple stood out, so a lot of the book had me saying “Now who is that again?” as I read.

The job search continues…got two nice e-mails from local firms I applied to over the weekend. They don’t need anyone right now, but one will re-visit things after tax season.

I appreciated the reply. That’s one nice thing about smaller firms, they are more likely to get back to people [but they don’t always do it!] With larger companies, the end result becomes one of those Unsolved Mysteries. I interviewed with the IRS twice this past year and never heard anything about what happened, just had to assume I was not selected when I never got a call.

My goal these days is to find a job before my current unemployment extension runs out in August. Now that we know we will be staying here a few years, it is easier to focus my job search. Before, we really had no idea where we were going to go or what to shoot for. The bad part is that employment opportunities here are pretty limited, but I think with patience and some effort, something will turn up eventually. I think I should be able to collect unemployment after August, but I’d rather not have to do that. I am tired of not working. I enjoy having the downtime to read, write, and so on, but I feel like the longer this goes on, the harder it will be to catch up. Accounting is not a static field and there are always changes in tax law, accounting practices, etc. If I’m out of the workforce for a significant period, it’s going to be more difficult. Hate to say it, but I am really banking on getting on with the IRS eventually, because they don’t really care about a lot of the things that are causing me problems getting hired elsewhere. That was the same reason I ended up at the Quasi-Federal Agency that is Known for Workplace Violence. They didn’t even interview me, they just looked at how I did on their exam and put me to work. Which is probably how they end up with their, ahem, somewhat “eccentric” workforce.

Friday, March 12, 2010

To Account or not to Account

I am in a quandary. I did well in my accounting courses, was interested in it, still have an interest in tax issues, what’s going on with accounting standards, etc. Tax is one of the rare fields where pretty much every single person is affected by it. It appeals to my interest in politics, history, and how things work.
But I seem to have a really hard time making the jump from school to the “real world.”
Some of that is because the work you do as a new accountant is basically data entry clerical work. It’s more important to have a strong working knowledge of tax preparation software than anything else. The person who goes the farthest in the early stages of their career is the person who is best at knowing how the software works. I am not that person.

I continue to apply to firms. Public accounting is not really what I want to do. It’s one of those things that people put up with for a few years until they get enough experience to go someplace else. My wife just found a job, and that makes me want to get a job even more. I don’t want to be the slacker husband, although at least I'm probably going to still be collecting unemployment for a while. I’m interested in the IRS, but that will bring with it a whole new area of stress. I’ve interviewed with them twice over the last year and have a pretty good idea of the problems associated with being a revenue agent—pressure to close cases, uncooperative taxpayers and their representatives, and a ton of bureaucracy. Good benefits, though!

Recently heard from yet another former co-worker. Apparently the Big Firm had a massive bloodbath right before Thanksgiving. I was surprised at some of the names of those let go, they were people I knew were sharp and who always had a lot of work. I assume what happened is that the firm has lost so many clients that there was no longer anything for them to do. They expect the firm to cut more after April 15, and a lot of this year’s class of new hires are afraid they will be fired before they finish their first year [important to do this in order to qualify for the CPA license, otherwise you can’t get licensed until you complete a year of experience.]

Anyway, enough of that for now. Next time…Library Book Saturday!

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

My Big Mistake at the Big Firm, Part Three

It is probably best to wait until I get some kind of readership before doing these multi-part posts. It is like making a series of movies that no one wants to see.
Oh well, hopefully by the time people start really looking at this I will have several other posts at the top so maybe they will interested enough in what I'm doing to read all this.

I freely admit a lot of the problems at the Big Firm were of my own making. I am a bad networker. I suppose I feel that if I wanted to be a salesperson, I would have gone into sales. But I’ve learned the hard way that a lot of life involves sales in one sense or another. All I really can do is be friendly and treat people with respect. Being outgoing, well, that is a stretch. Not impossible, but not something that comes naturally. And not something that I am able to do regularly. I had a list of nine or ten people that I felt comfortable asking for work. It has to be said that most of the work I did get involved clerical tasks such as copying, putting together documents, and so on. That’s fine. I hate when people have the attitude that they are too good for something.

What was frustrating was that none of this work ever seemed to develop into anything more substantial. It was seven months into my job before I actually got involved in putting together a tax return, and unfortunately I just didn’t have a good idea about what to do. Intellectually I knew how it worked, but had a hard time navigating the various software packages, etc. They had a training, but it was just that, one training. Their way of doing things is basically, we’ll give a training but after that you are expected to more or less know how to do something. You’re allowed maybe one or two slip-ups, but after that you better show immediate improvement or that’s it. I usually need a lot of repetition in order to learn anything, and a lot of time work was really intermittent, so I took too long to improve. Business is not like school and I understand that you can't sacrifice the project for the sake of employee development, but I found it really difficult.

I made the classic rookie mistake of not asking for help. Towards the end of *my* busy season [I was not really involved in the process after mid-March since they didn’t really trust me any longer] I improved somewhat, but I guess it wasn’t enough. I’m hoping that is a lesson I can take to my next job, whenever that might be. Ask for help! You don’t have to go to someone every single time there’s an issue, but stay in contact. Maybe have a list of questions so you can get everything answered in an efficient manner.

I think that is something I would have had to learn no matter where I worked, but I do think had I worked someplace else I might have been given more of a chance to put what I had learned into action. Seniors apparently got tired of dealing with me, and a lot of my work was given to, yep, interns.

I spent roughly the last four months of my job not being assigned to anything. I knew I was in trouble, but my various inquiries regarding work went unanswered. My days were spent surfing the Web and doing technical trainings online. It got extremely boring after a while. Some people like the idea of a job where they don't really do anything, but I found it very demoralizing.

I began saving e-mails and documents in case I had to defend an unemployment claim [ALWAYS save everything that might help you with this. Pay stubs, e-mails from leadership about how things are going, e-mails regarding your performance, anything else that you can use in case they say you were fired due to misconduct.] Of course, if you are in a state where you can’t get unemployment if you’re terminated, you’re probably out of luck. Thankfully, in California you can get unemployment if they let you go for being bad at your job. We would have been in even bigger trouble otherwise, and most likely I would be writing this from my parents' home because we would have been in foreclosure by now.

The last few weeks were very odd. I knew that something was going to happen soon, and as I went into the month of June I often thought to myself, I am in the final days of my being here. All of the paperwork for the year-end reviews had been submitted. They had a committee who reviewed each employee’s file to determine how well they did. My lease was up at the end of June and I asked my coach if I could learn the results of the review as soon as I could so I could give notice to my landlord in case the result was not a good one [I did not say this, but I was operating under the assumption that it would not be.] The last day of the month began like my usual day...