I was offered the job, and I just declined.
I have mixed feelings about the actual act of declining, of course,
since it was a job, and I don't really have one of those, at least not
in Canada. But it also makes me feel like I am in control of my
life, which I didn't feel I would be if I accepted this job.
The guy who wanted to hire me asked me to delete the offer letter he
sent, which I have done. But I have signed nothing, made no oral
agreements not to disclose anything, etc. However, I am sensible
and am not going to tell you his name or the company name.
The job was to write what would amount to splogs.
I am a blogger. I've been blogging for about three and a half
years in various venues and modes. I've blogged for myself, and
I've blogged for my employer. I've guest-blogged on other
people's sites. But I've never blogged something that wasn't
real. I've blogged jokes - my favorite blog post ever is probably
this one
- it actually fooled some people. And I've left out some things
in stories, changed names, whatever, possibly even blogged fiction, but
I've always noted when something was done like that. I've never
created a post that was completely fabricated in order to sell
something. And I hope I never have to.
And I won't work for someone I've never met, which the offer letter
indicated I would be doing. I am not interested in working where
the company name is not on the door, where the CEO doesn't have
business cards, where the company is incorporated offshore...it all
seems pretty sketchy to me. And I never got an email from the guy
until the offer letter. The only communication I'd had when I
went in for the interview was a call from the offshore location, which
was made with a calling card, so research was incredibly difficult
until after I'd met with him. He had all the info, I had
none. And what I found out over the weekend didn't please me.
I want a job. Joey has been incredibly patient about my
under-employment, and I really want to contribute more to our
household. But I won't do something that makes me feel icky.
Sure, it was nice to have an interview and be offered a position.
I interview well. But he was hiring me to write, and he never
asked for a writing sample. Possibly he did the research and
found online that I can write. But I tend to doubt it.
So, on to the next thing. It might have been fine. But it
might have been very bad, and I think it's better to decline the job
than to go for a week and quit. I've had ethical problems with an
employer before - a long, long time ago - and I did leave the
company. I'd rather have less money and more integrity.
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The Redhead is back from a long hiatus. You may contact her at wkoslow at most major free email services. I'm not kidding.
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Monday, June 5
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The Redhead
on Mon 05 Jun 2006 10:47 AM EDT
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