New job was misrepresented
By Joan LloydDear Joan:
I recently started my new job in marketing. My previous job was similar, but with more high-level responsibilities, however in a bigger company (one of the top 3 in its industry). When I joined this new company, I compromised with the opportunity of working with a smaller company and was excited to bring my skills and experience to the [new] table. I also consider myself a good interviewee and therefore ask many questions to make sure I understand expectations and job responsibilities well.
In my new job, I'm working very closely with the senior marketing manager, since I'm in the learning phase. However, I'm realizing that this job is more tactical than it was presented to me. The senior marketing manager has been telling me that she is frustrated with some of the day-to-day stuff and is eagerly waiting for me to take on those responsibilities so that she can give more time to thinking and strategy related stuff. When I told her that I would like to work with her on those strategic initiatives (part of my earlier job) as well, she hinted that my responsibilities were made clear to me during the interview process (which was not really exactly the case).
What should I do in this situation? Just give my best performance for things that I've been asked to do? Or, down the road talk to my manager and let him know what I'm really interested in working on? Or just wait for the right time to come? I don't want to step on anyone's shoes but at the same time I want to do quality work. Any suggestions would be highly appreciated. Thanks!
I recently started my new job in marketing. My previous job was similar, but with more high-level responsibilities, however in a bigger company (one of the top 3 in its industry). When I joined this new company, I compromised with the opportunity of working with a smaller company and was excited to bring my skills and experience to the [new] table. I also consider myself a good interviewee and therefore ask many questions to make sure I understand expectations and job responsibilities well.
In my new job, I'm working very closely with the senior marketing manager, since I'm in the learning phase. However, I'm realizing that this job is more tactical than it was presented to me. The senior marketing manager has been telling me that she is frustrated with some of the day-to-day stuff and is eagerly waiting for me to take on those responsibilities so that she can give more time to thinking and strategy related stuff. When I told her that I would like to work with her on those strategic initiatives (part of my earlier job) as well, she hinted that my responsibilities were made clear to me during the interview process (which was not really exactly the case).
What should I do in this situation? Just give my best performance for things that I've been asked to do? Or, down the road talk to my manager and let him know what I'm really interested in working on? Or just wait for the right time to come? I don't want to step on anyone's shoes but at the same time I want to do quality work. Any suggestions would be highly appreciated. Thanks!
Answer:
Making a move from a large company to a smaller one is usually
a shock. It’s a bit like moving from New York City to a small
town. Usually there is less infrastructure, fewer resources, less
staff and less sophistication. In a smaller company you also get
many non-monetary perks—broader scope of responsibilities,
more flexibility, more room to innovate and be creative, and often
a friendlier atmosphere. Depending on how you look at it, all of
these things can be either positives or negatives—it depends
on the work environment you prefer.
I’m not surprised that your current marketing efforts
seem more tactical than in your previous big-company job.
Regardless of what they said during the interview, what they may
have categorized as “strategic” is actually block and
tackle compared what you’re used to. They may not have even
realized they were misrepresenting the duties, since they
don’t have your experience with which to compare it.
It sounds as if the senior marketing manager is eager to get
involved in more strategic initiatives, but you mention that you
also have a manager to whom you report. The first thing I’d
recommend is to have a conversation with him and clarify your
duties and level of responsibility and authority. Ask some specific
questions about what the senior person is going to be working on
and how that contrasts with what he wants you to work on. If
it’s clear that he sees things differently than she does, you
need to repeat to him what she said to you.
Since this could potentially create a rift between you and the
senior marketing person, suggest to your manager that you intend to
earn your stripes in the tactical areas first. Explain that you
realize that the senior marketing manager has earned the right to
work on strategic initiatives, since she has put in her time on
tactical matters and you have a lot to learn before you can
contribute in a strategic way. Explain that you are willing to
contribute to any strategic work but you will focus on lower level
duties first. Ask for confirmation that this approach meets his
approval.
This will have several outcomes. Your manager will become
aware of the senior manager’s desire to keep the strategic
work for herself; and he will also be impressed with your mature
approach to this potential misalignment. In addition, he will be
cued in to the fact that you won’t be happy in a tactical
role indefinitely and you are able to contribute at a higher
level.
Several months from now, if she is incapable of being
strategic, or he feels that you could contribute much more based on
your experience, he will begin to push you into more high level
work.
Let things evolve for at least nine months before reevaluating
the situation. You will likely be involved in strategic matters
faster by demonstrating your expertise and getting results in your
tactical duties than by pushing for too much before proving
yourself.


