Overworked and struggling, any ideas?

truthseeker

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There used to be 4 people on my team, due to redundancy and natural loss we have lost 2 people and 1 gone to part time hours.

I am the only full time team member left and Im doing the work of those who left, plus the part time gap, plus my own work.

I have spoken to my boss about it on numerous occasions and he is very sympathetic but is himself under enormous pressure from management and is not allowed to take on new staff.

I dont know what to do - I simply cannot do the work of 3.5 people anymore. Its crazy to expect me to. Work is sliding and a number of issues remain completely unattended because I havent got time to get to them. The workload has actually increased in the past year due to projects being taken on and agreed (with no consultation with our team re resources).

Any ideas anyone?
 
I would make a list of all the tasks outstanding and prioritise them.
Perhaps give them a time line too..ie how long it will take to achieve...be generous.

Identify how much time you have available...throwing in some overtime to so willing.

Prioritise the list yourself.

Then go to your boss and ask him to review your list and prioritisation and ask him to adjust it as he sees fit.

Then work to that list....you might need to review the prioritisation every week or so as things change...but it may help.
 
Thanks Mommah.

Ive already done that suggestion a few times, but then management step in demanding some task or other and the boss insists I drop all to get whatever it is they need done. Or we have some disaster that Im the only one who knows how to fix it and its holding up production so I have to drop all to do it. One of the main problems is I need contingency time so that when some disaster does happen I can get to it. (the nature of the work means there are quite a few disaster/production hold ups a week).

I already put in more time than Im paid for and do any out of hours work necessary.
 
Sounds like you are doing what I said...just not comfortable with it.

In fact your bosses are rejigging your priorities.
I guess you have to accept that.

And I guess you have to accept you will be just fire fighting until this situation resolves.

You need time and colleagues to do pro-active work.

The key is not just to work off your own priorities and keep management informed.

I hear you ....I was in your situation for a while and its not fun.
 
There used to be 4 people on my team, due to redundancy and natural loss we have lost 2 people and 1 gone to part time hours.

I am the only full time team member left and Im doing the work of those who left, plus the part time gap, plus my own work.

I have spoken to my boss about it on numerous occasions and he is very sympathetic but is himself under enormous pressure from management and is not allowed to take on new staff.

I dont know what to do - I simply cannot do the work of 3.5 people anymore. Its crazy to expect me to. Work is sliding and a number of issues remain completely unattended because I havent got time to get to them. The workload has actually increased in the past year due to projects being taken on and agreed (with no consultation with our team re resources).

Any ideas anyone?

My suggestion is to spend your working time working !
I notice that you make on average of 4 or 5 posts to AAM everyday, all during working hours !!!!!
Also I notice that all your posts are on weekdays with no posts on Saturday or Sunday !

Shouldn't you be working while you are making your posts !!
Does your employer know you spend a lot of your working day on the web ?

I'm nobody to talk, I agree having an internet browser on your computer is SUCH AN ADDICTION, it's so hard not to click on stuff and wander into cyberworld, I've been guilty too ! :)
 
all you can do is what you can do. Do it to the best of your ability and do it honestly. If theres an issue after that then its a management problem. If you werent doing what you were doing what would they have to do? What if you get sick? They will leave you off as long as you do it. I wouldnt take your managers word for it either though, he could be just as well saying to senior management how well his dept is delivering with few resources, or he could be pleading your case and they might be pointing out that the dept is functioning on limited resources, what you have to do to get things done wouldnt concern them. Things are slipping but the priorities are been taken care of, this is short sighted and will eventaully blow in their faces as everything will become a priority and you'll just clap out. Look for another job, its tough but I hope you get one and just leave. Theyll probably end up having to hire 3.5 people to replace you. The bottom line here is if you keep on doing what you're, they will leave you off.

Look at it another way, if you put as much effort into your own biz as you are with these guys how well would you be doing.

Best of luck
 
My suggestion is to spend your working time working !
I notice that you make on average of 4 or 5 posts to AAM everyday, all during working hours !!!!!
Also I notice that all your posts are on weekdays with no posts on Saturday or Sunday !

Shouldn't you be working while you are making your posts !!
Does your employer know you spend a lot of your working day on the web ?

I'm nobody to talk, I agree having an internet browser on your computer is SUCH AN ADDICTION, it's so hard not to click on stuff and wander into cyberworld, I've been guilty too ! :)

How do you know what my working hours are?
 
A well known building society did the same. Where a branch had 4 experienced staff they introduced a redundancy package which left sometimes 3 or even less experienced staff in the branch.
Then people began to leave because of the stress of having to deal with the days work and the training of the new staff. In some cases this left 1 experienced staff member, 2 new entrants and possibly a part timer.
Staff turnover became a huge problem. Many branches now only had new staff with the senior person only having 6 months service. HR then started recruiting from a Dublin based Business College, students on work experience for a year. It was dreadful.

Now you know why you can get absolutely no proper kind of service anymore because the person on the other side of the counter has absolutely no knowledge of the product being sold has had no proper training and is only promoting a product because they have been given a "target" of this product to sell.

I don't think that things will get any better for you. I would only say to take your coffee break, take your lunchbreak, take your days off, don't work excessive overtime. Look after yourself.

Senior management don't care.
 
I broached the subject yet again and am being told that I am to put in more hours (for no pay) to get the work done.
 
Only you can decide if the job is worth keeping. I would look for another job, but do my best at the current job as you can. Work extra hours, but not at the expense of your own heath. Working for free is rarely worth it, and is usually taken for granted. In rare occurances the extra effort is worth it in the long run. So you can't dismiss it out of hand. Don't burn bridges.

You'd have to be more selective between what needs to be done, and what can be put off for another day. Sometimes its better to keep regular hours during the week, but come in on a saturday to clear a back log. For some reason that seen as more effort than doing an extra hour or do on a week day. It also doesn't leave you as wrecked.

I would also keep a track over all time worked, and the work done. Useful to analyse the workload and perhaps share the load to temp staff.
 
Your going to make yourself ill if you keep this up.
Draw a line in the stand. Tell them you'll work x amount of hours and want to be paid for all of them. If that amount of hours donest cover the worksload they will have to come up with a solution. You are being rode. Note everything. Do not care about them as they obviuosly do not care about you. If they force you out (im totally against law suits etc, but in this case etc) constructive dismissal or get Redundancy but they probably need you. Either leave with something or be working in an improved situation. Just look after yourself.
 
As already mentioned, looking for another job seems to be the only viable solution.

What you are doing now is unsustainable and you probably won't receive any credit for ti when things calm down.

I'd start the search process asap as it may take a while to find a suitable position given the current environment
 
Thanks for the constructive input.

I am starting to think leaving is the only option. I have over half my holidays still left to take this year because I just have not been able to take them due to being too busy and no one to cover.

I also feel when I bring it up that Im being vaguely threatened with 'do more hours (no extra pay) and consider yourself lucky to have a job, senior management will replace those who cant keep up with people who can'.
 
Thanks for the constructive input.

I am starting to think leaving is the only option.

Sounds pretty drastic but if you think you can walk into another job or can afford not to work then I would go for it if this situation is really stressing you out.

I think your problem is that you will be worrying about it too much i.e worrying about it when you go home etc. What you need to do is just do the work that you can and leave the rest until you can get around to it - don't think about it, when it does come up you can explain that you haven't had the time or resources to do it!. Re your holidays, if you give notice that you are taking holidays it is up to them to cover you - again this is not your problem, I suspect that you will have to toughen up a bit i.e stop worrying and stressing about it! .
 
Sounds pretty drastic but if you think you can walk into another job or can afford not to work then I would go for it if this situation is really stressing you out.

I think your problem is that you will be worrying about it too much i.e worrying about it when you go home etc. What you need to do is just do the work that you can and leave the rest until you can get around to it - don't think about it, when it does come up you can explain that you haven't had the time or resources to do it!. Re your holidays, if you give notice that you are taking holidays it is up to them to cover you - again this is not your problem, I suspect that you will have to toughen up a bit i.e stop worrying and stressing about it! .

Thanks ney001. I dont think i can just walk into another job in the current climate but its worth investigation.

Im not a pushover at all, I actually like my work and enjoy many aspects of it, and I take pride in delivering good quality work so have no issue giving extra time rather than shoddy work. But I physically cant cover for the number of people we have lost off the team. I might add, we didnt lose them all at once so this has crept up slowly and has only become a real issue in the past 3 or 4 months.
 
Like others said don't leave until you have a definate job to walk into, contract etc. People do U turns on Job Offers all the time. Or you can afford to take some time off. Don't cut off one revenue stream still another is established. I'd be inclinded to hang in there until something else came up. That said I just left. 6 months later the company went bust and no one got anything for all their extra work.
 
I am not a solicitor but I wonder if your employers are breaking the law by being negligent towards you when they overwork you?

There are a number of cases (Sutherland v Hatton, Barber v Somerset County Council) where work related stress from being overworked is discussed. The Irish Health and Safety Authority define stress as arising “when the demands of the job and the working environment clearly exceeds their capacity to meet them”. I know that the damages in the cases I have referenced are different from your circumstances. However because it has been recognised that work related stress can arise from being overworked, and your employers are overworking you, then your employers are breaking the law? Is this a weak line of argument? I don’t know. Maybe somebody else can say?

In employment law, constructive dismissal, is where an employee resigns because of their employer's behaviour. Is there an element of constructive dismissal in your instance if you have to seek employment elsewhere as a result of being overworked? Again, I don’t know.

I noticed you mentioned production. Is there any chance that you could make a ‘good business case’ for hiring more part time staff? Can you clearly illustrate to your boss that that the fact that you are overworked means other work goes undone, which results in costs to your company? Perhaps it increases the risk of a quality issue or increases the waste from the production line, etc. The manufacturing industry is full of terms about ‘operational excellence’ and ‘lean thinking’ these days. They both involve concepts about eliminating unnecessary work and working more efficiently. Simplistic examples would be introducing a software package that makes the workload more achievable, or rearrange the workplace so that everything is easier to get to. Could you implement any of these concepts in your workplace?

I think it might be no harm to get legal advice about it from a solicitor. I also think that like others have said, try to ensure that you have another job to go to before you leave where you are. I hope you get on well and things wok out for you. I know somebody in almost identical circumstances as you, and it is difficult.
 
Hold onto your job, consider yourself fortunate to have the job in this climate, do the best you can for now, look for a job outside of work hours, & for God sake get off AAM website during your work hours, assuming you are working at the minute

Don't take that previous point to heart, please.

By the way do you have family, wife kids etc. I know that some guys in my previous workplace used to make up excuses by saying to the boss, 'oh I have to pick up the kid from the creche, I have to drop my mother to bingo at 6:30pm' etc. Let them know that you have a private life too
 
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One - management seem to be refusing to entertain the idea of any new staff (this is company wide, redundancies have been rife this year and people have not been replaced anywhere where they retired or left naturally). It would be difficult enough to get part time staff in the area Im in, I work in a professional capacity, highly educated, highly skilled and very experienced, Ive been in the company over 10 years and tbh my own level of experience works against me as Im the only one who knows how to do a lot of things therefore these things fall to me. Since the team has been reduced so much there isnt an appropriate staff member to pass skillsets onto to provide cover. If I ever am sick (I missed a week due to illness earlier in the year) the work just piles up waiting for me, similar if I take holidays.

Pope John II - I dont have family commitments, but I do have studying commitments outside of work that I need my time off for (plus just having a life).

There is a very generalised 'culture of fear' pervading my workplace for a good while now due to redundancies etc... A number of other people have said to me they feel overworked and frightened that if they dont comply with demands for more hours without extra pay that they will lose their jobs - I am not alone in feeling how I feel at least.
 
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