dvdman1 wrote: » Definitely stay in the private sector Cronyism in the public sector is rampant its full of brothers, sisters and cousins that never even did an interview and if they did one, it was already known they'd get the job. Theres generations of incompetent workers who cover 1 thing......you guessed it, their own a** Do yourself a favour...Private sector is the real world its where everything is at.
Snow Garden wrote: » Only 15 per cent of staff in the Civil Service believe that poor performance is being tackled, according to a major new survey of personnel. The 2017 Civil Service employment engagement survey found that almost 60 per cent of civil servants maintained that poor performance was not being effectively addressed in their department.https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/only-15-of-civil-service-staff-believe-poor-performance-being-tackled-1.3443684
AndrewJRenko wrote: » You've noticed the new generation of 40-something SecGens, and similar A/Secs and POs, right? How did they manage to get 'seniority'? Promotions have nothing to do with seniority - the criteria for promotion competitions are set out clearly and implemented by Public Apps Service. Performance appraisals are as good as the line manager implementing them.
doc22 wrote: » That's terrible for the future, those senior positions will be out of circulation for 20plus years,far less people will have the opportunity to fill those roles, along with open recruitment there's going to be limited movement into the future for internals
doc22 wrote: » AndrewJRenko wrote: » You've noticed the new generation of 40-something SecGens, and similar A/Secs and POs, right? How did they manage to get 'seniority'? Promotions have nothing to do with seniority - the criteria for promotion competitions are set out clearly and implemented by Public Apps Service. Performance appraisals are as good as the line manager implementing them. That's terrible for the future, those senior positions will be out of circulation for 20plus years,far less people will have the opportunity to fill those roles, along with open recruitment there's going to be limited movement into the future for internals
Diceicle wrote: » For clarity - I work in the PS and there are benefits. Pension-wise there's no gain for you there as your contract would be a defined contribution.
Snow Garden wrote: » You might need to leave ambition at the door if you join the public sector. Progression is more about years of service and network than ability. Performance appraisals are generally a tick-the-box exercise but you will get your increments no matter what happens.
Monife wrote: » From my experience, performance appraisals do tend to be a bit of a box-ticking exercise but if you consistently under-perform, you will get a rating of unsatisfactory and will not receive your annual increment.
OMM 0000 wrote: » Almost everything I ever read about working in the public sector is negative. It seems to be a demoralising place. I would stick with the private sector.
Snow Garden wrote: » I have been in the PS several years and I never heard on one person getting unsatisfactory. I have never seen an increment being withheld. I know a few who should have
hardybuck wrote: » Snow Garden wrote: » I have been in the PS several years and I never heard on one person getting unsatisfactory. I have never seen an increment being withheld. I know a few who should have Over 320,000 people work in the Public Service. Just because you haven't seen something doesn't mean it doesn't happen.
Technocentral wrote: » The new intake are a lot more conscientious it has to be said, the lazy older ones will be gone soon enough. They started work in a different Ireland, that Ireland is gone.
hardybuck wrote: » Over 320,000 people work in the Public Service. Just because you haven't seen something doesn't mean it doesn't happen.
Crock Rock wrote: » Public Sector all the way. Excellent pension benefits, no performance reviews, exorbinant pay rates, essentially un-fireable, what's not to like?
AndrewJRenko wrote: » The fact that you got most of it wrong?
hardybuck wrote: » Technocentral wrote: » The new intake are a lot more conscientious it has to be said, the lazy older ones will be gone soon enough. They started work in a different Ireland, that Ireland is gone. Professionalisation of HR has also resulted in more action being taken. In the Civil Service a considerable number of new staff don't make it through probation. The system just demands more from the business now. In the olden days they could write to you and it could go into a drawer for a couple of weeks before a letter of response would go out. These days you've got the media, the public, the political system all prodding you for information non-stop, so while there are obviously some people in a big organisation who aren't brilliant, there's less hiding places.
Crock Rock wrote: » So which parts did I get right? Go on?
Snow Garden wrote: » A quick google revealed that 0.25% got Unsatisfactory in 2016. It's not clear whether increments were withheld from those folks. 800 out of 320,000 so. Seems like a reasonable bell curve
hardybuck wrote: » Why would you expect to see a bell curve?
Snow Garden wrote: » Because I previously worked in the private sector and bell curves like the one below were common when doing performance appraisals in large companies.https://empxtrack.com/blog/bell-curve-for-performance-appraisal/