Post
by ArkieDukie » January 11th, 2013, 8:10 pm
I'm bumping the thread back to the top in order to tell a story and get input.
I have a new colleague who is an assistant professor, so he's above me on the totem pole. He's very much like a male version of BarMinion, except he's not really a minion if one considers rank (BM is a senior scientist but with a lower rank than me). I'll call him BarMinY for now, until we come up with a better handle. Now, BarMinY (BMY) was hired after me, but his hire was in the works far before mine. You see, BMY worked with The Boss at his former job and was a close collaborator. So, he's The Boss's protege of sorts, and The Boss seems to think this guy is the cat's meow. Here's where things get tricky: BMY's area of "expertise" (and I use the term loosely) is very, very close to mine. If BMY is not a complete and total idiot, you can see it from where he's at. Problem is, the only people that recognize this fact are myself and the two colleagues with whom I work the most closely (one of them being BarMinion's boss). He's one of those people that use just enough techno speak to make those outside the field think he's a genius, but he's really just throwing completely unrelated terms into the same sentence and speaking complete gibberish. In addition, if you actually understand his work, he rivals The Minion in terms of the scientific validity of his experimental design and analysis. So, problem is, The Boss talks this guy up to everyone and refers to him as a world expert because he believes this himself. The Boss is even getting people to collaborate with this bozo who would've otherwise been working with me. Fine; there's plenty of work to go around. My two friends and I are distancing ourselves from his work as much as possible and are keeping our mouths shut outside our circle of 3 regarding BMY's incompetence. (As an aside, I think that BarMinion and BMY are the perfect match in terms of working relationship due to similar scientific philosophies, and I'd dance a jig if BM switched to BMY's lab.)
We've been having problems with one of our analytical methods, mainly because of an instrument that was purchased at BarMinY's recommendation. It was purchased without doing any sort of instrument demo (the equivalent of test-driving a car). Even better, we purchased the newest model of the instrument right when it came out. There are some pretty serious design flaws in the instrument that make it not work well for the type of analysis that The Boss wants to use it for. We had on-site training this week and, despite the fact that BarMinY knew about it, he didn't show up once. (I'll also point out here that he cancelled on-site training for the instruments he has purchased because "he already knows how to run them," even though he's never operated the instruments he's purchasing. Can't wait to see how that works out for him.) The applications specialist worked with us on this method and confirmed what I had found. Now, other reason we're having trouble is that the person I've been working with on our method (I'll call him Dug, after the dog on Up, because he has trouble staying on track) has some nutty ideas and basically won't listen to me. If you guessed that Dug moved here with The Boss and worked with BarMinY before, move to the head of the class.
At group meeting today, the Boss asked BarMinY to work with Dug on the method I've been helping him with. It really ticked me off at first, and then I decided that I should keep myself in the discussion rather than just roll over and die, so to speak. After all, BMY has no clue what has been done up to this point, and he knows absolutely nothing about the instrument that he stuck us with since he didn't demo the darn thing and he skipped out on the onsite training (**cough**dumbass**cough**). Now, here's where things get fun. When I decided to put myself back into the method discussion rather than bowing out completely, Dug and BMY were going through the experiments that had been done to date. BMY started saying that we were doing the experiment incorrectly and that we should do things a different way. Funny thing is, he was suggesting that we do something that I had already shown wouldn't work at all. When I tried to say this, the asshat interrupted me and started telling me how I should've done it. I cut him off again and told him to let me finish, and then explained what I had done. I also told him that we had worked on this exact method with the applications specialist that was visiting this week, and that we had verified my findings. (Implicit in the discussion: he would've known all of this if he had bothered to show up at training. Dumbass.) I basically squashed BMY like a bug. As an added bonus, by the time our planning session was over, I was in the driver's seat. Now, BMY did have input, I was always careful to ask his opinion, and I was also very sure to say so when he raised a good point.
At some point during our discussion, The Boss showed up and joined in (he returned from a meeting with The Dean). When The Boss asked what was going on, BMY reported on things like he was large and in charge. Funny thing is, IMO, he made himself look like more of an idiot. Now, unbeknownst to BMY, I gained street cred with The Boss this week because one of my papers from my former job went live on PubMed on Monday. I'm way down in the "et al" portion of the list of coauthors, but contribution to the paper is exactly what we're trying to do - in fact, my work produced a very nice figure in the paper. So, when I said "Here's the problem" and based my statement on the work in the paper, he actually listened to me. Everything I've been trying to get Dug to do for the past 2 months is back on the table and is in an experiment that he's performing this weekend. In all fairness to Dug, I will say that The Boss also wouldn't really listen to my suggestions until today, and he was controlling what happened. I'm just crossing my fingers and hoping that we get solid results so that the project will finally move forward.
Up to this point, the only problems I've had with the new job have been related to the perceived expertise of BarMinY. Dug and another colleague, who I'll call Crush (a Finding Nemo character) always defer to BarMinY since they've learned what they know about instrumentation from him. I think the tide is starting to turn, thanks to the aforementioned colleagues who are extremely competent. One in particular is a hard-core instrumentalist, and Dug and Crush seem to respect his opinion. Since we're usually in agreement, that helps me.
Now, what's the best way to navigate this situation? Up to this point, BMY acts as though he has very little respect for me. (My sister would say "demand it," and I think I did that today.) I'm trying to keep my head down, do my job, and let my results speak for themselves. I want to win people over based upon the quality of my work, and I think this is working to some extent with the people that matter. I would consider BMY to be someone who does not matter, while The Boss does matter. My concern is that there will come a time when other colleagues (who have been encouraged to work with BMY) are going to figure out that BMY isn't as much of an expert as he thinks he is. I think that the time is very quickly coming where The Boss, in particular, is going to figure this out - especially when he sees the results of some work I've been doing over the past couple of months on a couple of other projects. My concern is that The Boss is going to ask me to bail BMY out in terms of data analysis, and his experiments would be challenging at best to rescue. My instrumentation wizard colleague has a similar fear. I may be borrowing trouble here, but how would the rest of you handle being asked by The Boss to bail out an incompetent colleague without allowing said person's incompetence to damage your own professional reputation?
Most people say that is it is the intellect which makes a great scientist. They are wrong: it is character.
-- Albert Einstein