It's happening again...
I could almost think it's something about me, but it's not.
In my previous position with the school I provided administrative support to the Law Review (a student publication). Â Under the original faculty publisher I had a lot of responsibility, and it grew over time. Â Then a new faculty publisher came in and suddenly I found my position gradually (though not slowly) being diminished. Â She never bothered to even learn what I did and started giving the students more and more responsibility which had formerly been mine (and responsibility that they really couldn't handle given their schedules). Â So I felt like I was effectively demoted without changing positions.
In September I moved to the Marketing Department and immediately loved my new job, my new responsibilities, and my new boss. Â At the time I reported directly to the Vice President of Marketing, and she gave me quite a bit of autonomy in my position (maybe too much, who knows).
In December the VP left. Â In the interim her management responsibilities were split between another VP and a manager in our department (I took on some of her non-management responsibilities). Â So for the transition period I knew that I was working under that manager. Â I wasn't thrilled by that - I like her, but she's not a very good supervisor (her communication skills are seriously lacking). Â But I figured I could survive, and they were pretty quick in finding a new VP, so all seemed good.
Then in early January the Dean sent an email to the entire school announcing the new VP. Â At the bottom of that email he also mentioned that the manager I had been temporarily working under had been promoted to Assistant VP, and among her responsibilities was supervising some of the Marketing Dept., INCLUDING ME!!! Â So, I had been once again effectively demoted (adding a new person/position directly above you in the chain of command is a demotion), and only found out about it through an email that went to the entire school.
I decided over the weekend that there really isn't much I can do about the situation except start to develop an exit strategy. Â I've only been in this position for about 5 months, and it's a new role, so I definitely need to hold out longer and learn more. Â I'd also like to get through my surgeries while I'm still here rather than having to deal with that with a new employer (especially GRS since it will involve a longer recovery time).
While it's nice to have an exit strategy in mind, it doesn't help much in terms of getting through day-to-day.
So anyway, I just needed to get that out somewhere :-)
xoxo
Chrissy
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