- cross-posted to:
- antiwork@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- antiwork@lemmy.ml
- It’s true that it’s not always about the money, but it’s probably never about a ping pong table - Well, hypothetical speaking, if there were two completely absolutely identical jobs, but the one had a ping pong table. I might choose the one without and ask them to get a Foosball table, since I’m no good at ping pong. - It also depends on whether it’s about a pingpong table in the office, or whether I get one for at home and we’re talking a fully remote job. - Getting a free pingpong table isn’t a bad bonus! I’d prefer a decent crokinole board though, tbh - It’s a bad bonus if you don’t have space for a ping pong table. Speaking from experience, I got a free ping pong table for Christmas once… 
 
 
- Most places that have HR like this work their employees too hard for them to have time to use a ping pong table anyway, so it’s really just a hollow gesture. 
- I was at my last job for 10 years. - If I had been well paid and treated well I would not have ever started that job search. Further even just having one of those two thing might have kept me from looking. - At that job I hit the tipping point of both. It’s was getting shittier everyday and the pay wasn’t budging year after year. Finally mid-Covid the power flipped to the employee and jobs were much easier to get. I started looking and jumped shipped. 
 
- As a professional in this field, top reasons would be… - Dissatisfaction with pay
- Limited/No career progression
- Dissatisfaction with environment/culture
- Dissatisfaction with management
- Poor work-life balance
- Poor job design/expectations of role
- Poor taining quality/knowledge management
- Inadequate tools/systems
 - Edit: I should also point out we have about half a dozen ping-pong tables scattered around my work and our turnover figures were bang on average for annual benchmarking against the sector. I consider the average too high, though, and will be targeting better retention over this year. We’ll need at least double the amount of ping-pong tables. - I don’t see pizza party or ping pong table on that list so you’re obviously not a professional. - A real professional knows employees want pizza parties instead of higher pay and they want more responsibilities with the same pay! - :P 
 
- There is a bit of truth here. Toxic culture and out of touch management will make people walk as well. - Thing is, there might just be a wad of cash big enough to make me put up with that against my health interests. - Fuck ping pong tables though. No one left a company because they didn’t have enough fucking table sports. If you think they are then you are the problem. Exit interview your own fucking arse. - One of the best bosses I ever had once told me that people will stay for the culture but leave for money. His philosophy was to try and ensure that money was not a factor in people’s decision, then build as good a culture as he could. - And to be clear, by making money not a factor, I mean he paid well. - I had a meeting years ago with my company’s CTO about my salary. He kicked off the meeting by saying “you care a lot more about what you make than I do” which prompted me to ask for 50% more than I had been planning to ask for. He agreed to it without argument. TBF he was a coke addict married to the daughter of the company’s owner and within six months he’d been divorced and fired, but I got to keep my salary. 
 
 
- Yeah, the main reason Ive changed jobs is money. Nobody gives raises like new bosses. 
- A company offered me a million dollars to work for them, but then I remembered the ping pong table at my current employer and said no way. Totally worth it. 
- I thought this was chatgpt for a second because I didn’t want to believe anyone but ai could be this tone deaf. then I remembered humans and got depressed 
- This is a jackwagon CEO (Oligarch in training.) trolling the masses. Don’t fall for the rage bait. Just form a Union and strike. Better yet, boycott the company until they disolve. 🤷 




