<p>I know this was a week and a half ago, but consider a couple of things.</p>
<p>When you posted, you said you had been there for a few days… a few days can’t give you a good idea of whether you will like a job, especially if you liked it enough to accept an offer they made to you. </p>
<p>One thing I have learned is that you will never have <em>nothing</em> to do unless you don’t want anything to do. If you’re bored, talk to a superior about finding work to do. If they have nothing and give you silly, meaningless or amorphous tasks, then finish those tasks quickly, and then start watching things.</p>
<p>If you are working somewhere that isn’t giving you work, the company is not perfectly run, which means there is a great opportunity to improve it. Take the time that you would be doing nothing to explore inefficiencies in the way they run the business. To use a simple example, if you find that paper supplies are located in a room that doesn’t have a printer/copier/fax machine, find a way to store paper in the more logical room, even if that involves moving things around. A little thing like that may seem like nothing, but it could show a supervisor that you can actually do something to help their business. It’ll also give you something to do when you’re bored.</p>