Monday, January 6, 2020

Past Employer Wont Let You Go Learn How to Reject a Counter Offer

Past Employer Wont Let You Go Learn How to Reject a Counter Offer Leaving a job without burning bridges and with references in tact is difficult, especially when you are jumping ship for a better position elsewhere. But what about when your current employer doesnt just sit back and let you leave? Once youve found a new job, you enter into a transitional state as you prepare to enter a new environment with new responsibilities and expectations. So, what do you do when your old job decides to give you a counter offer? Once the offer is on the table, you may be tempted to take it since it probably offers many things you always wanted out of your job (e.g. higher pay, mora vacation, better benefits). But before you say yes to your would-be past employer, there are things to consider and a few steps to help make turning down the offer easier. First of all, remember that there is a reason you decided to leave your job in the first place, and your employer may have just figured that it was less expensive simply to keep you around than to recruit, hire, and train a new employee. When considering a counter offer, look it over carefully and make sure it is the best decision for helping you reach your career goals. The more doubts and reservations you have, the more likely you should decide to reject the offer.If you decide to turn the offer down, the issue becomes how to approach the situation to ensure a continued mutual respect. If you sense and undercurrent of negativity or spite in the offer, dont let your emotions get the better of you by remaining professional and remembering that a good reference in the future is worth more than the temporary satisfaction of a petty revenge in the present. The best approach is to meet with your boss face-to-face and deliver a formal rejection in person.An alternative method is to write your rejection into your resignation letter. Remain respect ful by thanking your employer for the offer, but politely turn it down. Regardless of your feelings toward the offer, whether you are flattered or offended, the break from your employer need not be damaging to your professional relationship with your boss and senior management. Accepting a counter offer may seem tempting in the short run, but it runs the risk of revealing a number of negative consequences in the years ahead. Always remember that you have chosen to move on to a different setting and position in order to continue to grow as a professional and expand your skill set as you become an ever more valuable employee.

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Carpet Tufting Apparatus Designated as an ASME Landmark

Carpet Tufting Apparatus Designated as an ASME Landmark Carpet Tufting Apparatus Designated as an ASME Landmark Carpet Tufting Apparatus Designated as an ASME Landmark(Left to right) Jay Henry, director, Innovation Operations Support, Shaw Industries Melissa Mondello, one of the nominators of the landmark ASME Past President Reginald Vachon Mary Lynn Realff, ASME Board of Governors member and Turner Plunkett, vice president, Supply Chain at Shaw Industries. (Photo by Wil Haywood, ASME Public Information)An early device that brought mechanization and speed to fabric tufting and spurred the growth of carpet manufacturing in Georgia was recently designated as an ASME Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark. The designation ceremony took place on July 31 at Shaw Industries in Dalton, Ga.The original Moench tufting apparatus, which was named after its inventor Ernest J. Moench and patented in 1928, featured a durable needle that punched loops of thick fabric through a web of backing mat erial, resulting in the reliable, high-speed tufting of carpet without human intervention. Descendants of the apparatus, which was named ASMEs 266th landmark during the ceremony, are currently used to fabricate mora than three-quarters of the carpets produced in the United States. The Moench tufting apparatus, the device that brought mechanization and speed to carpet tufting, was designated as the 266th ASME Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark last month in a ceremony in Dalton, Ga. (Photo by Wil Haywood, ASME Public Information)The Moench tufting apparatus played a role in the growth of the textile industry in the state of Georgia, said ASME Past President Reginald Vachon, who spoke at the designation ceremony. The device is a significant piece of the industrial heritage of Americas south and worthy to receive landmark status.The ceremony was also attended by ASME Board of Governors member Mary Lynn Realff Elisabeth Deeb, chair of the Atlanta Section Mark Poteet , chair of the Chattanooga Section Chair and Robert Gagliano, former chair of the Chattanooga Section.For more information on the ASME History and Heritage Landmarks Program, visit www.asme.org/about-asme/engineering-history/landmarks/about-the-landmarks-program.