How to write a email to boss asking him to hire qualified empolyee to help me in QA dept [duplicate]

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  • How to approach a manager about his or her workload being too large?

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I joined as a junior in QA dept then grew to manager,day after day the products of the company get larger and I am unable to conduct all experiments and tasks lonely. So what I need to ask my boss to dedicate someone could assist me and achieve the required work at high level .could anyone help me in writing this email properly and convincingly??







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marked as duplicate by Jim G., gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Monica Cellio♦ Feb 25 '15 at 1:55


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • Have you ever asked you boss for anything? As a growing company/division someone needs to think ahead and have some sort of measurement to determine how much work you can do alone and when to hire another person.
    – user8365
    Feb 15 '15 at 13:19










  • @JoeStrazzere I agree with your point, but there are some workplaces where things flow predominantly through written communication. OP is probably working at one of such places.
    – Masked Man♦
    Feb 15 '15 at 15:08
















up vote
-1
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • How to approach a manager about his or her workload being too large?

    3 answers



I joined as a junior in QA dept then grew to manager,day after day the products of the company get larger and I am unable to conduct all experiments and tasks lonely. So what I need to ask my boss to dedicate someone could assist me and achieve the required work at high level .could anyone help me in writing this email properly and convincingly??







share|improve this question












marked as duplicate by Jim G., gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Monica Cellio♦ Feb 25 '15 at 1:55


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • Have you ever asked you boss for anything? As a growing company/division someone needs to think ahead and have some sort of measurement to determine how much work you can do alone and when to hire another person.
    – user8365
    Feb 15 '15 at 13:19










  • @JoeStrazzere I agree with your point, but there are some workplaces where things flow predominantly through written communication. OP is probably working at one of such places.
    – Masked Man♦
    Feb 15 '15 at 15:08












up vote
-1
down vote

favorite









up vote
-1
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • How to approach a manager about his or her workload being too large?

    3 answers



I joined as a junior in QA dept then grew to manager,day after day the products of the company get larger and I am unable to conduct all experiments and tasks lonely. So what I need to ask my boss to dedicate someone could assist me and achieve the required work at high level .could anyone help me in writing this email properly and convincingly??







share|improve this question













This question already has an answer here:



  • How to approach a manager about his or her workload being too large?

    3 answers



I joined as a junior in QA dept then grew to manager,day after day the products of the company get larger and I am unable to conduct all experiments and tasks lonely. So what I need to ask my boss to dedicate someone could assist me and achieve the required work at high level .could anyone help me in writing this email properly and convincingly??





This question already has an answer here:



  • How to approach a manager about his or her workload being too large?

    3 answers









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Feb 15 '15 at 10:51









user32659

22




22




marked as duplicate by Jim G., gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Monica Cellio♦ Feb 25 '15 at 1:55


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by Jim G., gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Monica Cellio♦ Feb 25 '15 at 1:55


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • Have you ever asked you boss for anything? As a growing company/division someone needs to think ahead and have some sort of measurement to determine how much work you can do alone and when to hire another person.
    – user8365
    Feb 15 '15 at 13:19










  • @JoeStrazzere I agree with your point, but there are some workplaces where things flow predominantly through written communication. OP is probably working at one of such places.
    – Masked Man♦
    Feb 15 '15 at 15:08
















  • Have you ever asked you boss for anything? As a growing company/division someone needs to think ahead and have some sort of measurement to determine how much work you can do alone and when to hire another person.
    – user8365
    Feb 15 '15 at 13:19










  • @JoeStrazzere I agree with your point, but there are some workplaces where things flow predominantly through written communication. OP is probably working at one of such places.
    – Masked Man♦
    Feb 15 '15 at 15:08















Have you ever asked you boss for anything? As a growing company/division someone needs to think ahead and have some sort of measurement to determine how much work you can do alone and when to hire another person.
– user8365
Feb 15 '15 at 13:19




Have you ever asked you boss for anything? As a growing company/division someone needs to think ahead and have some sort of measurement to determine how much work you can do alone and when to hire another person.
– user8365
Feb 15 '15 at 13:19












@JoeStrazzere I agree with your point, but there are some workplaces where things flow predominantly through written communication. OP is probably working at one of such places.
– Masked Man♦
Feb 15 '15 at 15:08




@JoeStrazzere I agree with your point, but there are some workplaces where things flow predominantly through written communication. OP is probably working at one of such places.
– Masked Man♦
Feb 15 '15 at 15:08










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote













Before doing so, track your tasks and progress to ensure you have an accurate record of what you are doing and not doing. Otherwise, "I cannot keep up" becomes opinion and is easily refuted by management.



Second, consider automation or other improvements. If you can show efforts to do your job better, arguments for new staff are much stronger.



If both these avenues are exhausted, talk to your boss. Start with the facts (both the above) then suggest help. If you start with the request for new staff, it can sound like frustration rather than a rational argument and bosses are good at dismissing non-rational discussions.



You do not elaborate on your organization but your boss may not have the authority to hire or assign new staff. He or she may need to request to his management and, even if the case is sound, budget constraints or dozens of other reasons may mean the request is denied.



In the meantime, if you feel like you cannot achieve everything in the allotted time, tell your boss everything you have to do and ask him/her to select what to do. Bosses are good at prioritizing issues like this. It also ensures any last focus or priority changes are considered.






share|improve this answer




















  • Great Answer! Particularly the last paragraph. Having your manager prioritize work based on product needs is something many miss. @user32659 - If you've never read the Mythical Man-Month, I would encourage you to do so at this point - because the book hits on exactly what you're facing.
    – cloyd800
    Feb 15 '15 at 17:05

















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
3
down vote













Before doing so, track your tasks and progress to ensure you have an accurate record of what you are doing and not doing. Otherwise, "I cannot keep up" becomes opinion and is easily refuted by management.



Second, consider automation or other improvements. If you can show efforts to do your job better, arguments for new staff are much stronger.



If both these avenues are exhausted, talk to your boss. Start with the facts (both the above) then suggest help. If you start with the request for new staff, it can sound like frustration rather than a rational argument and bosses are good at dismissing non-rational discussions.



You do not elaborate on your organization but your boss may not have the authority to hire or assign new staff. He or she may need to request to his management and, even if the case is sound, budget constraints or dozens of other reasons may mean the request is denied.



In the meantime, if you feel like you cannot achieve everything in the allotted time, tell your boss everything you have to do and ask him/her to select what to do. Bosses are good at prioritizing issues like this. It also ensures any last focus or priority changes are considered.






share|improve this answer




















  • Great Answer! Particularly the last paragraph. Having your manager prioritize work based on product needs is something many miss. @user32659 - If you've never read the Mythical Man-Month, I would encourage you to do so at this point - because the book hits on exactly what you're facing.
    – cloyd800
    Feb 15 '15 at 17:05














up vote
3
down vote













Before doing so, track your tasks and progress to ensure you have an accurate record of what you are doing and not doing. Otherwise, "I cannot keep up" becomes opinion and is easily refuted by management.



Second, consider automation or other improvements. If you can show efforts to do your job better, arguments for new staff are much stronger.



If both these avenues are exhausted, talk to your boss. Start with the facts (both the above) then suggest help. If you start with the request for new staff, it can sound like frustration rather than a rational argument and bosses are good at dismissing non-rational discussions.



You do not elaborate on your organization but your boss may not have the authority to hire or assign new staff. He or she may need to request to his management and, even if the case is sound, budget constraints or dozens of other reasons may mean the request is denied.



In the meantime, if you feel like you cannot achieve everything in the allotted time, tell your boss everything you have to do and ask him/her to select what to do. Bosses are good at prioritizing issues like this. It also ensures any last focus or priority changes are considered.






share|improve this answer




















  • Great Answer! Particularly the last paragraph. Having your manager prioritize work based on product needs is something many miss. @user32659 - If you've never read the Mythical Man-Month, I would encourage you to do so at this point - because the book hits on exactly what you're facing.
    – cloyd800
    Feb 15 '15 at 17:05












up vote
3
down vote










up vote
3
down vote









Before doing so, track your tasks and progress to ensure you have an accurate record of what you are doing and not doing. Otherwise, "I cannot keep up" becomes opinion and is easily refuted by management.



Second, consider automation or other improvements. If you can show efforts to do your job better, arguments for new staff are much stronger.



If both these avenues are exhausted, talk to your boss. Start with the facts (both the above) then suggest help. If you start with the request for new staff, it can sound like frustration rather than a rational argument and bosses are good at dismissing non-rational discussions.



You do not elaborate on your organization but your boss may not have the authority to hire or assign new staff. He or she may need to request to his management and, even if the case is sound, budget constraints or dozens of other reasons may mean the request is denied.



In the meantime, if you feel like you cannot achieve everything in the allotted time, tell your boss everything you have to do and ask him/her to select what to do. Bosses are good at prioritizing issues like this. It also ensures any last focus or priority changes are considered.






share|improve this answer












Before doing so, track your tasks and progress to ensure you have an accurate record of what you are doing and not doing. Otherwise, "I cannot keep up" becomes opinion and is easily refuted by management.



Second, consider automation or other improvements. If you can show efforts to do your job better, arguments for new staff are much stronger.



If both these avenues are exhausted, talk to your boss. Start with the facts (both the above) then suggest help. If you start with the request for new staff, it can sound like frustration rather than a rational argument and bosses are good at dismissing non-rational discussions.



You do not elaborate on your organization but your boss may not have the authority to hire or assign new staff. He or she may need to request to his management and, even if the case is sound, budget constraints or dozens of other reasons may mean the request is denied.



In the meantime, if you feel like you cannot achieve everything in the allotted time, tell your boss everything you have to do and ask him/her to select what to do. Bosses are good at prioritizing issues like this. It also ensures any last focus or priority changes are considered.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Feb 15 '15 at 12:23









akton

5,4811732




5,4811732











  • Great Answer! Particularly the last paragraph. Having your manager prioritize work based on product needs is something many miss. @user32659 - If you've never read the Mythical Man-Month, I would encourage you to do so at this point - because the book hits on exactly what you're facing.
    – cloyd800
    Feb 15 '15 at 17:05
















  • Great Answer! Particularly the last paragraph. Having your manager prioritize work based on product needs is something many miss. @user32659 - If you've never read the Mythical Man-Month, I would encourage you to do so at this point - because the book hits on exactly what you're facing.
    – cloyd800
    Feb 15 '15 at 17:05















Great Answer! Particularly the last paragraph. Having your manager prioritize work based on product needs is something many miss. @user32659 - If you've never read the Mythical Man-Month, I would encourage you to do so at this point - because the book hits on exactly what you're facing.
– cloyd800
Feb 15 '15 at 17:05




Great Answer! Particularly the last paragraph. Having your manager prioritize work based on product needs is something many miss. @user32659 - If you've never read the Mythical Man-Month, I would encourage you to do so at this point - because the book hits on exactly what you're facing.
– cloyd800
Feb 15 '15 at 17:05


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