Hey love, let me tell you how my Monday went at the new office in Shoreditch you know, the place that used to be all grey filing cabinets and now its all glass dividers and those fancy liftup monitor stands. I walked in just before nine, hung my coat on the back of my chair, fired up my laptop and checked the agenda. The big bold task at the top read: Onboard interns Mentor: Olivia. Beneath it were three surnames Id memorised the night before while nursing a cuppa and scrolling on my laptop at home.
Im fortyfive, and in the clientprojects team Im one of the older folks, but it feels more like a fact of life than a sentence. I remember five years ago when we were just shifting to a new CRM, thinking everything was moving at warp speed. I got the hang of it eventually and now Im the one showing the newbies where to click and what to leave alone.
The interns were due at ten. Before they arrived I had to finish the finance directors report and print a few simple process flowcharts Id sketched yesterday nothing flashy, just basic diagrams of who does what and when.
By tentofive Id already got three folders of starter guides on my desk, plus a stack of notebooks and pens. I gave everything a quick glance to make sure I hadnt mixed up the names I cant stand being called hey, you.
First in was a tall girl in a light cardigan, backpack slung over one shoulder. She peeked in, paused at the door and said, a little nervous, Hi, Im Emily.
Come in, Emily. Im Olivia, I replied, standing to shake her hand. Have a seat over here, the others will be here soon.
A minute later a bloke in a checked shirt, short hair and a laptop bag swung over his shoulder walked in.
Hey, Im James, he said, scanning the room. Im on the projectmanagement graduate scheme.
Right, James, have a seat.
The third was a petite woman with short dark hair, black blazer and trainers. She walked in confidently, though her eyes hinted at a bit of tension.
Good morning, Im Grace, she said, pulling a notebook straight out of her bag.
I looked at the three of them and caught myself smiling a little. They were younger than my teenage son, which felt both strange and oddly familiar new faces, a fresh cycle.
Great youre all here on time, I said. Lets get started. Today is your intro day. Ill tell you what the department does, what we expect from you, and you can fire away with any questions. Then well look at the current projects and see where you might fit.
I kept my tone calm and even. Every time new people show up I tweak the emphasis a bit the worlds changing, and they need a solid footing, not just a rulebook.
Lets nail down a few basics first, I continued. One: if you dont get something, ask. No stupid questions. Pretending everythings clear and then breaking the project later is the real stupidity. Two: were not living in chat. Written communication matters, but the tricky stuff we hash out by voice drop by, hop on a call. Three: you own what you promise. If you see you wont hit a deadline, flag it early. Thats not a failure, its just reality.
James nodded, already opening his laptop. Emily scribbled each rule diligently. Grace stared straight at me, as if matching my words against her internal checklist.
Will we have a team chat? Emily asked. Just for quick bits.
Absolutely, I said. We have a channel on Teams. Ill add you. Remember, the chat is a tool, not a way of life.
I gave a quick rundown of the company structure, key clients and how a project typically rolls out. I skipped the long brand history and instead shared two bitesize stories: one where catching a contract mistake saved a deal, another where a team missed a deadline because they were too shy to admit they didnt understand the brief.
Our job isnt to pretend everythings under control its to actually keep it that way, I summed up. Thats the foundation of client trust and internal cohesion.
After the intro we took a tour. I pointed out where the analysts sit, where finance huddles, where the meeting rooms are. I introduced a few colleagues, and the newbies exchanged shy hellos, curiosity sparkling in their eyes.
We were back at my desk just before noon. I pulled up the projectmanagement dashboard on the big screen and laid out the three streams they could jump into.
First, were rolling out a new service for a big highstreet retailer. Lots of routine work but youll see the whole cycle. Second, a pilot with an online platform where things move fast. Third, an internal project to tighten up our own processes.
James was quick to speak up. Id like the pilot, he said. Im keen to see how its tested with real users.
Got it, I noted. Emily?
I think a more structured piece would suit me better, she replied cautiously. Maybe the retailer rollout I like having a clear plan.
Alright. Grace?
The internal optimisation, she answered without hesitation. I want to understand how we work from the inside out.
I logged the choices and mentally mapped out how to balance their time so nobody felt left out or buried.
In the weeks that followed they settled into the rhythm. I met with each one individually, walked through tasks, showed proper client email etiquette, and stressed the importance of clear promises what will be delivered and by when.
Emily once remarked, If we sound too harsh the client might get offended.
Be firm yet polite, I replied. Instead of we cant, say heres what we can offer. You guide, you dont push away.
She rewrote the draft and seemed more at ease.
James, meanwhile, got the hang of the new platform fast. He showed me how to pull user reports and build simple dashboards.
Can we push those metrics straight to the team channel so everyone sees the trend? he asked one day. I could write a tiny script that refreshes the summary daily.
I listened, not pretending to be an old hand at everything.
If it doesnt break security, lets give it a go, I said. First run it by IT and the security team.
We chatted with the sysadmin, James explained his idea, I asked clarifying questions, and a couple of days later his script was live. The channel now showed tidy daily snapshots of the pilot, and colleagues were dropping thumbsup and emojis.
Grace dove into the internal survey project. She suggested making the employee questionnaire anonymous for honesty.
Can we add a couple of questions about how they use our tools? she asked in a meeting. Ive noticed many arent aware of half the features.
Sure, just phrase it so nobody feels dumb, I advised.
We tweaked the wording together, and Graces keen eye for nuance impressed me. At my age Im used to cutting straight to the chase, but I now see how her gentle phrasing makes a difference.
When I was manually shifting deadlines in the task spreadsheet, James pointed out, You can automate that there are templates and dependencies that recalc dates for you.
I froze, then admitted, Honestly, I havent dug into that. Show me?
He sat next to me, walked me through it in plain language, no jargon. Fifteen minutes later I was linking tasks myself, feeling a mix of irritation at my own wasted time and gratitude for the shortcut.
Why didnt you tell me earlier? I asked.
I thought youd prefer I left you alone, he mumbled. Didnt want to be pushy.
Pushy is fine, I said gently. If you see an improvement, shout it out. Its help, not criticism.
Days flew by, spring sunshine brightening the streets, people swapping coats for light jackets, the office humming a little louder each morning.
Midsecond month a big project landed on our desk a threeweek rollout of a loyalty service for a national pharmacy chain. Tight deadlines, demanding client, and a system still in beta.
The department head called a standup and said, Olivia, youll lead this. Bring the interns on board if you think it helps, but keep an eye on the timeline. The clients a priority.
I nodded, feeling that familiar tension in my shoulders. Ive been through this before; the difference now was having James, Emily, and Grace as part of my crew.
We huddled in the meeting room, papers spread, laptops open, the cityscape of London visible through the windows.
Heres the situation, I began. Three weeks to launch a loyalty program for the pharmacy chain. We need to configure the system, integrate with their POS, train staff, and run live tests. The client is demanding but reasonable. Mistakes will happen; we just cant let them affect shoppers.
James jumped in, I can take the testing piece and maybe set up alerts for the pharmacies so they know instantly if something drops.
Got it, I noted. Emily, youll handle client communications drafts, meeting minutes, task tracking. Ill be nearby but I want you to own it.
Emily swallowed, then nodded. Okay.
Grace, youll run the internal coordination gather status updates, prep short reports for the director. No novels, just the facts.
Grace replied, Can I also make a quick cheatsheet for the pharmacy staff on what to do if something glitches?
Great idea, I said.
The first few days were smooth. The client sent over requirements, we configured, we tested scenarios. I hosted a few calls each day, logged agreements, and handed out tasks. I stayed a bit later each evening to doublecheck everything.
In week two minor hiccups popped up bonus points not crediting at one store, a checkout freeze at another. We fixed them, the client was a tad anxious but overall the rollout kept moving.
Then, on a Friday evening, three days before golive, a panicked message pinged the team chat: Four locations have the system down. No bonuses, checkout errors. Tomorrow we have a big promo this cant happen.
My heart raced. I was about to shut my laptop and head home when I heard the phone ring. I answered the clients angry voice, let them vent, took notes, and then calmly repeated back the issues, proposing a plan: Well assemble the team now, give you a status in an hour, run overnight tests, and reconvene at nine tomorrow.
I dialled James.
Did you see the alert? I asked.
Yeah, Im looking at the logs. Something with the integration library blew up, he said.
Join the call in fifteen minutes, Ill pull Emily and Grace in too, I instructed.
Fifteen minutes later we were all in a small conference room, the office almost empty, the London sky darkening outside.
The situations messy but not a disaster, I started. First, we need to pinpoint the failure and see what we can fix before morning.
James pointed to his screen. During a library update a config for the pharmacies got wiped. We can restore it, but we need a few hours and then run tests.
How long? I asked.
Three to four hours, give or take, plus testing.
Emily, can you draft a client email outlining the action plan no excuses, just clear steps and timings, I said.
She took a breath. Sure, can I sketch it first and youll review?
Exactly. I turned to Grace. Put together a concise status for the director facts only.
They split up. I felt that familiar tightrope tension, the urge to point fingers, but I knew that wouldnt help anyone.
Twenty minutes later Emily returned with a draft. I read it, tweaked a couple of phrases, cut the extra apologies, added firm deadlines, and gave her the goahead to send it with me ccd.
Grace handed me a threepoint bullet: what went wrong, what were doing, risks.
I approved and sent both.
Night stretched on. James was glued to his code, occasionally narrating his steps out loud. I helped him verify scenarios, suggesting which pharmacy sites to hit first. Emily kept the client looped, answering followup queries. Grace kept the internal status board tidy so nobody woke up to a surprise.
Around two in the morning James leaned back. Looks good, the configs are back, three pharmacies passed tests. Two more to run, no errors so far.
My chest relaxed a notch.
Great. Lets finish those two tests and then fire an interim update to the client, I said.
When the final tests cleared, we shot a short progress note to the client. I closed my laptop, looked at the three of them and said, Thanks, everyone. Youve done a massive amount today.
Emily whispered, I was scared youd yell at us for missing something.
I laughed, Yelling wont fix code. Mistakes are part of the process. What matters is we see them and sort them out. If wed pretended everything was fine and walked away, the shouting would have been justified.
We all headed home around three. I took a cab, feeling exhausted but already mapping tomorrows morning call, the final report, and a chat with the director.
The next morning, as soon as I stepped into the office, the client called. Their tone was still a bit tense but calmer. I walked them through what wed done overnight, the tests wed run, and a backup plan just in case. They thanked us and said they were ready to go ahead.
After the call I gathered the team at my desk. The clients still nervous, thats normal. But they see were not hiding. Today well doublecheck every critical point and stay on standby.
James suggested, Ill set up monitoring alerts for specific errors so we dont wait for the client to call.
Do it, but run it past IT first, I said.
Emily drafted a quick checklist for pharmacy staff to run before calling us, and Grace polished the internal debrief, adding a lessonslearned section.
By days end the system was holding up. A few minor glitches popped up, nothing catastrophic. The client sent a brief message: Thanks for the swift work. Lets keep it rolling.
I felt a quiet satisfaction, not a buzz of triumph but a steady hum of getting through a crisis together.
At the weekly planning meeting the department head singled out the interns, Well done. You didnt bolt at the first sign of trouble.
We exchanged modest smiles. I thought about how, that evening, I deliberately didnt try to solve everything solo I let them take responsibility. It was a risk, but it taught them real ownership.
After the meeting we drifted back to our desks. The hum of the office returned to its usual pace, jokes popping up in Teams.
Grace stopped me by the window. Just wanted to say thanks for how you lead us, she said. In my last job the mentor just dumped tasks and vanished. Here its different.
I shrugged lightly. I need you guys too. You spot things I miss like your surveys and checklists. Id probably make them all formal and bland.
She laughed. Were used to other formats, but your structure keeps us from drowning.
James later handed me a paper. Ive sketched a proposal to automate our department reports. Its plain English, with examples of time saved.
Its interesting, I replied. Lets discuss it internally first, then take it up the chain. And youll present it.
Me? he asked, surprised.
Yes, its your idea. Ill be there.
Emily swung by with a polished set of email templates. Ive pulled together the common phrases we use with clients. Can I show them at the next team meeting?
Absolutely, I said. Thatll be useful for everyone.
In the evening, as the office emptied, I opened an old development plan Id drafted years ago training, standards, automation. Most of it was now being driven by the newer crew, not just me.
I reflected on how I used to worry that tech would push me out, that younger folks would speed past me. Now that fears turned into something else. My calm, my ability to set boundaries, blends with their speed and tech savvy. Together we achieve what neither could alone.
I closed the file, stood up, and noticed a forgotten notebook on the neighbours desk bright cover, a splash of colour. I placed it where it could be seen, thinking tomorrow someone would claim it.
Before I left, I dropped a quick note in the interns Teams channel: Thanks for pulling through the pharmacy project. Next week well debrief, look at what worked and what we can improve. Bring your ideas. O. A few replies popped up: Thanks!, It was intense but great, Already brainstorming.
I grabbed my coat, walked down the corridor lit with a soft glow, and headed for the lift, already picturing how to give the team even more space to decide while I keep the overall direction steady. New month, new projects, new faces Im tired but theres this quiet confidence that my experience still matters, marching right alongside the fresh energy.






