So I've made a previous thread about my relatively new job as a Site Reliability Engineer for a software company (as of three months now) and some of our interactions with my boss. I have noticed that he is not in the office as much and many of the things he has addressed with me have been assumptions that he drew conclusions on. The first few things he stated that I did:
-Submitting my time card without putting my lunch hours. Made a claim that he told me to do this and that I did not do this. Essentially insinuating I was stealing company time. I did not do this nor did I take lunch.
-Made the assumption that I was coming into work late on purpose. The expectation was not set for me to come in at 9, rather than 9:30 which I later addressed and we cleared out.
-Looking at non-work things too much at work. I promptly said "OK" and did not continue this. He stated
On these he stated that I should "consider this your first and last warning". He later said that maybe I didn't know which I didn't. This was within a time frame of three weeks into the role.
Fast forward to mid-April I have a 1:1 with him today and he premises the conversation that this is a "chance for you to improve" before he has to put me on a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP). This is almost always code for a boss to build a case against you to terminate you. I am in an At Will state but they have to cover their ass.
So essentially he brought up a few things regarding procedures and how to escalate things. He felt I wasn't ready to be On Call yet. I've been essentially been handling alerts and addressing issues. Some key areas he stated that needs "improvement"
-Ask more questions if I am unsure of something. Don't be afraid to ask.
-Don't ask the same question twice. Document things.
-Understand components of the infrastructure.
-Know the difference between testing and production instances. What is/isn't customer impacting.
-Be more engaged in group discussions.
-Handle/acknowledge all alerts that come in.
-Leave non-work browsing to a minimum. Save for lunch.
-If you have nothing to do, ask.
He gave me about 15 key action items to address and stated that he will check up on me every week for a month. I have had a total of 3-4 1:1 conversations with him over the past few months. Given our email correspondence there was no inclination as to me underperforming. He even stated last month after addressing one issue I handled that "other than that, I have no complaints".
It strikes me as odd. Some of these assumptions he makes about me are baseless. The one about me being more engaged. I listen and consume information in my own manner and if I am working on something I'm focused on that. I will not interrupt people just to talk. I ask questions for all things that come my way and have addressed them, even been proactive in doing certain things.
So this certainly comes as a surprise from minimum contact with my boss to 15 key action items he wants a few months later.
Instinctually I will brush up my resume just in case but I feel like I can resolve this internally. I will talk to HR on this because some of these assumptions are false and if this is what is between me and a PIP, they need to be addressed. I also have all of our emails and will provide those.
What else should I do? Has anyone else been in this situation? Also yes I am the only black person on my team and this is a high level position.
-Submitting my time card without putting my lunch hours. Made a claim that he told me to do this and that I did not do this. Essentially insinuating I was stealing company time. I did not do this nor did I take lunch.
-Made the assumption that I was coming into work late on purpose. The expectation was not set for me to come in at 9, rather than 9:30 which I later addressed and we cleared out.
-Looking at non-work things too much at work. I promptly said "OK" and did not continue this. He stated
On these he stated that I should "consider this your first and last warning". He later said that maybe I didn't know which I didn't. This was within a time frame of three weeks into the role.
Fast forward to mid-April I have a 1:1 with him today and he premises the conversation that this is a "chance for you to improve" before he has to put me on a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP). This is almost always code for a boss to build a case against you to terminate you. I am in an At Will state but they have to cover their ass.
So essentially he brought up a few things regarding procedures and how to escalate things. He felt I wasn't ready to be On Call yet. I've been essentially been handling alerts and addressing issues. Some key areas he stated that needs "improvement"
-Ask more questions if I am unsure of something. Don't be afraid to ask.
-Don't ask the same question twice. Document things.
-Understand components of the infrastructure.
-Know the difference between testing and production instances. What is/isn't customer impacting.
-Be more engaged in group discussions.
-Handle/acknowledge all alerts that come in.
-Leave non-work browsing to a minimum. Save for lunch.
-If you have nothing to do, ask.
He gave me about 15 key action items to address and stated that he will check up on me every week for a month. I have had a total of 3-4 1:1 conversations with him over the past few months. Given our email correspondence there was no inclination as to me underperforming. He even stated last month after addressing one issue I handled that "other than that, I have no complaints".
It strikes me as odd. Some of these assumptions he makes about me are baseless. The one about me being more engaged. I listen and consume information in my own manner and if I am working on something I'm focused on that. I will not interrupt people just to talk. I ask questions for all things that come my way and have addressed them, even been proactive in doing certain things.
So this certainly comes as a surprise from minimum contact with my boss to 15 key action items he wants a few months later.
Instinctually I will brush up my resume just in case but I feel like I can resolve this internally. I will talk to HR on this because some of these assumptions are false and if this is what is between me and a PIP, they need to be addressed. I also have all of our emails and will provide those.
What else should I do? Has anyone else been in this situation? Also yes I am the only black person on my team and this is a high level position.