I was on the hunt for a new job several years ago. One prospective employer sent me a long worksheet and only gave me 24 hours to send it back. I worked on it that night, but I wanted to look it over the next morning before sending it in. So I emailed it to myself and then downloaded it at work. Instead of giving it an obvious name, I hid the worksheet document in my folder at work and used the exact same naming convention that I use for all my files. But instead of naming it for that day, I named it for a day far into the future assuming the file would never get found. I did not get the job. Then about 9 months later my boss emailed me and asked why I'd sent him this worksheet from another prospective employer. I had, of course, forgotten about my clever future name for the file several months later and sent it off, like I did everything else. Instead of firing me he made me vow that I would also try to get him a job if that employer ever hired me.
Work Worksheets
I was on the hunt for a new job several years ago. One prospective employer sent me a long worksheet and only gave me 24 hours to send it back. I worked on it that night, but I wanted to look it over the next morning before sending it in. So I emailed it to myself and then downloaded it at work. Instead of giving it an obvious name, I hid the worksheet document in my folder at work and used the exact same naming convention that I use for all my files. But instead of naming it for that day, I named it for a day far into the future assuming the file would never get found. I did not get the job. Then about 9 months later my boss emailed me and asked why I'd sent him this worksheet from another prospective employer. I had, of course, forgotten about my clever future name for the file several months later and sent it off, like I did everything else. Instead of firing me he made me vow that I would also try to get him a job if that employer ever hired me.
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