Discuss Advice on quitting or staying in current job in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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81ll

Gas Engineer
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I am a gas safe engineer with little experience in the industry. I can do servicing, CP12's, basic fitting work and very minimal fault finding.

To progress my career I started working for a company & have been there for 3 months. Issue is I Spend 95% of my time servicing which is getting boring. I have asked to do more and am told I am to slow fitting and will get to do fault finding but nothing is changing.

i am now thinking I will give it 6 months and then move on if nothing changes.

What would you guys out there recommend I do.
 
Stay if you wanna stay or go if you wanna go, at the end of the day only you will know.
 
Theres a song in there somewhere :)

As rpm said, nobody can make or direct you into a decision other than yourself.

You have only been there 3 months though.
 
My concern about leaving is I won't have any support if I come across jobs I'm struggling with.

i don't want to quit then find out this is what it like in the industry e.g. Companies get you to do simple stuff then start developing you after you've been there for 6 months...

what I wanted to understand is have other ppl been in this position
 
My concern about leaving is I won't have any support if I come across jobs I'm struggling with.

i don't want to quit then find out this is what it like in the industry e.g. Companies get you to do simple stuff then start developing you after you've been there for 6 months...

what I wanted to understand is have other ppl been in this position

no company wants to develop you. They want to earn from you. Work is boring. It's not all bored lonely housewives and yummy mummy's. You've been there 3 months. It wasn't that long ago that you were worried about finding a job. They've given you a foot in the door. Stick it out for at least anther 6 months.
 
My concern about leaving is I won't have any support if I come across jobs I'm struggling with.

i don't want to quit then find out this is what it like in the industry e.g. Companies get you to do simple stuff then start developing you after you've been there for 6 months...

what I wanted to understand is have other ppl been in this position

Personally I`ve had loads of jobs where the interview hasn`t lived up in real life and I`ve given it six months but kept an eye out for other jobs at the same time. One company offered me a big pay rise when I quit but I stll quit telling them "What`s to say you wont do it to me again?"
 
In a previous life I worked on a production line. Sat picking up 4 glass vials, looking at them, pulling out anything dodgy and then putting them down on a different conveyor. Did this for two months before the team manager dragged me in the office to tell me I looked miserable in my work. I had transferred into the department so that I could stay on shifts. I asked him if there was a problem with my work, there wasnt. I explained that I dont need to sit there for 8 hours with a cheesy smile on my face to do a good job. After all I was only there for the money. Well he thought that my attitude was bad for saying that. I told him he was either a liar or a very sad individual if he was there for anything different. The next day my training started on the machines, then in the sterile areas etc.

Get stuck into your boss or supervisor, but, could you handle him turning round saying no chance cos youre not good enough? Not saying youre not though.
 
It wasn't that long ago that you were worried about finding a job. They've given you a foot in the door. Stick it out for at least anther 6 months.

Didn`t realise that AP, with that knowledge I now say stay!
 
Just remember as well. If you do move on then you will be the newbie again. The newbie always gets the crap.
 
Stick it out. I have been working for this place i'm at almost 2 years now, I still don't like the way they do things but it keeps my hands on the tools and i do a wide variety of work.

If you have only been there 3 months and been doing servicing work for the majority of that time how has your boss decided that you are too slow on installs etc? if he gave you one or two install jobs when you started and you was slow and now he has decided you will never be doing that work then that's not very good. Like someone has already said though, you are there to earn him money not learn and develop. I know my boss couldn't give a toss about me and i'm not bothered, i'm there to earn them money, not be happy.

Take on the type of work you want to do evenings and weekends and learn from your own mistakes, you don't have to put a lot of pressure on yourself because if it doesn't work out you still have your day job.

You have only been there for 3 months, i would give it more time you never know what might happen. If it is that bad stay there, save some money and keep looking for something better. Easier to find a better job when you have a job.
 
3 months is nothing, you need to look on the bright side of things and realise you have a job and ultimately a way to progress your skill base with this company. No company is going to throw courses or money at you so soon after joining! How long was you with your last firm?
 
Think I'll stick it out for another 3 months, and then take it from there.

reason I was thinking about leaving is A guy I trained with is working for himself, picking and choosing his jobs.

i feel he is progressing quicker than me....
 
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