newkidontheblock
New Member
Currently a PT Training Supervisor looking to run an outbound belt. Looking for advice to be as successful as possible when I do make the switch. Any and all advice, welcome!
My advice ...Mostly because I am dissatisfied with my role as a trainer. I'm not sure all my qualities make for a great trainer, and so I feel like I can be doing more. I am personable, and can communicate well but I am also impatient and don't respond well to mediocrity. And so I feel like all those qualities together are better suited for operations.
I am also impatient and don't respond well to mediocrity.
My advice ...
Be careful what you ask for ... training is a great job if one is working their way through college, as an example.
One's goal, in this example, is to get a college degree with good grades, get a nice resume by working at UPS in a management position.
However, if one is interested in moving up the Corporate Ladder, then a move to Operations would be seen as aggressive and going for it.
Either example, it's a ballsy move that will serve you well in future endeavors (of course, the assumption is that you do well in Operations).
Good luck in your decisions and life.
Which is why if one is working their way through college to work at a "nice" place in a "nice" job, training might be a great job.This.
Promotions in operations come from the ranks of operators. And forgive the language, but training / compliance is seen as a "paper bitch" job for non-hackers who don't pack the gear to operate.
So what you're saying is I could say I supervised my entire time here and UPS wouldn't verify it to my new employer? Sounds like the door just opened to a whole new world of job opportunities.Which is why if one is working their way through college to work at a "nice" place in a "nice" job, training might be a great job.
No one outside UPS knows the difference and all UPS verifies is that the employee was employed at UPS from this date to that date.
Not unless your job was a management position.So what you're saying is I could say I supervised my entire time here and UPS wouldn't verify it to my new employer?
Gotcha.Not unless your job was a management position.
What I was saying is that because a training supervisor and an operations supervisor are both management ... either could just put Supervisor and it would be verified as such.
So what you're saying is I could say I supervised my entire time here and UPS wouldn't verify it to my new employer? Sounds like the door just opened to a whole new world of job opportunities.
Not really. Our preload supervisors do not train, training sups train. The preload sups have very little knowledge of what is coming and where it goes.Don't touch any packages, train people the RIGHT way based on what bulk stops are coming for the trucks that he or she is loading so that the person can understand the routes. These are the 2 keys to becoming a successful belt supervisor.
Not really. Our preload supervisors do not train, training sups train. The preload sups have very little knowledge of what is coming and where it goes.
i bet you quit alreadyCurrently a PT Training Supervisor looking to run an outbound belt. Looking for advice to be as successful as possible when I do make the switch. Any and all advice, welcome!
Correct. The only thing UPS HR is allowed to say to another company is, "I can verify that Harry Balls was employed here as a loader from April 2015 to Sept 2015 and as a part time supervisor from Sept 2015 through Sept 2016."
All that other garbage I put out there was inside baseball.
That dude has a BrownCafe profile lol
Half his channel is about working at UPS.That dude has a BrownCafe profile lol