When I started at my current job, I had been a legal secretary - mostly at partner level - for well over 15 years. But I had never been a legal secretary
at this particular firm - British or not. So I had to learn what it was like to work here. Yes, I brought some knowledge with me - mostly enough to know when I should be asking questions! I work for a man who seems to have gone through secretaries like most men go through socks. And he eats temps alive...
Funny enough, I started here as a temp. And since I seemed to survive just fine working with him, I was asked (begged, more like) to stay. So I did. And about a year into the job, my boss told me he had finally stopped waiting for me to say "But this is how we do it in the States..." because I just hadn't. I told him that when I could some up with something that would be an
improvement and not merely a
change, I'd let him know.
The attitude you give off has a lot to do with the attitude you get back. If you act like you think a job is *beneath* you in any way, trust me, there are plenty of people out there who would be grateful to have that job. And the employer would rather have one of them any day. If you don't act like a team player - getting stuck in and seeing if you can be of help in a way that might be outside your actual "job description" - then you don't get treated as a member of the team.
I guess I'm lucky in that I've never had any problem working a job that put money in the bank. I worked as a Court Reporter for 4 years - and for one of those years I also worked nights at 7-Eleven for the health care benefits. Just because I spent all day in a "proper profession" didn't mean that I was too proud to clean out a Slurpee machine or scrape a hot dog grill to get what I needed for my family.
I'm lucky I was able to get a job here in my profession relatively easy and that I fit in and it fit me. But if it had come to it, I wouldn't have had a problem wearing a Co-Op smock and ringing up other people's groceries...or frying chips at the chippie down the street. The only jobs I wouldn't do are ones I know I'm no good at - because that just isn't fair to the employer or the customers/clients.
As for being let go from temping jobs - if there's nothing for you to do, why should they continue paying you to be there? A temp is just that - temporary; there to help a business catch up or make up for another employee's absence or whatever. But if the temp is sitting around with nothing to do, then they obviously aren't needed. I've had more than a few temp assignments that were originally for a week or two but ended a few days in. It happens.
Just my opinions/experiences.