Here's the important takeaway, though: your managers are capable of doing much more than that, and with them doing something else you might get a chance to do everything you're being paid for. My father in law is a Ph. D biochemist. He's got a dozen patents related to diabetes. But for the past ten years he's been supervising technicians and auditing Excel macros. Publicly traded multinational employer. Just sayin'.
That hits hard man. I've been spending a lot of time in Excel since finishing grad school.My father in law is a Ph. D biochemist. He's got a dozen patents related to diabetes. But for the past ten years he's been supervising technicians and auditing Excel macros.
Hey, he does okay. For most of my wife's childhood they were hardscrabble survive-on-grants single-income peeps. Now he's a two-houses frequent-flyer kinda guy. There's money in nerd-herding. Less science, though. They've got a line of product that pulls in a couple million a year that they'll have to give up when he fully retires. There simply aren't any candidates with the depth of experience he's got to maintain it.