Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
I tell people I'm a Lead Engineer 'cause I fix church roofs.
Very few people get my hilarious joke.
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
It's a common misconception amoung HR IME, it's also stupid. In order to get chartership through the UK engineering council you have to have managerial skills anyway. Specifically...
Clear evidence of line management and/or project management, responsible for technical and non[technical staff, significant budgetary control, staff development and training,delegation, problem solving, clear understanding of quality, risk assessment etc.
or
Responsible for a number of technical and non-technical staff either as a line manager or within a project management environment, staff development, problem solving and probably limited budgetary control. Responsible for managing a project though its entire life cycle, the project may be small or more complex. Planning and personal supervision of team based projects in research and/or development programmes or problem investigation. Such teams are likely to be multidisciplinary and may include personnel from outside the company.
Those two descriptions are what you need to get level 4 and level 3 in "Competence C - Techical and Commercial leadership". You have to get level 3 or 4 to be chartered.
Last edited by Mr. Dazzle on Tue Jul 13, 2021 2:30 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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- derek badger
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
I don't believe HR are targeting me as an individual or looking to prevent further promotion or pay rises. The company acquired about 5 other firms over the last 3 years and they are trying to standardise a lot of things, not just job titles, but one of the standards coming across the pond from corporate HQ is "Manager = people manager". All good points and input from everyone, thanks for that. As I said there are some big changes ahead so we'll wait and see what happens with the bigger picture.
- Horse
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
In some businesses, particularly those aligned with Civil Service type banding, it's just that.
Ours goes
Job
Senior job
Principle job
Then that loosely aligns to pay scales, responsibilities and rates.
Even bland can be a type of character
- DefTrap
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
This is going to be hilarious for the place that I work (just been taken over by a US firm) as 90% of our employees have manager in the job title, despite not managing any people.
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
Bet it doesn't.
- Horse
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
We're very sensible and serious people, we have principals, you know.
Even bland can be a type of character
- Cousin Jack
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
That's very annoying. I was about to refer to @Potter's post from earlier - if you're going to refer to yourself as "Principle" anything, you really ought to spell it correctly, or you'll never get that promotion. It's a matter of principal, see.
Now Horse has stolen my thundery wit.
Now Horse has stolen my thundery wit.
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
There are many oddities in the NHS, but one is our pay terms and conditions. We have a payment umbrella called ‘Agenda for change’ ( you can look it up- the scales are freely available). The higher up the scale, the greater the expectation that you have management and then leadership skills and capabilities.
For technical roles, particularly now with niche skills- you have to open your wallet. That means we might have to pay tall money for someone that might have zero or limited leading skills- but their pay puts them on our scale at a leadership level IYSWIM.
What this also means is that if your role doesn’t have the right words in it- when HR ( who won’t understand your role) go to desktop it for its banding, it might misrepresent your abilities etc.
Personally, I’d hard swerve anything with ‘senior’ in the title- these get overlooked by those in actual senior roles and kind of reflect the ceiling that person is operating at.
I’ve the quirk of both being a ‘chief’ and a ‘director’ - both are relevant in their own way, but mostly I introduce myself as a nurse still.
We have ‘leads’ who have no direct reports. Heads of/ managers all have direct reports and are involved in the transaction weeds of doing.
So personally I’d have (blank) lead or (blank) Officer ( I’m also one of those and it sounds proper wanky) - but make sure the JD and PS are actually where you describe wtf you do.
For technical roles, particularly now with niche skills- you have to open your wallet. That means we might have to pay tall money for someone that might have zero or limited leading skills- but their pay puts them on our scale at a leadership level IYSWIM.
What this also means is that if your role doesn’t have the right words in it- when HR ( who won’t understand your role) go to desktop it for its banding, it might misrepresent your abilities etc.
Personally, I’d hard swerve anything with ‘senior’ in the title- these get overlooked by those in actual senior roles and kind of reflect the ceiling that person is operating at.
I’ve the quirk of both being a ‘chief’ and a ‘director’ - both are relevant in their own way, but mostly I introduce myself as a nurse still.
We have ‘leads’ who have no direct reports. Heads of/ managers all have direct reports and are involved in the transaction weeds of doing.
So personally I’d have (blank) lead or (blank) Officer ( I’m also one of those and it sounds proper wanky) - but make sure the JD and PS are actually where you describe wtf you do.
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
Senior Head IT consultant
Or shitcunt for short
Or shitcunt for short
- wheelnut
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- wheelnut
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
IMO anyone who thinks of a person as a Human Resource really needs to have a look at themselves and think about what the term Human Resource implies.
Honda Owner
- KungFooBob
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
yeah, the more progressive companies call it 'People' or PLD, 'People, Learning and Development', but everyone still refers to them as HR.
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- DefTrap
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
Our new (U.S.) parent company calls it Talent Management. Fair made me wince. Why are they such wankers? I don't want to be a human resource or have my talent managed - just feck orf!
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Re: Assistance needed - corporate jargon and job titles
Yup, and they call their HR team, the Talent Acquisition Team. <groan>