Wednesday, April 15, 2020
The Age When People Start Hating Their Jobs
The Age When People Start Hating Their Jobs Jean Prince was 50 when she started working for a U.K. tech company near Cambridge as a technical author, writing software documentation. âI felt extremely lucky,â she said. But she wasnât happy. âThe workplace has become more impersonal and tougher,â she said. âEveryone is performance-managed to death.â She felt underappreciated and unloved. Older workers tend to be more unhappy in their jobs than their younger colleagues, according to a survey of more than 2,000 U.K. employees by human resource firm Robert Half U.K. One in six British workers over age 35 said they were unhappyâ"more than double the number for those under 35. Nearly a third of people over 55 said they didnât feel appreciated, while 16 percent said they didnât have friends at work. Thereâs the stress of being in a high-ranking positionâ"or the disappointment of not making it far enough up the career ladder. True, salaries are higher, but life starts to get more expensive. âWork-life balanceâ starts to mean taking care of children, rather than just personal stress management. âThere comes a time when either you havenât achieved success, work has burned you out, or lived experience tells you family is more important,â said Cary Cooper, a workplace researcher at Manchester Business School. âYou ask yourself: âWhat am I doing this for?ââ Johanna Bodnyk worked as a culture and communications coordinator at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University for six years. At a certain point, her friends were nearly all married and starting families, and she realized her current relationship wasnât going to last. That prompted her to reevaluate a lot of things in lifeâ"including her job. Two years ago, at age 34, she switched careers and learned how to code. âYour 30s are both personally and professionally a time when people take stock and make a change,â she said. A fifth of older British workers believe their employers donât value staff of all ages equally, according to a poll by the City Guilds Group, a skill development organization. And a third of workers over 55 feel sidelined for younger staff, according to Capita Resourcing. Itâs also possible younger people have lower expectations, higher hopes, and theyâre not yet burned out. Bodnyk was thrilled just to have a job when she first started her career. âOnce you get a little more stable and settled in, you then look around and ask whether you actually enjoy it,â she said. We know more older people are working. The U.S. government estimates that one in four people in the labor market in 2024 will be 55 or older. Thereâs a way to combat the ennui, Cooper said, but it takes effort. Making work buddies can improve the situation, even if it can be hard to find time for happy-hour drinks. Refocus on a personal project at work and make that your passion, he said. //compass.pressekompass.net/static/opinary.js
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