Associate
- Joined
- 13 May 2004
- Posts
- 1,491
- Location
- Wales, Wrexham
So long, and thanks for all the fish
... snip ...
And IMO for a "complaint" I'd write:
"Whilst generally this has been a forward looking organisation to work for, on occasion my performance has been affected by my ability to access OcUK"
... snip ...
Davem

12 weeks! Our place usually lets them go at the end of the week. One place i wa at was just, "ok then, get your stuff and get out". Needless to say that place was a pile of steaming poo and i left because it was.
Oh yes. Bring it on. I've been offered a job today, and when the written letter of offer comes through the post I will be crafting a lovely resignation letter fit for an oil tycoon.
So where do I start? In a serious way I don't really know, and though I could look it up, I'd prefer to let you guys have a jab at writing one for me, or at least helping.![]()
Oh yes. Bring it on. I've been offered a job today, and when the written letter of offer comes through the post I will be crafting a lovely resignation letter fit for an oil tycoon.
So where do I start? In a serious way I don't really know, and though I could look it up, I'd prefer to let you guys have a jab at writing one for me, or at least helping.![]()
Most decent companies / organisations will want you to serve at least a month, mainly for you to instruct the person who will fill your role on details of the job. It can be different, obviously, depending on the nature of your role.
For example if you make burgers in fast food joint your hardly likely to need 3 months to train the person following you. But if you're developing methods for detecting faults with nuclear reactors you might need a good period to train the new guy!

), then for security reasons I would have to stop ~90% of my work immediately and I'd only have supervised access to several system, (which currently i have authority over), in order to hand information over.
Watch the sweary mate!
So long, and thanks for all the fish