Re: In the Trenches, A Bit of Venting

Subject: Re: In the Trenches, A Bit of Venting
From: David Handy <david -dot- handy -at- automsoft -dot- com>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com>
Date: Thu, 14 Nov 2002 17:27:41 -0000




Unclebonsai:

I've never worked in a contract position, and your situation
-- workload, organisation, office politics -- are obviously
unknown to me. But I have a few questions that I hope might
clarify things a bit.
In no particular order, and in the context of your concern that
your contract may not be renewed if your tech-writing
colleague persists with spinning his wheels...

* Have you been given deliverables by your client? Are you
meeting them?
Sounds like you're doing a good job for these guys. But
how specific are your deliverables -- have you specific doc
tasks or are you generally putting out fires? This leads to...

* Were these deliverables given to you individually or to you
and Mr MFA collectively?
If you're meeting your deliverables and you're not impeded
by Mr MFA, then you're left maybe with a slowpoke as a
colleague but no other major problems. If you and he are
working together on common projects and he is slowing you
down, you can act to change that. One (hopefully) non-
confrontational way to do that is to be proactive and (e.g.)
propose a project plan that addresses his working preferences
and yields genuine documentation results. This needn't be a
matter of holding his hand, but of acknowledging him as
colleague.

Ghosting that point is the matter of whether or not you have
a manager who is in touch with the documentation issues and
your workload. If you don't have someone like that, it's tough.
But you gotta have someone to report into.

* Are you doing Mr MFA's work for him?
If the answer's Yes -- i.e. you're picking up his slack on a
daily basis -- then you are absolutely entitled to raise it with
him or with a manager. I like to think I'd raise it with him first,
so that he can get himself organised without dragging his boss
into it. You may be working with this guy for a while. But I
don't know your situation and whether that's the best way to
go.
If the answer's No, then you have less to sweat about.

Speaking of which...
It sounds like you're very conscientious and naturally keen
to keep your job. But if Mr MFA is happy, and his boss is
happy, and your boss (the same person) is happy -- a lot of
maybes I grant you -- then maybe you can sit back and enjoy
it. This isn't the same as Andrew's exhortation that you should
let this guy dig his own grave docs-wise. It describes a
situation in which you can do your job well while not sweating
your coworkers.

Just my two cents.

dh
automsoft

PS I thought Bonnie Granat and Mike Bradley posted
perceptively on this topic yesterday. I agree with Bonnie
that Darwin doesn't or needn't apply in the office. Anyway, it's
my experience that good managers know more about what's
going on in their offices than we think.




^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Check out SnagIt - The Screen Capture Standard!
Download a free 30-day trial from http://www.techsmith.com/rdr/txt/twr
Find out what all the other tech writers, including Dan, already know!

Order RoboHelp X3 in November and receive $100 mail in rebate, FREE WebHelp
Merge Module and the new RoboPDF - add powerful PDF output functionality
to RoboHelp X3. Order online today at http://www.ehelp.com/techwr-l

---
You are currently subscribed to techwr-l as:
archive -at- raycomm -dot- com
To unsubscribe send a blank email to leave-techwr-l-obscured -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com
Send administrative questions to ejray -at- raycomm -dot- com -dot- Visit
http://www.raycomm.com/techwhirl/ for more resources and info.



Previous by Author: RE: How to explain this?
Next by Author: RE: Sowtware tools and Java Help - Robo Hell 3 users
Previous by Thread: Re: In the Trenches, A Bit of Venting
Next by Thread: Re: In the Trenches, A Bit of Venting


What this post helpful? Share it with friends and colleagues:


Sponsored Ads