[MENTION=6109]Halla74[/MENTION].
Classic, classic example of the difference between an ESTP who uses Ti and an eNTJ who uses Te! Thanks for expanding my shorthand by providing examples and techniques of how to get there!
You are very welcome!

Thank you for summarizing my wordy passasges of bibble-babble into useful information!

We complement each other well, yes we do.
-Alex
Usehername said:
I am undoubtedly willing to work hard, but I also don't want to be the person who will hoop-jump through every stupid little thing to get there. I like having a life and not working 100 hour workweeks.
I forgot to address this, and it is a very important topic, especially for younger people who are commonly exploited by old, lazy, fat people.
(1) Working overtime ALL THE TIME is NOT good or YOU or your CAREER. Your efforts will be taken for granted, because that is what you ALWAYS do.
(2) Working overtime occasionally, is expected in most positions considered to be of gainful employment. How do you determine when the "real overtime" is and when the "unnecessary overtime is?" Here is a good rule of thumb. If your boss is working overtime, then you might ought to as well, unless your boss is a total fuck up and unable to say "No" to every assignment that comes his way, when he should be asking for more staff.
(3) In general, if there is an organizational perception of possible failure on a project you are working on, for a given deliverable/milestone, and you think you can "perform a miracle" by burning a little bit (an evening, maybe two) of your personal time, a few times per year (once per quarter is my rule of thumb), do so, but make sure your efforts are documented as follows:
----(3a) Send out an e-mail when you begin with an attachment of the document/deliverable in its current state to the relevant players (Cc your boss, of course, if they are not directly involved with the project) when you begin your overtime (Let's say 5:10 PM)
----(3b) Send out an e-mail when you complete your work for the evening to the same people you notified when you began, and attach the work with your reccommended revisions/changes, and a bulleted list of what they are in the e-mail (Let's say 10:10 PM).
If you are on point, and the next day hailed as a hero, and some nit-picking beauracrat doesn't edit your work to death subjectively in an effort to claim it their own, your work will get you recognition, most likely.
Sidebar: When I become aware that people are trying to steal my work, I blast them for it, sometimes in private, sometimes in public

, sometimes in e-mail, sometimes all three, it depends on my mood, which is why people at the office typically don't fuck with me, because they know (a) I WILL FIGHT BACK, and (b) they have NO IDEA what the degree of my retaliation will be.

Plagiarism is to be frowned upon, especially by academics. If it is wrong in the classroom, then it is wrong anywhere, period. The problem is, in many public organizations, there are always a few petty, lazy, little slimebags who survive by by felching the work of others. If such things do happen with your well intended efforts, then you might want to look for another place to work.
----(3c) If you can get the overtime "approved" and be either (i) paid for it, or (ii) offered an equivalent number of hours of time off in return, then do so, but this means you are most likely asking for permission to do so BEFORE you perform the work.
----(3d) Even if any overtime you do exert does not result in a direct effort to promote you within the organization, there are other intangible benefits that it may bestow upon you that you will not immediately realize, yet that are also VERY important: (i) You will be less likely to be targeted during a layoff, as you are a motivated employee producing good results, and (ii) You might just learn something that you didn't know before, that you can put in your resume, and that another prospective employer will value enough to hire you later on. I've benefitted from both in the last 17 years.
Cheers!
-Alex