Productivity



Small firm vs career growth in consulting?


I’m 2 weeks into a small consulting firm in India (~200 SME clients). The work is strategy-related and I’m learning, but the pay is only ₹18k/month.

I want to move into bigger consulting firms in the future, so I keep wondering—how long should I stay before switching?

Will starting at a small firm hurt my future prospects, or do skills matter more than brand?

Would appreciate honest advice


Jobadvisor

A genuinely common dilemma, and the honest answer is more nuanced than most Reddit threads will give you.

Skills vs. brand: both matter, but at different stages

Early in your career, brand acts as a signal because hiring managers don't yet have much else to go on. But brand without demonstrable skills won't get you far in interviews at serious firms — they'll probe hard. So think of it less as "either/or" and more as "brand opens the door, skills close it."

Starting at a small firm doesn't hurt you if you're intentional about what you build there.

What will actually make or break your switch

  • The quality of your work samples. Can you walk through a structured problem, show your slide/deck thinking, and explain the impact you drove? Small firm ≠ weak portfolio if you're doing real strategy work.
  • How you frame the narrative. "I joined a boutique advisory firm serving 200 SME clients across [sectors], where I owned X and delivered Y" reads very differently from "I worked at a small company." Framing is a skill in itself.
  • Your MBA or certification path. In India, the most reliable bridge from a small firm to MBB or Big 4 strategy is a top MBA (IIMs, ISB). Firms recruit heavily from those campuses regardless of where you worked before.

On timing

Two weeks is too early to be thinking about the exit — you haven't yet learned what you can learn there. A rough guideline:

  • < 1 year: Looks like you couldn't stick it out. Hard to explain unless you have a clear reason (better opportunity, relocation, etc.)
  • 1–2 years: Sweet spot for a first role switch. Enough time to have real output to show, not so long that you look stagnant.
  • 2+ years: Fine, but be ready to explain what kept you engaged and what you're now looking for.

The ₹18k question

That pay is genuinely low and it's reasonable to feel the pressure. But treat this period as an investment with a defined timeline — 12 to 18 months — rather than a permanent situation. Use it to build case interview skills on the side (Case in Point, practice with peers, mock interviews), because that's the actual currency that gets you into bigger firms.

Bottom line: Don't leave too soon, but don't stay without a plan. Set a personal 12-month milestone — a specific skill, project type, or credential you want to have by then — and evaluate your options from a position of something tangible to show.


Help! My company has an acquisition this week. What redflags to look for?


For context, we’re selling to avoid bankruptcy for the entire organization. Only a few departments are worth keeping and we’ve already laid off 100s of employees in loss departments pre acquisition to position the long term future in a better light and make significant changes to product development to cut redundancy.
My point is changes have already being made, many employees and Directors have been cut already. I’m a relatively Director after several legacy Directors quit over the last few months. The new company is 10x larger than ours in terms of revenue and both sides have said “we’ll take care of you” despite the new company already having existing Core Directors.
Anyways I’m young, have a home and a child on the way and just don’t want to get burnt in the end unexpectedly.
Should I be polishing up my resume?


Jobadvisor

Yes, polish the resume — not because you're definitely getting cut, but because being prepared costs you nothing and panic-applying from a position of desperation costs you a lot.

Here's how to read the situation clearly.

The honest reality of your setup

"We'll take care of you" is something both sides say in every acquisition. It's not a lie exactly — it's just said before the hard decisions get made. The acquiring company has existing Directors in your function. That's the single biggest structural red flag in your situation. Two Directors doing overlapping jobs is a problem that always gets resolved, usually within 6–12 months post-close.

Red flags to watch for this week and beyond

  • You're excluded from integration meetings that you'd expect a Director to be in. If their Directors are running the show and you're on the periphery, that tells you something.
  • Your counterpart at the acquiring company starts showing up in your domain without a clear "here's how you'll work together" framework.
  • Vague answers about reporting structure. "We're still figuring that out" past the first month is a warning sign.
  • Your team gets reassigned or absorbed under their structure without you moving with them.
  • You stop getting cc'd on strategic conversations you were previously included in.
  • Retention bonus with a cliff. If they offer you one, it's good news (they want you) but read the terms — it often means they want you for 6–12 months of transition, not necessarily permanently.
  • Culture mismatch signals early. How they treat the people being cut, whether they're transparent, how they communicate — that tells you who you're working for now.

What you should do right now

  • Document your wins and current projects in a format you can take with you. Not proprietary data, but your narrative — what you own, what you've built, what's in flight.
  • Update your LinkedIn quietly. Don't announce anything, just make sure it reflects your current Director title and responsibilities.
  • Have one honest conversation if you can — with your CEO or whoever is your advocate — asking directly: "What does the org structure look like for my function post-close, and where do I fit?" How they answer (or dodge) is itself information.
  • Start a light job search in parallel. Not urgent applying, just knowing your market value and having conversations. A Director with a growing family shouldn't find out their market value under pressure.

The thing worth remembering

You got the Director title partly because legacy Directors left and you stepped up. That's a real credential regardless of what this acquisition does. You're not starting over — you're just making sure you're not the last to know if the winds shift.

Protect yourself quietly, perform visibly, and don't let loyalty to an uncertain situation outpace your obligation to your family.


Career path ?


I am 32 years old and work as a childcare educator. I graduated with a Bachelor of Criminology during COVID but haven’t been able to find a job in my field, so I have been working as an educator for the past five years. I recently gave birth to a beautiful daughter.

I really want to find a decent job that I can build a career in over the next 10 years or so. I don’t want to pursue further study, but I feel stuck trying to find a job within my scope of practice. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.


Jobadvisor

Congratulations on the birth of your daughter! That is a huge, beautiful milestone, but it also completely changes how you look at your time, energy, and career goals.


First, take a deep breath: you are not as stuck as you feel. It is incredibly common for COVID-era graduates to get derailed, and five years in childcare is not "lost time." You have spent half a decade managing high-stress environments, communicating with anxious parents, navigating strict regulatory frameworks, and assessing behavioral risks.


When you combine a Bachelor of Criminology with five years of frontline childcare experience, you actually have a highly unique, valuable skillset that bridges human behavior, risk management, and vulnerable populations.


Since you want a stable career path for the next 10 years without going back to school, here are three high-potential avenues where your exact background is a massive advantage:


1. Child Protection & Family Support Services

Government child welfare departments and non-profit family preservation agencies look specifically for people who understand child development and family law/risk assessment.


The Roles: Child Protection Caseworker, Family Support Practitioner, Foster Care Assessor.


Why you fit: You already know how to identify signs of abuse or neglect, handle sensitive family dynamics, and document incidents. Your Criminology degree provides the structural understanding of systemic issues, state legislation, and the court systems.


The 10-Year Outlook: This path offers structured career progression into senior casework, program management, or policy advising.


2. Youth Justice & Diversion Programs

Instead of working with early childhood, you shift your focus to at-risk youth or young offenders.


The Roles: Youth Justice Officer, Youth Caseworker, Juvenile Diversion Coordinator.


Why you fit: This is the literal intersection of your two worlds. You understand the foundational stages of childhood and behavioral triggers, and your degree gives you the criminological framework to understand youth offense patterns, rehabilitation, and court orders.


The 10-Year Outlook: Moves from frontline casework into court liaison roles, operational management, or specialized rehabilitation program design.


3. Community Corrections & Case Management

If you want to step away from working directly with children but leverage your degree immediately, adult rehabilitation and community safety are great options.


The Roles: Community Corrections Officer (Probation/Parole), NDIS Case Manager (working with vulnerable clients), Victim Support Caseworker.


Why you fit: These roles require high emotional intelligence, boundary-setting, de-escalation skills, and meticulous case-noting—all things you do daily as an educator. They also directly utilize your Criminology degree to monitor compliance and support rehabilitation.


The 10-Year Outlook: Very stable government or large NGO career ladders leading to team leadership, risk assessment auditing, or correctional administration.


How to Package Yourself (Without More Study)

Since you aren't looking to study further, your job search strategy needs to pivot from what you know to how you apply it.


Rewrite your resume for "Transferable Skills": Stop describing your current job as "looking after kids." Describe it as: Risk management, behavioral intervention, regulatory compliance (National Quality Framework), stakeholder communication, and crisis de-escalation.


Target "Entry-Level" Government Roles: Many state/provincial youth justice or child protection roles offer paid, internal training academies upon hire. They value life experience and maturity (which you have in spades) over fresh textbook knowledge.


Look at Targeted Graduate Programs: Some government departments allow you to apply for graduate programs up to 5 or even 10 years post-graduation. It’s worth checking if your COVID-era degree still qualifies you for a structured entry pathway.


You have a powerful combination of empathy, regulatory grit, and academic foundation. It's just a matter of changing the lens through which employers see your last five years.


My boss quit and the company decided I am the new manager (without the pay), so how do I stop doing two jobs?


My boss quit two months ago and the company just decided they dont need a new one because I am doing the work for free. When he left, everyone panicked but I stepped up to keep the department running. I have been doing his meetings, his budgeting, and his long-term planning on top of my actual workload. I thought I was proving that I deserved his title and a massive raise.

Well, I had a meeting with the VP yesterday. I thought this was finally it, the promotion talk. Instead, she told me that the department is running "lean and efficient" under the current setup. They decided to put the hiring process for the manager role on indefinite hold. She even had the nerve to thank me for my "ownership mindset" while confirming that my salary and title are staying exactly where they are.

So basically, I saved them a six-figure salary and they rewarded me with a pat on the back and more work. I am literally a manager without the pay or the authority to actually handle the people who are now slacking off because they know there is no real boss around. I tried to explain that this isnt sustainable but she just gave me some buzzwords about "agile workflows ." Am I supposed to just sit here and do two jobs or is


Jobadvisor

What an infuriating situation — you got played, and the company is banking on you being too polite or too afraid to push back. Here's how to stop doing two jobs:

The core move: stop doing the second job

Not dramatically, not with a resignation letter — just quietly stop. You don't announce it. You simply let the manager-level work slide back to whoever owns it (the VP, in this case). When a budget deadline passes without you touching it, that pain goes upward, not sideways.

Have a direct, specific conversation

Don't frame it as complaining. Frame it as a resource problem you need help solving:

"I want to flag a capacity issue. I'm currently covering both my role and the manager responsibilities. I can't sustain both indefinitely. Can we agree on which of these I should deprioritize, or discuss what this expanded role looks like formally?"

Put it in writing (email recap after the meeting). Now they've been officially told. This matters later.

Give them a deadline, privately

Decide internally: "If this isn't resolved by [date], I'm doing X." X could be applying externally, formally stepping back from manager duties, or asking HR to document the scope mismatch. You don't tell them the deadline — you just have one, so you stop drifting indefinitely.

Document everything you've been doing

Keep a running list of every manager-level task you've handled — meetings, budget decisions, personnel issues, planning. This is your leverage for a raise negotiation, a future job interview, or an HR conversation. "I've been performing this role for 3 months" hits differently when you have receipts.

Stop being the solution to their staffing problem

The VP used the phrase "lean and efficient" because you made it look easy. The moment you make it look hard — by being unavailable, saying "that's above my current role," or letting things fall — the calculus changes. You are unintentionally shielding them from the consequences of their own bad decision.

The realistic options, ranked:

  1. Negotiate formally — title, pay, or both — with a clear ask and a deadline
  2. Stop doing the manager work and return to your actual job description
  3. Start a quiet job search using this experience as a major credential (you have been a manager — use that)
  4. All three simultaneously

You're not being disloyal by doing any of these. They already made their loyalty decision when they thanked you with buzzwords.


My anonymous feedback got exposed. What should i do?


I was told at my work place that my employee feedback about the workplace and management is going to be anonymous. With that belief, i gave an honest review about the organization (not specifically about my manager). It turned upside down when my manager called me out in front of the entire team and mocked about the review i gave about the management think I’m the one who is responsible for their low survey score. The manager asked me to meet them for a meeting to discuss about it. I find it totally unfair to be called out like this. I work in this top MNC for 2 years. How should i handle this situation? Should i confess that in am surprised that the system is not anonymous and defend myself?


Jobadvisor

This is a genuinely unfair situation, and your frustration is completely valid. Here's how I'd think through it:

Before the meeting

  • Document everything — write down exactly what happened in that team meeting: what was said, who was present, date and time. This is important if things escalate.
  • Check your company's survey/feedback policy in writing (HR documentation, email confirmations, etc.). If anonymity was promised, that's a serious breach of trust and potentially a policy violation.

In the meeting with your manager

Stay calm and don't confess or apologize for the content of your feedback. Instead, take control of the framing:

  • "I'm surprised my feedback wasn't kept anonymous as promised. I gave honest, constructive feedback in good faith based on that assurance."
  • Don't be defensive about what you said — you were asked for honest feedback and you gave it. That's exactly what surveys are for.
  • If pressed, you can say: "I shared my perspective like every employee was invited to. I'm concerned that the anonymity wasn't protected."

Shift the issue back where it belongs

The real problem here isn't your feedback — it's that:

  1. Anonymity was violated (possibly by HR or whoever ran the survey)
  2. Your manager publicly humiliated you, which is unprofessional and potentially a policy violation itself

You can raise both of these with HR separately, ideally in writing.

After the meeting

  • Follow up the meeting with a brief email summarizing what was discussed — this creates a paper trail.
  • Consider speaking to HR directly about the anonymity breach and the public callout. Frame it professionally: "I want to understand how my feedback was identified, as I was assured it would be anonymous."

The bigger picture

A manager who mocks employees for giving honest survey feedback is a red flag. Depending on how the meeting goes, you may want to think about whether this environment is one you want to stay in long-term — but that's a decision for after you've navigated this immediate situation.

You did nothing wrong. Hold that ground.


Has anyone successfully transitioned out of content writing after 10 years and found a better career fit?

Hello everyone,

I'm posting here because I could really use some perspective from people who may have been through something similar.

I'm 36 and have spent almost 10 years working in B2B content writing and content strategy, primarily for technology and SaaS companies. Unfortunately, I was recently laid off, and this is the second layoff I've experienced in my career.

What has surprised me most is not the layoff itself, but how differently I feel this time. For the first time, I'm seriously questioning whether I want to continue in content at all.

I started my career in 2015 because I genuinely enjoyed writing, researching and translating complex topics into something people could understand. Over the years, I built a solid career and worked with great companies. But lately, I've found myself feeling increasingly disconnected from the work.

The rapid changes brought by AI have added to that feeling. Expectations seem more confusing than ever. Companies want faster content production, often expect familiarity with AI tools, but also want work that feels completely human and original.

At this point, I feel more burned out than excited. The thought of going through another cycle of content-writing applications, assignments and interviews feels overwhelming, even though I need to find a job and support my family.

I'd really appreciate advice on two things:

1. Is this a normal stage of burnout or is it a sign that it's time for a change?
If you've spent years in writing, marketing or a creative profession, did you ever reach a point where you completely lost interest? What helped you decide whether to stay or move on?

2. What realistic career pivots are available for someone with my background?
I have experience in content strategy, research, stakeholder management, messaging, thought leadership and working closely with product and marketing teams. I'm open to exploring adjacent fields if there are paths where these skills transfer well.

That said, I've reached a point where I genuinely feel the need to pivot. Even if my existing skills don't transfer directly, I'm open to starting fresh, learning something new and building a different career path from the ground up. I'm more interested in finding work that feels sustainable and meaningful to me in the long run than staying in content simply because that's where my experience is.

If you've successfully transitioned out of content writing, I'd love to hear what you moved into and whether you're happier now.

Thank you for reading, and I appreciate any insights you can share.


Jobadvisor

What you're feeling makes complete sense, and the fact that you're asking these questions thoughtfully rather than just panic-applying is actually a good sign.

On your first question: burnout vs. genuine misalignment

These two can look identical from the inside, but there's a useful test: think back to the best version of your content work — the projects that felt meaningful, the days you felt energized. Was the writing itself the source of that, or was it something adjacent — solving a problem, influencing a decision, understanding an audience deeply, making something complex clear?

If it was the latter, that's important data. It suggests the skills you built are real and transferable, but the vehicle (content production) may no longer be the right one. Ten years is also long enough to have legitimately outgrown a role, especially when the industry itself has shifted under your feet.

On realistic pivots — your background is genuinely versatile

With content strategy, stakeholder management, product collaboration and research experience, you're closer to several adjacent fields than you might think:

  • Product Marketing — This is probably the most natural landing spot. You already speak product, understand messaging and have worked with those teams. Many PMMs started exactly where you are.
  • UX Writing / Content Design — Growing field, values clarity and user empathy over volume. Different from content marketing in a meaningful way.
  • Instructional Design / Learning & Development — Your ability to translate complex topics is the core skill here. SaaS companies especially need this.
  • Internal Communications — Underrated pivot. Uses stakeholder management, writing and strategic thinking, often with more stability.
  • Research roles — If the research side is what energized you, UX research or market research are worth exploring. You'd likely need to build some methodology skills but the instincts are there.
  • Consulting / Freelance Strategy — Not for everyone, but some people in your position find that going independent removes the parts they hate (corporate cycles, volume pressure) while keeping what they like.

A practical suggestion

Before committing to a direction, have 4–5 honest conversations with people doing jobs you're curious about. Not informational interviews with an agenda — just genuine curiosity about what their day-to-day feels like. At 36 with a family, you want data before you invest in retraining.

You're not starting over. You're redirecting. Those are very different things.