I've flipped burgers and hauled packages, but I didn't realize how bad hourly service jobs were until I got a 9-to-5 office job

microsoft, i've flipped burgers and hauled packages, but i didn't realize how bad hourly service jobs were until i got a 9-to-5 office job

Justin Jordan says he has more mental energy to focus on things like his health now that he has a corporate office job — something he couldn't do when he worked a physical labor job. Kristen Davis

  • Justin Jordan, a 29-year-old social video creator, shares his experiences transitioning from non-corporate to corporate jobs.
  • Jordan points out the dehumanizing treatment in non-corporate jobs.
  • He highlights the differences in how employees are treated and says all jobs should treat workers with respect.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Justin Jordan, a 29-year-old social video creator at Homage. The following has been edited for length and clarity.

I've worked in a variety of jobs, both non-corporate and corporate. Nobody tells you how once you jump into the corporate space, you realize how stupid certain rules in non-corporate jobs are.

In jobs where I didn't make as much money, I felt like people would use that as an excuse to dehumanize us. As I got older and made more money, I was then treated like I was more deserving of humanity.

But that shouldn't be the case; my paycheck shouldn't determine the amount of humanity I receive.

I've worked a variety of service jobs

In high school and college, I worked as a golf caddy, an ice cream shop employee, and a server at a burger chain.

After graduating from college with a journalism and media communications degree, I worked as a video editor at NBC4 until the second half of 2019.

microsoft, i've flipped burgers and hauled packages, but i didn't realize how bad hourly service jobs were until i got a 9-to-5 office job

Starting work at NBC4. Justin Jordan

After that job, I thought I'd be able to become a freelancer, given my videography background, but then the COVID-19 pandemic hit, and there was nothing to shoot or edit.

So I got a job at a shipping company handling packages because I needed health insurance. It was awful and something I wouldn't wish upon anyone.

In January 2023, I finally returned to corporate office life as a social video creator at Homage, a t-shirt company.

Here are the three biggest differences I saw between my non-corporate and corporate jobs:

1. I wasn't treated like an adult in non-corporate jobs

When I was 16, I started working at a local ice cream shop. It was fine, but it was weird to feel like I was constantly being monitored. I was on my feet all day, and I had to ask before using the bathroom. When it was busy, we wouldn't get to take our lunch breaks.

When I joined the shipping company in 2020, it was so weird going back to how I was treated as a teenager in my previous service industry jobs.

We had to ask before using the bathroom because the packages and belt had to keep moving. I mean, I'm a grown adult, and you're treating me like I'm in high school. I have to ask to go to the bathroom — seriously? It felt like asking for snack time.

I understand that logistically it was necessary to get someone to take my spot for a moment, but there are better ways to deal with it; when I became a supervisor, I stepped in to fill my supervisees' spots while they used the bathroom, for example.

Now, in my office job, no one gets mad if I go out and get lunch. If I leave the office midday to work from home the rest of the day, no one's going to bat an eye because we trust each other. I feel more comfortable because no one's watching me like a hawk.

2. In service jobs, I felt like I was expendable

At the ice cream shop, there was always another teen who wanted to work at an ice cream shop.

At the shipping company, it felt like management had the mindset that if we could be somewhere else, we would be there. But since we were here, we had to accept whatever the company wanted to give us because there would always be another package and another willing human body to move that package, so it didn't matter if they were nice to us or not.

But in the corporate world, there's a sense of: "We've picked you for this position, and you're the person that we want to be here. You have a degree and the specialties that we need or want, so you are deserving of this position." And so they give you more of a benefit of the doubt. As long as the work gets done, the company really doesn't care what you do.

Some of my coworkers had no choice but to accept this kind of treatment at the shipping because even though it wasn't the best job in the world, the pay could be livable, at least at the beginning, with the bonuses they offered. I was getting paid $25 an hour, which during those two years was better than nothing.

A lot of employees really needed these jobs to work out but were also viewed as extremely expendable. I worked with felons who had criminal records, for example, and couldn't easily find jobs anywhere else.

When these two dynamics are put together, the company can treat you poorly and doesn't have to treat you any better. They don't have to give you snacks. They don't have to allow you to use the bathroom whenever you want — there's always another person to scoop ice cream, move a package, or serve you a burger.

3. Office jobs are less taxing and less focused on specific tasks

At the shipping company, I just kept my head down to accomplish the specific task of loading and unloading boxes. But now in my corporate job, it's so nice not to have my time dedicated to specific tasks but rather to the ideation around the task, like how to accomplish it and how it went.

There's a difference between executing someone else's plan — like, I'm just here to move this package — and feeling like I'm responsible for creating a solution that works. The latter makes me feel a lot more invested. It also makes the work feel more meaningful by scratching the itch in the creative side of my brain.

microsoft, i've flipped burgers and hauled packages, but i didn't realize how bad hourly service jobs were until i got a 9-to-5 office job

Shooting a promotional video for Homage. Kristen Davis

Working non-corporate jobs were also much more taxing on my body. I would have to stand for long periods of time, and my feet and back would hurt every time I got home.

Sometimes I would come home from work and be so exhausted, I couldn't do anything. Even applying for jobs was a huge task because I'd be so tired and everything would hurt.

Nowadays, I have more mental energy to devote to more things. I can focus on my health and things that really matter to me, because I have the time and energy to dedicate to it.

Every job needs to treat workers with respect

When I re-entered the corporate world after my shipping company job, I felt like I was finally treated like a human again, at a job with real benefits and a real living wage that made me feel like an adult. I could finally drink water whenever I wanted to and take a lunch break whenever I wished!

This is how it's supposed to be. It's not that every job in the world has to be nice to you, but they should treat you with some amount of respect or at least treat you like an adult, in a way that a lot of lower-paying jobs don't.

Companies need to pay people better so that workers can earn a living wage and feel like they're valued. I'm much happier now because I'm more financially stable. I'm making more money now, and I have better benefits. At the shipping company, I was making $25 an hour working 30 to 35 hours a week, and at Homage now, I'm making $53,000 a year.

If there's one thing I miss about service jobs, it would be the camaraderie of being in a sucky situation with your coworkers. You don't get that same sense of being "in the dirt" together when you're working a corporate job. Sometimes, there's that sentiment in office jobs, too, but it's a different kind of dirt when you're working these physical labor jobs.

If you made a career pivot and would like to share your story, email Jane Zhang at [email protected].

If you enjoyed this story, be sure to follow Business Insider on Microsoft Start.

OTHER NEWS

26 minutes ago

Callum Walsh's stunning Carlos Ortiz knockout sets up Cork homecoming

26 minutes ago

Fabrizio Romano Transfer Latest: Forgotten Man City flop Sergio Gomez replaces popular Arsenal star Kieran Tierney

26 minutes ago

Bradish and 2 relievers combine on 2-hitter, Henderson hits 3-run homer and Orioles beat Rays 5-0

26 minutes ago

Dornoch pulls off upset to win first Belmont Stakes run at Saratoga Race Course

26 minutes ago

Mark Harper: PM leaving D-Day events early was 'clearly a mistake'

26 minutes ago

USMNT goalkeeper Turner apologizes to fans after Colombia thrashing

26 minutes ago

Jenna Challenor back on Comrades Marathon start line with ‘grateful heart’

29 minutes ago

$3b money laundering case: 10 convicted, 17 on the run; police are after the rest

29 minutes ago

Rising share of women staying single is behind S’pore’s great baby drought

33 minutes ago

Labour’s net zero plans ‘risk blackouts and public unrest’

34 minutes ago

How to watch Paolini vs Andreeva — live stream French Open semi-final, start time, TV channel

34 minutes ago

Massive chunk of Wyoming's Teton Pass crumbles; unclear how quickly the road can be rebuilt

34 minutes ago

‘Big mistake’: Jason Clare slams Peter Dutton over energy policy

34 minutes ago

Great wealth transfer raises the inheritance stakes and inevitable discussion

35 minutes ago

USMNT gets pre-Copa América 'wake-up call' in rout by Colombia

35 minutes ago

‘One Tree Hill’ Star Bethany Joy Lenz Confirms Title Of Upcoming Memoir About Her Decade In A Cult

35 minutes ago

Bethany Joy Lenz Explains How Her New Hallmark Movie Reminded Her Of ‘One Tree Hill’ Role

35 minutes ago

Kelowna Pride March and Festival sees record attendance for 2024

40 minutes ago

Trump raises millions in Newport Beach and Beverly Hills in post-conviction appearances

40 minutes ago

Boy diagnosed with testicular cancer at 16 recalls early symptom: ‘I thought it was normal'

40 minutes ago

Squatting is a problem across DFW – here's why it's hard to track

41 minutes ago

Street Store for the homeless is back again

43 minutes ago

Don't miss these 4 movies leaving Hulu in June 2024 with over 90% on Rotten Tomatoes

46 minutes ago

Former Global BC anchor Randene Neill nominated as BC NDP candidate

46 minutes ago

Ian McKellen On Reprising ‘Lord Of The Rings’ Gandalf Character In Gollum Movie: “If I’m Alive”

46 minutes ago

Can the Bulldogs cut Mitchell Moses down to size?

46 minutes ago

England's confirmed Euro 2024 squad numbers hints at Three Lions starting XI

46 minutes ago

Taylor Swift halts Edinburgh show to help fans — and deal with a major hand cramp

46 minutes ago

PGA Tour Pro Lambasts Commissioner Jay Monahan In Fiery Rant

46 minutes ago

Joey Logano wins third pole of the season at Sonoma

46 minutes ago

Jessica Simpson, 43, struts her stuff in sexy pink dress and snakeskin boots as she joins family at daughter Birdie's kindergarten graduation in LA

46 minutes ago

Ryan Garcia ARRESTED in Los Angeles in latest shocking incident for the troubled boxer

49 minutes ago

Massive chunk of Wyoming's Teton Pass collapses, shutting down section of roadway

50 minutes ago

It started with a race row in the queue at a 7-Eleven. It ended with one woman dying. Now her thug attacker has dodged jail - and here's why...

51 minutes ago

Plane horrifyingly crashes in front yard of Colorado home — with neighbors pulling out victims, including 2 kids, from fiery wreckage

51 minutes ago

After nearly 40 years on ABC television, Paul Higgins is preparing for his final weather report

51 minutes ago

David Robb Remembered As Great Reporter & Even Better Person At Memorial: “He Had No Peer”

51 minutes ago

Caitlin Clark snubbed from Olympic roster partly due to potential backlash over limited playing time: report

51 minutes ago

Oilers’ Skinner allows goal on first shot for fourth time this post-season

51 minutes ago

People of Australia want ‘cheap reliable energy’