News4 mins ago
Would I do more worse than good?
12 Answers
My fiancee works for a company in hospitality, lets call it X
She is treated differently because she is agency staff; other staff employed by company X are getting promotions and area allowed more flexible work, and are able to apply for other jobs internally. She has applied to get a contract with the company, and is still waiting reply after 2 months. (They have not yet rejected her or approved her) Other people whom know high up staff, ie; friend of manager, has been employed straight away, skipping online interviews. My fiancee was in tears today, she has no job security. Two people have skipped the interview process and came straight into a job before her. She is now the longest employed agency staff in X, as others who was there longer than her were employed, but now it seams to be a standstill. Staff with a contract are paid more than those with an agency. She does not want to move in and have commitments till she has a secure job; her work is affecting her personal life.
Would I be overstepping, or make things worse if I were to write a letter to the company? Its basic HR... No job security = no motivation. No motivation = less profit...
Im a Business Student, and there are serious flaws in the way the organisation treat their staff. Basic stuff. I am no way saying I know everything, but I seriously hate large organisations such as this going for nothing but profit and not caring about their staff.
She has been working for them for 2 years this summer.
She is treated differently because she is agency staff; other staff employed by company X are getting promotions and area allowed more flexible work, and are able to apply for other jobs internally. She has applied to get a contract with the company, and is still waiting reply after 2 months. (They have not yet rejected her or approved her) Other people whom know high up staff, ie; friend of manager, has been employed straight away, skipping online interviews. My fiancee was in tears today, she has no job security. Two people have skipped the interview process and came straight into a job before her. She is now the longest employed agency staff in X, as others who was there longer than her were employed, but now it seams to be a standstill. Staff with a contract are paid more than those with an agency. She does not want to move in and have commitments till she has a secure job; her work is affecting her personal life.
Would I be overstepping, or make things worse if I were to write a letter to the company? Its basic HR... No job security = no motivation. No motivation = less profit...
Im a Business Student, and there are serious flaws in the way the organisation treat their staff. Basic stuff. I am no way saying I know everything, but I seriously hate large organisations such as this going for nothing but profit and not caring about their staff.
She has been working for them for 2 years this summer.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by jp_2031. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Personally I think it would be quite inappropriate for you to contact them on her behalf (bit like the role of parent rather than partner). Has she spoken to the manager/HR department directly herself? She should do this, particularly as I thought agency staff couldn't be kept on longer than 2 years anyway (that's how it is in my company because after 2 years they become entitled to employee rights).
i think it could only hinder her for you to write to the company and point out their short comings, and especially if you point out she has no motivation and less productivity!!!! and if i were her i'd be quite peed off with you. If she is a contractor, she can't apply for internal positions cause she's not an internal candidate
Have you ever considered that she might just be rubbish at her job?
Have you ever considered that she might just be rubbish at her job?
I agree with what's said - it would be a very bad move, and you have no right to do this. If your fianceé wants help with writing her own letter, then let her do it - but it's the agency which she needs to write to, not the company where she's placed, to ask them to find her something better since she's making no progress in her current role. If I were her I would also write direct to the HR manager asking why her application for permanent employment is going unacknowledged - her application may have been mislaid so it is always worth following up. Whatever you do, the approach has got to come from her not you - if you interfere, you will only make things more difficult for your girlfriend.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --