Anonymous
Guest
Anonymous
Guest
It has been almost 2 years since the Pricara layoff. I've not been back to this site in over 1 year and was curious the current state of JnJ/PriCara corporate culture. Wow. It appears to as bad (or worse) than the events leading up to April 2009. Sad the way every turned to crap.
I wish to say "thank you" to JnJ/PriCara for cutting me loose. For the last year, I've been at a sales job that I can't wait to begin in the morning and in disbelief at how quickly the day is over (often putting in 10-12 hours daily). I sell equipment for basic, translational, and clinical research (cell based research - regenerative/stem cell/cancer/developmental/and neurologic fields). I haven't been bored (not even a moment) and am on-fire passionate about our value proposition to the scientific community. Had I never been "kicked out", I would have never pursued such an opportunity (and leave the "sure thing"?). Thank you JnJ!
I'd add that a former physician customer was instrumental in helping me secure am interview with the company (and provided a tremendous letter of reference). Never discount the relationships you've built with your customers, at the end of the day, it might be all of you have (Thank you Dr. Jay S.).
Best wishes to all of you (I do miss seeing some of you)! If the crap hits the fan, understand that the road to meaning (in your work) might not be easy (I know, I took some less than desirable jobs in the interim), but it can be amazingly worth it!
-R.
I wish to say "thank you" to JnJ/PriCara for cutting me loose. For the last year, I've been at a sales job that I can't wait to begin in the morning and in disbelief at how quickly the day is over (often putting in 10-12 hours daily). I sell equipment for basic, translational, and clinical research (cell based research - regenerative/stem cell/cancer/developmental/and neurologic fields). I haven't been bored (not even a moment) and am on-fire passionate about our value proposition to the scientific community. Had I never been "kicked out", I would have never pursued such an opportunity (and leave the "sure thing"?). Thank you JnJ!
I'd add that a former physician customer was instrumental in helping me secure am interview with the company (and provided a tremendous letter of reference). Never discount the relationships you've built with your customers, at the end of the day, it might be all of you have (Thank you Dr. Jay S.).
Best wishes to all of you (I do miss seeing some of you)! If the crap hits the fan, understand that the road to meaning (in your work) might not be easy (I know, I took some less than desirable jobs in the interim), but it can be amazingly worth it!
-R.