Working slower to avoid mistakes. (I don’t want to, I’m just told I should.)
I’ve only had one person who was able to legitimately judge my work (at an internship), and my work/mistake ratio was not unreasonably high.
There is evidence to suggest that the person giving this advice trying to justify to herself how I can get the work done far faster than she could, although my opinion on that could be personal bias.
There is someone checking over all my work, so even when I do make a mistake it is caught without becoming a serious issue.
The only way I would be working slower is checking over all my entries before I submit them, which would just be duplicating the job mentioned in 3.
Unless the person complaining is the person who checks your work, or there’s some reason to believe that they’d have more information about the ideal speed to mistakes ratio than you do, I suggest just ignoring it. If one or the other of my caveats is true, I suggest asking the person who checks your work for more information about the issue, so that you can see why you should want to work slower and avoid more mistakes.
I used to think I needed to learn this. Then I was given unsupervised access to do accounting entries, and discovered I could double-check my work quite well when there was an actual nee. I just can’t stand wasting time on it normally, for the #1 and #4 reasons you listed.
Working slower to avoid mistakes. (I don’t want to, I’m just told I should.)
I’ve only had one person who was able to legitimately judge my work (at an internship), and my work/mistake ratio was not unreasonably high.
There is evidence to suggest that the person giving this advice trying to justify to herself how I can get the work done far faster than she could, although my opinion on that could be personal bias.
There is someone checking over all my work, so even when I do make a mistake it is caught without becoming a serious issue.
The only way I would be working slower is checking over all my entries before I submit them, which would just be duplicating the job mentioned in 3.
Unless the person complaining is the person who checks your work, or there’s some reason to believe that they’d have more information about the ideal speed to mistakes ratio than you do, I suggest just ignoring it. If one or the other of my caveats is true, I suggest asking the person who checks your work for more information about the issue, so that you can see why you should want to work slower and avoid more mistakes.
I used to think I needed to learn this. Then I was given unsupervised access to do accounting entries, and discovered I could double-check my work quite well when there was an actual nee. I just can’t stand wasting time on it normally, for the #1 and #4 reasons you listed.