Photo: CBS News. Expression: Perfect. |
In my Big Agency Dreams maybe |
Cut to last April, in a small, bustling office in Seattle. An
agency called Hydrogen Advertising had welcomed me into their fold. An agency
full of old friends and former co-workers. An agency of hope, talent and
(surprise) people who honestly try to help each other out. Really. I remember after sitting in my first
all-agency meeting (we did then and still can squeeze into one room) and saying
to my colleagues: “Everyone’s really, genuinely nice to each other here. I’ll
try to get used to this.”
Now don’t get me wrong, most of my career has been filled
with positive experiences: good friends, wise mentors, you name it. And when things
weren’t as, um, positive, well I proudly look back on these times as “learning
experiences.”
Oh, and speaking of “learning experiences, ” let’s get back
to my new job and my new life. Sans assistant of course, I gamely sat down to
do my first timesheet in our agency’s timesheet program a week or so into the
gig. I stopped looking at the clock after two hours. I think I had half a
bottle (or more) of wine that night just trying to forget the horror that was
that timesheet. I swear that program was designed by sadistic left brainers
who, at a young age, decided that right brainers must be punished and punished
severely. Then there were the expense reports. (Oh yeah, I used to sign those…)
And of course, the copier.
Thanks to Eli Moody for a very evil copier illustration. |
Actually, no I can’t. I can print, yes. I can even collate
and staple. But for the life of me, of the four paper trays on that monster,
none of them seem to be the “empty” one. I think the paper hops around when the
trays are closed to trick me. Of course, kind, patient co-workers swoop in to
help. I haven’t even asked where the toner cartridges are. Nor would they
probably tell me, if I asked. (Wise move on their part.)
Oh and the timesheets? No prob these days. I have learned to
click on the least intuitive box in the spreadsheet and my job numbers pop up
in seconds. Click. Save. Done.