Is being a neonatologist a good job?

I'm not sure my new job is a good fit...

  • I have been in a new job for about four weeks. I have moved from another industry into government. I was expecting it to be quite different to my old role, but I'm not sure that I like it. Do I start applying for new jobs? Sorry this is a bit long on account of being anonymous. I loved the last place that I worked at, but it was a very small workplace without much scope to move around. I had really enjoyed my job there for most of the time I was there, but after some major achievements over the last few years, wanted a new challenge. I have always been interested to try out working in this particular area of government and took a job that paid slightly more than my last job - but with less responsibility. I knew this when I took it, but previously had not been successful getting a government job because I didn't have government experience (feedback from interviews). So I thought this job would be a good bridge into government - it is a year-long contract, so I figured I would have a year where I could learn a lot about government and then be in a good position to move into another role within government. Although, it is also an election year for the jurisdiction I am working for and around here, this typically means a crack-down on hiring at the start of a new term - right when I would be after a new role. I don't hate the job, but I feel fairly ambivalent about it. The good parts - I don't think about work at all when I walk out the door at 5pm. I'm thinking of doing a part-time masters and I would possibly get some tuition assistance and definitely get some time allowance for it. I think I have felt very defined by my work for the last few years, so this is making me think about other things. On the other hand, I am not feeling challenged by the work, and enjoyed being engaged in my last job. Now that I realise how little responsibility I have, I am concerned that the job will look like a backwards step on my resume. It has a job title that sounds much lower than my last - I thought it was just government job titles, but really, it is lower. I am in my mid-thirties, my last role was a management role looking after a program and managing a team, with a lot of autonomy and decision making power. This role is not management (of anything or anyone). Since I started, I have been lent out to another team to work on a project that is different to what the role would usually be - doing something I'm good at, but find boring. This project will finish in the next few weeks. So it is fair to say that I haven't had a chance to really see what the job is about yet. But I also feel I'm 1/12th into a job where I really wanted to learn about this particular area and instead am back doing something I used to do years ago. I am still picking up small bits of new knowledge, but in a passive way from being in a new environment, not doing new things. I am finding myself looking at job vacancies - whereas with my last job, I didn't start idly looking at job vacancies for a few years. A few jobs have really caught my eye - should I apply for other jobs? How would I explain leaving so soon in an interview? I feel like I didn't know enough about government jobs to accurately gauge the level of role that would suit me. Would leaving this job soon be a black mark in terms of getting a government role again at another time? What else should I consider in thinking about staying or going? If I am going to stay, what can I do to get the most out of it from a work and non-work perspective?

  • Answer:

    I don't think you've been doing this job long enough to have sufficient experience to make a sound judgment about whether it is working out or not. I suggest you give it six months. That's the period at which we (government agency) assess whether a candidate is working out. And I have seen a couple of people look tenuous for the first few months, only to blossom and really find their footing in the fourth or fifth month.

anonymous at Ask.Metafilter.Com Visit the source

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I would think if you're really serious about pursuing a graduate degree, this position seems to be very well suited to that.

lownote

Sit tight. You're being paid slightly more, and you want to do some study. I think that you'll find that the boredom you're experiencing will level out if you start studying; you'll be happy that your job is not challenging.

heyjude

http://ask.metafilter.com/255876/Im-not-sure-my-new-job-is-a-good-fit: "I am in my mid-thirties, my last role was a management role looking after a program and managing a team, with a lot of autonomy and decision making power. This role is not management (of anything or anyone). " I went from over a decade of consulting to being a state employee about two years ago, and this quote sums up the role change for me too. It was a rough transition though. I thought I had made a huge mistake for about 6 months. A former supervisor asked me one day, "How's the career change going?" which was weird to me because I didn't realize that's what I had done. I was doing the same "work" but from the other side. Also I had what I initially perceived as very little responsibility and it seemed like no one cared what I did. I finally realized that it was the opposite, that people gave me a lot of independence because they trusted me, and I have a tremendous responsibility to the people I serve. As with any new job I think you have to get it time. Find your groove and figure out your role. If you're ambivalent that's ok. I would only say get out if you were miserable.

Big_B

I would reframe your view of the new job. Make it about developing contacts, exploring how the government bureaucracy works, finding potential future employers who contract with government...and so on.

srboisvert

4 weeks in is exactly the time when I start questioning any new job. The newness has worn off a bit, and you know just enough to panic about the idea that you're totally unsuited. Give yourself a good 6 months without even looking at a job listing. That's the minimum it will take for you to even know all your job duties.

xingcat

Considering your resume - Going back to school is a great justification for a less demanding job. I moved to the public sector from private about 10 years ago, and in my experience it is not unusual at all to move around a lot even very quickly, especially within the same agency.

lilyfern

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