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NYS.....

























Just wait till the goals catch up with the creative call planning and things go south. It’s gonna get ugly. The company is catching on finally that certain people are playing games
 






Recently heard a manager trying to get rid of rep looked at gas log and noticed a rep pumped 17 gallons of gas when company car only held 15.5 gallons … then questioned rep “ are you filling another car or maybe your gas can at home ? “ you tell me people can’t find reason to get rid of you .
 






Recently heard a manager trying to get rid of rep looked at gas log and noticed a rep pumped 17 gallons of gas when company car only held 15.5 gallons … then questioned rep “ are you filling another car or maybe your gas can at home ? “ you tell me people can’t find reason to get rid of you .


The tank is 15.5 gallons then more can overflow into the filler pipe and onto the ground. Happens all the time.
 






Recently heard a manager trying to get rid of rep looked at gas log and noticed a rep pumped 17 gallons of gas when company car only held 15.5 gallons … then questioned rep “ are you filling another car or maybe your gas can at home ? “ you tell me people can’t find reason to get rid of you .
Lies
 












How many times have you read a CP post from some former NNI employee that said they just came back to see what's happening at NNI? Well, add me to the list!! But unlike previous posters, I wont BS you with how well I'm doing now, and that I'm making a lot more money etc. I'm just curious to see if anything has changed since I left which was more than five years ago. Ever hear somebody say "Same shit. Different day."?

What I will say about my employment with NNI is that I was an excellent corporate phony. You read that right. I was a total fake. The real me wasn't anything like what I made everybody think I was. Everybody thought I cared when didn't. I said all the right things to all the right people, especially my DM. I know by my performance ratings that he thought highly of me, as did my RBD. Truth was, I despised them both. Maybe I should have gone to Hollywood. I was such a good actor that maybe I had a talent that might have served me better on the big screen.

I knew who my peers at NNI were that I liked and could trust, but there weren't a lot of them. The big thing those trusted peers and I had in common was that they were phonies too. Our behavior was expressly for one reason only - money! I realize that being a corporate phony isn't for everybody. It isn't a bad thing to respect yourself, but my attitude about it was that I did what I needed to do to survive in The Corporate Jungle. Where I worked prior to NNI, I wasn't a corporate phony, and I paid dearly for that. When I got to NNI, I decided I needed a new corporate persona, and I soon discovered that I was a lot better off being a phony. Know this too - NNI isn't any worse than other Corporate Jungles. What I did happens everywhere. What I came to realize was that I was just too naive at the place where I was employed prior to joining NNI.

These days I'm retired. I did the move from The Northeast to Florida thing too. Now that I've started over here in Florida with a clean slate, I'm no longer the phony I once was. That's one thing about being retired that I like a lot, and that's that everybody's past is completely invisible. Nobody knows who/what I was while I was working, and I keep it that way. I suspect that many of my new acquaintences are former corporate phonies too, but that doesn't matter. I'm happy, there are a few things in my life that I wish were different, but they're minor. I'm not recommending to anybody that they should do what I did. That's for you to decide. It worked for me is all I'm saying. Good luck to you in your Big Pharma career no matter where you work.
 






How many times have you read a CP post from some former NNI employee that said they just came back to see what's happening at NNI? Well, add me to the list!! But unlike previous posters, I wont BS you with how well I'm doing now, and that I'm making a lot more money etc. I'm just curious to see if anything has changed since I left which was more than five years ago. Ever hear somebody say "Same shit. Different day."?

What I will say about my employment with NNI is that I was an excellent corporate phony. You read that right. I was a total fake. The real me wasn't anything like what I made everybody think I was. Everybody thought I cared when didn't. I said all the right things to all the right people, especially my DM. I know by my performance ratings that he thought highly of me, as did my RBD. Truth was, I despised them both. Maybe I should have gone to Hollywood. I was such a good actor that maybe I had a talent that might have served me better on the big screen.

I knew who my peers at NNI were that I liked and could trust, but there weren't a lot of them. The big thing those trusted peers and I had in common was that they were phonies too. Our behavior was expressly for one reason only - money! I realize that being a corporate phony isn't for everybody. It isn't a bad thing to respect yourself, but my attitude about it was that I did what I needed to do to survive in The Corporate Jungle. Where I worked prior to NNI, I wasn't a corporate phony, and I paid dearly for that. When I got to NNI, I decided I needed a new corporate persona, and I soon discovered that I was a lot better off being a phony. Know this too - NNI isn't any worse than other Corporate Jungles. What I did happens everywhere. What I came to realize was that I was just too naive at the place where I was employed prior to joining NNI.

These days I'm retired. I did the move from The Northeast to Florida thing too. Now that I've started over here in Florida with a clean slate, I'm no longer the phony I once was. That's one thing about being retired that I like a lot, and that's that everybody's past is completely invisible. Nobody knows who/what I was while I was working, and I keep it that way. I suspect that many of my new acquaintences are former corporate phonies too, but that doesn't matter. I'm happy, there are a few things in my life that I wish were different, but they're minor. I'm not recommending to anybody that they should do what I did. That's for you to decide. It worked for me is all I'm saying. Good luck to you in your Big Pharma career no matter where you work.
 






How many times have you read a CP post from some former NNI employee that said they just came back to see what's happening at NNI? Well, add me to the list!! But unlike previous posters, I wont BS you with how well I'm doing now, and that I'm making a lot more money etc. I'm just curious to see if anything has changed since I left which was more than five years ago. Ever hear somebody say "Same shit. Different day."?





What I will say about my employment with NNI is that I was an excellent corporate phony. You read that right. I was a total fake. The real me wasn't anything like what I made everybody think I was. Everybody thought I cared when didn't. I said all the right things to all the right people, especially my DM. I know by my performance ratings that he thought highly of me, as did my RBD. Truth was, I despised them both. Maybe I should have gone to Hollywood. I was such a good actor that maybe I had a talent that might have served me better on the big screen.

I knew who my peers at NNI were that I liked and could trust, but there weren't a lot of them. The big thing those trusted peers and I had in common was that they were phonies too. Our behavior was expressly for one reason only - money! I realize that being a corporate phony isn't for everybody. It isn't a bad thing to respect yourself, but my attitude about it was that I did what I needed to do to survive in The Corporate Jungle. Where I worked prior to NNI, I wasn't a corporate phony, and I paid dearly for that. When I got to NNI, I decided I needed a new corporate persona, and I soon discovered that I was a lot better off being a phony. Know this too - NNI isn't any worse than other Corporate Jungles. What I did happens everywhere. What I came to realize was that I was just too naive at the place where I was employed prior to joining NNI.

These days I'm retired. I did the move from The Northeast to Florida thing too. Now that I've started over here in Florida with a clean slate, I'm no longer the phony I once was. That's one thing about being retired that I like a lot, and that's that everybody's past is completely invisible. Nobody knows who/what I was while I was working, and I keep it that way. I suspect that many of my new acquaintences are former corporate phonies too, but that doesn't matter. I'm happy, there are a few things in my life that I wish were different, but they're minor. I'm not recommending to anybody that they should do what I did. That's for you to decide. It worked for me is all I'm saying. Good luck to you in your Big Pharma career no matter where you work.


So happy you got out before it got so bad. you don’t know what it takes now to be viewed well.. yammer posts, publicly bragging about our good deeds for recognition, having camera on every call so we can wave signs and dance like monkeys or push the emojis so everyone knows how f’ing happy we are. It’s exhausting and demoralizing. I just want to do my job.
 






How many times have you read a CP post from some former NNI employee that said they just came back to see what's happening at NNI? Well, add me to the list!! But unlike previous posters, I wont BS you with how well I'm doing now, and that I'm making a lot more money etc. I'm just curious to see if anything has changed since I left which was more than five years ago. Ever hear somebody say "Same shit. Different day."?

What I will say about my employment with NNI is that I was an excellent corporate phony. You read that right. I was a total fake. The real me wasn't anything like what I made everybody think I was. Everybody thought I cared when didn't. I said all the right things to all the right people, especially my DM. I know by my performance ratings that he thought highly of me, as did my RBD. Truth was, I despised them both. Maybe I should have gone to Hollywood. I was such a good actor that maybe I had a talent that might have served me better on the big screen.

I knew who my peers at NNI were that I liked and could trust, but there weren't a lot of them. The big thing those trusted peers and I had in common was that they were phonies too. Our behavior was expressly for one reason only - money! I realize that being a corporate phony isn't for everybody. It isn't a bad thing to respect yourself, but my attitude about it was that I did what I needed to do to survive in The Corporate Jungle. Where I worked prior to NNI, I wasn't a corporate phony, and I paid dearly for that. When I got to NNI, I decided I needed a new corporate persona, and I soon discovered that I was a lot better off being a phony. Know this too - NNI isn't any worse than other Corporate Jungles. What I did happens everywhere. What I came to realize was that I was just too naive at the place where I was employed prior to joining NNI.

These days I'm retired. I did the move from The Northeast to Florida thing too. Now that I've started over here in Florida with a clean slate, I'm no longer the phony I once was. That's one thing about being retired that I like a lot, and that's that everybody's past is completely invisible. Nobody knows who/what I was while I was working, and I keep it that way. I suspect that many of my new acquaintences are former corporate phonies too, but that doesn't matter. I'm happy, there are a few things in my life that I wish were different, but they're minor. I'm not recommending to anybody that they should do what I did. That's for you to decide. It worked for me is all I'm saying. Good luck to you in your Big Pharma career no matter where you work.
 






How many times have you read a CP post from some former NNI employee that said they just came back to see what's happening at NNI? Well, add me to the list!! But unlike previous posters, I wont BS you with how well I'm doing now, and that I'm making a lot more money etc. I'm just curious to see if anything has changed since I left which was more than five years ago. Ever hear somebody say "Same shit. Different day."?

What I will say about my employment with NNI is that I was an excellent corporate phony. You read that right. I was a total fake. The real me wasn't anything like what I made everybody think I was. Everybody thought I cared when didn't. I said all the right things to all the right people, especially my DM. I know by my performance ratings that he thought highly of me, as did my RBD. Truth was, I despised them both. Maybe I should have gone to Hollywood. I was such a good actor that maybe I had a talent that might have served me better on the big screen.

I knew who my peers at NNI were that I liked and could trust, but there weren't a lot of them. The big thing those trusted peers and I had in common was that they were phonies too. Our behavior was expressly for one reason only - money! I realize that being a corporate phony isn't for everybody. It isn't a bad thing to respect yourself, but my attitude about it was that I did what I needed to do to survive in The Corporate Jungle. Where I worked prior to NNI, I wasn't a corporate phony, and I paid dearly for that. When I got to NNI, I decided I needed a new corporate persona, and I soon discovered that I was a lot better off being a phony. Know this too - NNI isn't any worse than other Corporate Jungles. What I did happens everywhere. What I came to realize was that I was just too naive at the place where I was employed prior to joining NNI.

These days I'm retired. I did the move from The Northeast to Florida thing too. Now that I've started over here in Florida with a clean slate, I'm no longer the phony I once was. That's one thing about being retired that I like a lot, and that's that everybody's past is completely invisible. Nobody knows who/what I was while I was working, and I keep it that way. I suspect that many of my new acquaintences are former corporate phonies too, but that doesn't matter. I'm happy, there are a few things in my life that I wish were different, but they're minor. I'm not recommending to anybody that they should do what I did. That's for you to decide. It worked for me is all I'm saying. Good luck to you in your Big Pharma career no matter where you work.

Succinctly put you simply told 'em what they wanted to hear. The life of a corporate politician sucks, but it pays big dividends no matter where you work.

Now you're retired and the slate has been wiped clean regarding your past career. No need to be a corporate politician any more. Sounds good to me.
 






How many times have you read a CP post from some former NNI employee that said they just came back to see what's happening at NNI? Well, add me to the list!! But unlike previous posters, I wont BS you with how well I'm doing now, and that I'm making a lot more money etc. I'm just curious to see if anything has changed since I left which was more than five years ago. Ever hear somebody say "Same shit. Different day."?

What I will say about my employment with NNI is that I was an excellent corporate phony. You read that right. I was a total fake. The real me wasn't anything like what I made everybody think I was. Everybody thought I cared when didn't. I said all the right things to all the right people, especially my DM. I know by my performance ratings that he thought highly of me, as did my RBD. Truth was, I despised them both. Maybe I should have gone to Hollywood. I was such a good actor that maybe I had a talent that might have served me better on the big screen.

I knew who my peers at NNI were that I liked and could trust, but there weren't a lot of them. The big thing those trusted peers and I had in common was that they were phonies too. Our behavior was expressly for one reason only - money! I realize that being a corporate phony isn't for everybody. It isn't a bad thing to respect yourself, but my attitude about it was that I did what I needed to do to survive in The Corporate Jungle. Where I worked prior to NNI, I wasn't a corporate phony, and I paid dearly for that. When I got to NNI, I decided I needed a new corporate persona, and I soon discovered that I was a lot better off being a phony. Know this too - NNI isn't any worse than other Corporate Jungles. What I did happens everywhere. What I came to realize was that I was just too naive at the place where I was employed prior to joining NNI.

These days I'm retired. I did the move from The Northeast to Florida thing too. Now that I've started over here in Florida with a clean slate, I'm no longer the phony I once was. That's one thing about being retired that I like a lot, and that's that everybody's past is completely invisible. Nobody knows who/what I was while I was working, and I keep it that way. I suspect that many of my new acquaintences are former corporate phonies too, but that doesn't matter. I'm happy, there are a few things in my life that I wish were different, but they're minor. I'm not recommending to anybody that they should do what I did. That's for you to decide. It worked for me is all I'm saying. Good luck to you in your Big Pharma career no matter where you work.

It is true. Fake all day =everyday.