- Temping is like
starting a new job every week, or sometimes every few days – try to imagine
what that feels like! It’s not for the faint hearted, you must have nerves
of steel. If you don’t’ have nerves of steel, fake it (like I do).
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You can judge what a place will be like when you walk in and sense the atmosphere. The dark dank places where nobody even looks at you let alone
raise a smile are to be avoided at all costs. Take a look at the clothes
people are wearing; if they’re shabby, they’re not being paid enough and
they’re too demoralised by this to be cheerful. Leave immediately.
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If they point at a desk and tell you to get on with it, take a deep
breath, sit down and start filing your nails – it just ain’t worth it.
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Always ‘get in’ with the doorman – very often they’re the only nice person
in the building.
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Warning bells ring out when you arrive at a new place and they say, “Oh we
have LOADS for you to do.” People always overestimate their workload, and
‘loads to do’ translates as roughly 3 letters and a fax, for the week!
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It takes a week before you’re comfortable enough to open your mouth and
say something, and a month to really ‘get into a job’, which is unfortunate
as most temping jobs only last a week.
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It can be very tedious looking at the A-Z all the time trying to figure
out where you’re supposed to be first thing on Monday morning.
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The temping agency will do and say
anything to get you into a position, so
wheedle every little bit of information out of them – 80% copy typing means
a couple of memo’s and an email a day; taking messages on the phone means
booking international plane flights and trying to find vacant hotel rooms in
Kuala Lumpa.
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After a while you do tend to give up making ‘a good impression’ … nobody
notices anyway, and you’re only there for a week.
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Never expect any praise or recognition for your work – after all, you’re
only the temp. If someone actually says you’re ‘good’, try not to fall on
the floor and kiss their feet, its very undignified.
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First thing you should try and do is make a list of everybody’s name, a
floor layout of where everybody sits, and a list of their extension
numbers. None of this will help if your brain automatically shuts off every
time you hear the phone ring. If in doubt, admit you’re a temp and that you
know absolutely nothing.
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Never forget that you’re ‘just the temp’. You will get all the shitty
jobs, like a six month backlog of filing or all the typing nobody else wants
to do.
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Assume that the next job is going to be as crap as the last one,
that way you're at least pleasantly surprised every now and again.
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Never underestimate other people’s capacity to ignore you.
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Don’t let anyone put you down.
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There are terrible jobs out there being done by terrible people.
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I was once stuck in a room furnished with only a computer on a table, and
left to type for eight hours. My only conversation was with the coffee
machine, for which I had to pay 20p (for the coffee, not the conversation).
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If it has free coffee and people who treat you like a human bean, and if
the phone only rings once every four or five hours, beg them for a permanent
job.
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Once you get ‘into’ a job and know what you’re doing with a certain amount
of confidence, you know it must almost be time to leave!
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It may help you to remember, when you’re in a pit of despair with a job
you wouldn’t offer to your worst enemy, to remind yourself that they could
have gotten a lot worse than you and that you'll be gone by the end of the
week (unlike the people who work there).
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he hassle with some jobs isn’t worth the money they’re paying you.
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If the temping agency suddenly offer you more money than you’re used to,
there’s a catch, there’s something they’re not telling you – like everyone
else on their books has refused to do it, and often for very good reason
(which you won’t discover until you arrive at some shabby office block full
of shabby people struggling to do crappy work).
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20p for a cup of truly awful coffee from a ricketty old machine. That’s
over £1 a day for a caffeine addict. Or worse, there’s no cup for you on
the first day so you can’t have a drink at all. On the second day you have
to drag in a separate bag full of coffee, sugar, milk, spoon, mug, and your
sandwiches.
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Going for a smoke can sometimes be dangerous. In a mental hospital, you
have to walk through all the wards in order to reach the smoke room, which
is invariably bleak and yellow with no ventilation. Its hard to tell the
difference between the staff and the patients. This can be a very
depressing way to earn a penny.
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Never doubt that, once you leave, everyone will blame you, the temp, for
absolutely everything that’s gone wrong in the last seven decades. You can
almost hear the echo of their voices, all crying, “It was the Temp! The
Temp did it!”
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With some jobs, you think, “Why do they work here, why do they stay?” And
a day passes like a very long month, and you can’t stop looking at the
clock, or timing your fag breaks closer and closer, or taking a very long
time on the loo and finding you’ve only wasted 6.5 minutes.
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Smiling so much you’re face aches. When it hurts so much you can’t do it
any more and you realise not one single person has smiled back, give up.
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After a while, you long to stay in one job and just get stuck in.
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Travelling for hours in a huge metropolis …
not fun, but necessary if you want to work where the 'money is'. One
hour and twenty minutes to get into the city, the same to get home again
at night. You leave the house at 8am and don’t see the place again
(and then only through a haze of exhaustion) until 6.30pm. You
wonder why you do it, then you glance at your bank statement and realise
why. Long hours, more hours of travelling, sometimes getting lost
trying to find a new place, turning up at an assignment and realising
instantly that its going to be ‘a bad one’ (temps quickly develop a sixth
sense about this).
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The size of your household domestic bills is directly proportional to the
size of your salary – the more you get paid, the more you have to pay out.
Nothing changes this, its sods law.
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The single working mother – knackered, stressed to breaking point,
surrounded by ever-demanding people (not necessarily children) and an
increasing sense of guilt (about everything). Welcome to my world!
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You’ve been at a place for four whole months and you’re well into the
swing of things, convinced they’re gonna offer you a job. Then the big boss
comes over and says, “Right, you’ve done all the hard work [all the million
tons of filing] we don’t need you any more, bugger off.” And you’re
suddenly thrust back into the big bad world and start hassling your temping
agency (who’ve probably forgotten your name) for work, work, you MUST have
work.
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Finally, and most importantly, no matter how keen and enthusiastic you are
and no matter how good an impression you want to make, do not, under any
circumstances;
(a) arrive for work early (and start work!)
(b) work through
lunch (no matter how much there is to be done - get out there and get some
fresh air in yer lungs), or
(c) work late (you do have a life, after all).
If you break any of these three rules, you’re making a rod for your own back
- they’ll start to expect it (trust me, I know). One day, in
the not too distant
future, when they expect you to work over to finish something and you say
you can’t, they’ll be positively
indignant. Start
how you mean to go on. Do your hours, break for lunch, and that’s
it.
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