Uncategorized Protected: Morale! 15 November 2003

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Let’s Chat!




Let's Chat!

aww, how good does your job sounds! it’s so good to see ppl loving their jobs.

does microsoft need a business graduate like me? πŸ˜›

aww, how good does your job sounds! it’s so good to see ppl loving their jobs.

does microsoft need a business graduate like me? πŸ˜›

Not speaking for anyone else but myself, after sitting at a desk 7.5 hours a day doing

ever so exciting stuff as parsing Qantas Holidays XML feeds, writing SCO shell scripts and cron jobs and rearranging webpages,

Friday nights tend to get more of an appreciation than what it did at uni. The best the rest of us can dream is that sometime around this part of the year, we want about 3 months off before returning to work.

Speaking for my company, we haven’t gotten any “morale building activities” as of yet, and I’m not sure if we do have them. But I have to attend corporate meetings every month which quickly from commercially viable forecasts and monthly reflections to a social pigout of finger food and a limited bar tab.

That’s true.. weekends suddenly seem a bit more important when you’re working. The corporate meetings you have sound like fun πŸ˜›

Sounds cool!

We have some outings at work, not so much morale boosting as such its just go out and have a relax and wind down type of thing. We are going carting in January and we go out for drinks and such and usually go to a bar where they have food too (cos we are all greedy) if someone has a client meeting and the client is cool we bring them too, they always have fun and we can charge the drinks to the company account (just pretend the client is a lush haha!) – this isnt too frowned upon as the Boss does it too (sneakily but I am his secretary muahahaha!)

Sounds like you are having a great time, I really like my work too-meespiersonintertrust.com

Well morale is basically to have fun and bond.. so the stuff you do counts as that! Going out and eating always ranks as one of the best things to do IMHO πŸ˜‰

Not speaking for anyone else but myself, after sitting at a desk 7.5 hours a day doing

ever so exciting stuff as parsing Qantas Holidays XML feeds, writing SCO shell scripts and cron jobs and rearranging webpages,

Friday nights tend to get more of an appreciation than what it did at uni. The best the rest of us can dream is that sometime around this part of the year, we want about 3 months off before returning to work.

Speaking for my company, we haven’t gotten any “morale building activities” as of yet, and I’m not sure if we do have them. But I have to attend corporate meetings every month which quickly from commercially viable forecasts and monthly reflections to a social pigout of finger food and a limited bar tab.

That’s true.. weekends suddenly seem a bit more important when you’re working. The corporate meetings you have sound like fun πŸ˜›

Sounds cool!

We have some outings at work, not so much morale boosting as such its just go out and have a relax and wind down type of thing. We are going carting in January and we go out for drinks and such and usually go to a bar where they have food too (cos we are all greedy) if someone has a client meeting and the client is cool we bring them too, they always have fun and we can charge the drinks to the company account (just pretend the client is a lush haha!) – this isnt too frowned upon as the Boss does it too (sneakily but I am his secretary muahahaha!)

Sounds like you are having a great time, I really like my work too-meespiersonintertrust.com

Well morale is basically to have fun and bond.. so the stuff you do counts as that! Going out and eating always ranks as one of the best things to do IMHO πŸ˜‰