• @FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      665 months ago

      It don’t matter how organized I am, my boss sees I’m done by noon on a friday he’ll give me more service calls, shop time or some other job to do.

      • @pearsaltchocolatebar
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        5 months ago

        Wow, Sounds like you really need to work on your time management skills.

      • @li10@lemmy.ml
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        525 months ago

        That’s where you’re going wrong, you still need to pretend you’re doing work

        • @FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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          105 months ago

          That only works until the last call I did calls to pay their bill and now the office knows I’m done my work. I usually just suck it up and take more work, I’d hoestly rather that than twiddle my thumbs for a few hours.

          • Dandroid
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            5 months ago

            Oh, I see. My work only knows I’m done by when I move my tickets to complete on Jira, so I just leave them as in progress until my due date. I work from home, so I just watch TV or play video games while sitting near my work laptop to respond to emails or chat messages in the meantime.

          • @Coreidan@lemmy.world
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            25 months ago

            Twiddle your thumbs? You need some hobbies my dude. There is more to life than constantly working.

      • Flying Squid
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        155 months ago

        That’s why you develop the talent of looking busy while not doing shit.

      • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        15 months ago

        That’s not the type of job they are referring to.

        They’re referring to jobs where you have overarching goals and deliverables but aren’t logging actions to the event, or to the hour.

        I’ve had jobs like yours and steady, dependable, maintainable pace is the way to get through the week. Don’t over promise, don’t look available for random new tasks.

        At my current gig I have tasks issued at the 2 week level, and aside from very rare requests for assistance or discussion, I’m left to my to-do list, and my predetermined commitments. If I consistently meet my commitments, and show up for scheduled meetings, no one gives a shit when I actually work. It’s great but requires the right environment.

      • @acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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        395 months ago

        It is. You should try to move to a career where you sell the results of your labor, not the time it takes to achieve them. Easier said than done, I know. Good luck!

        • @Kiosade@lemmy.ca
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          65 months ago

          I think I would have to get a govt job in my career path to be able to do that. I’ve considered it, but idk if I really want to or not.

          • @Truck_kun@beehaw.org
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            35 months ago

            Until recent times, I’ve always thought a govt job was a good thing to have.

            Still is, but the constant threat of government shutdowns, in the US at least, as of late, make me feel you need to live below your means and keep a decent chunk of 3 to 6 months pay, because you could suddenly be without pay for a good chunk of time because some idiots think they score political points, or will get their way, by hurting citizens.

            • @Kiosade@lemmy.ca
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              25 months ago

              That’s a very good point… it seems like every time the national budget is up for renewal, those Republican clowns threaten to fuck everyone over. Bastards, the lot of them!

    • Dandroid
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      165 months ago

      I already finished all my work for the sprint that ends on Tuesday. It’s Thursday at noon currently.

  • @grey_maniac@lemmy.ca
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    855 months ago

    How about also, “Wow, seems like you need to work on your resource planning skills,” when a manager tries to demand unpaid overtime?

    • Snot Flickerman
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      5 months ago

      I think you might just straight say “management skills” because that’s bare minimum part of their fucking job to organize a schedule well enough so they don’t have to have people running into overtime to get the job done. That is time management, too, because you’re supposed to know how long it takes each employee to do shit, and you should be fucking organizing based on that.

      I’m so fucking sick of skeleton crews. I’m pushing 50 and the last 25 fucking years has been nothing but skeleton crews where if one person calls out sick everything falls apart. Sorry, that’s inefficient as hell. If one person calling out wrecks everything, then that means you’re doing it fucking wrong and maybe you need one or two more people to help cover the gaps. I’m sure it makes them beaucoup bucks in the short term, but the profits from ruining your relationship with your customer base won’t last. Eventually customers do get sick of being treated like shit. (Corporations are banking on all of them similarly treating you like shit so you won’t have any real options that are better.)

      • Iron Lynx
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        105 months ago

        skeleton crews

        I’m not a manager, but if I had a business critical three person job and some busywork, I’d schedule four people minimum. Probably five if the busywork is important at the time.

      • @LoamImprovement@beehaw.org
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        65 months ago

        Managers lower the bus factor to like .8 and force everyone else to work too hard to pick up the slack. Then they act shocked when somebody gets hit by a bus and it all falls apart.

      • Flying Squid
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        25 months ago

        Literally every order at my last job bottlenecked through me. That meant that I got shit every time I dared to take time off because it meant one of the salespeople had to do my job and they didn’t even know how to do it well because our processes kept changing and only I was keeping up. I was paid dick despite that too. So glad to be away from that fucking job.

    • @foggy@lemmy.world
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      115 months ago

      I’d straight up tell a boss that asked for unpaid overtime that their failure to allocate resources is money out of my pocket if and only if you want to hear from the DoL.

      • @pearsaltchocolatebar
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        115 months ago

        Unfortunately, many jobs that do this are salaried exempt.

        Now, whether they are miss categorized is a different story. That’s why my wife’s old workplace is going to get some attention from the IRS and DOL when she finishes her month’s notice.

  • @LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world
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    765 months ago

    My coworkers give me shit for not working late all the time. Like, I work late when I absolutely have to or get permission to make up missed time. I refuse to stay just because lol.

    • Flying Squid
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      195 months ago

      At my last job, I would clock-watch like a kid in school and bolt out of there when it got to be 5. No fucking way was I staying there any longer than I had to.

      • @InputZero@lemmy.ml
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        75 months ago

        Soon I’m going to be part of our safety management team, I respect this type of attitude. I don’t want all of our employees being exhausted all day, that’s dangerous. Go home, get rest, relax, come back 100% tomorrow. Any other attitude is unsustainable and irresponsible. I do appreciate the need to SOMETIMES work overtime. I’d really like to understand the positive feedback loop that’s involved with excessive overtime but that’s not my specific field of study.

      • @LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world
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        55 months ago

        Same tho. Like, I do my job well when I am expected to work and work over when absolutely necessary. I think that’s good enough lol.

    • @Mischala@lemmy.nz
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      95 months ago

      Your coworkers shame you for not donating your time to the company?
      Seems pretty fucked up. sounds like yall need a union rep.

  • @TBi@lemmy.world
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    525 months ago

    I had someone boast that they had all their vacation days at the end of the year because they were so “devoted”. I just said it seems they have bad time management since this time off was included in schedules.

  • Margot Robbie
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    275 months ago

    For me, it’s very much cyclical: when there is a project going, there are so many people counting on you that pretty much every minute counts, and the cost of mistakes is always high. It’s during these times that time management skill is critical and you need people on the team who’s job is to manage everybody’s time and make sure things gets done, but even with that, the long hours are unavoidable. I don’t think it’s something to brag about, it’s the nature of the job.

    But when there is no project going, it feels like there is really not much to do all day, sometimes even the task of finding things to do is a struggle, so you do whatever you want until the next project starts.

  • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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    275 months ago

    Here’s my view as an executive, if my folks regularly add hours to their day/week to get their job done they’re not good at their job. If they’re good at their job they know how to prioritize and they also know how to optimize and automate constantly so they can do more with less. They also do their form of zero base reporting or zero base budgeting constantly to get rid of what was once important that no longer is.

    To be fair in senior leadership a 40 hour week probably isn’t going to happen but you should swing between 55 hours and 30 hours depending on the week and average it to the mid to high 40s.

    I suspect this isn’t going to be a popular post, and I accept your down votes but would also like to hear your contrary view along with it if you don’t mind.

    • IndiBrony
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      385 months ago

      I’d say there’s also something to be said about an overbearing workload. If everyone is constantly struggling to get things done in time then more staff could be needed. But yeah, if it’s the same ones over and over and only them, then investigating why makes sense.

      • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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        195 months ago

        If the majority of the people the majority of the time have the same result then it’s the system not the people.

        So yeah it could be a systemic issue, it’s my job to prevent or correct that.

      • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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        245 months ago

        Agreed! Luckily they’re fairly easy to replace as long as you don’t build systems that won’t allow them to fail.

        A decade or more before COVID my favorite tool was to let everyone work from home. Those that sucked at their job wouldn’t get anything done. HR would just ask we bring them all in and I’d refuse. If they can’t be trusted to work without supervision they can’t be trusted to work with it.

        Now keep in mind we have to be reasonable people and not driving our people beyond reasonableness.

        • Promethiel
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          55 months ago

          Now keep in mind we have to be reasonable people and not driving our people beyond reasonableness.

          Ditch your suite, and go into executive exclusive consultancy.

          Just paraphrase the quoted section for each individual thick skull, and maybe teach them that softening the skin around your eyes and giving the beleaguered high performers bringing feedback a knowing look doesn’t violate business needs.

          Then you won’t have to worry about posts starting with “as an executive” going wrong.

          Well, no not really, but I know a board that needs to internalize that sentiment.

          • @HuntressHimbo@lemm.ee
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            55 months ago

            The problem is you need a executive body that already agrees with you to select you from their choices of consultant. We’re not rational creatures and are our personal biases make it so we’re more likely to hire the consultant that reflects our preconceived ideas

          • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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            45 months ago

            I’m not sure why you got a down vote for saying someone should help change the whole system but here is an up vote to help fix it.

            And bottom line that won’t work. It won’t because American organizations are dictatorships and dictatorships always end up that way. I do what I can to fight it but I know my efforts have limited impact outside of my departments.

            For some “light” reading, try The Doctors Handbook and Cultish. Both amazing books that do a great job outlining why the systems work the way they do and changing the system is what’s needed to change the default output.

            Germany to an extent and some Nordic countries do a good job of this on paper. I can’t say I’ve read enough to speak intelligently about their solutions though.

    • @wandermind@sopuli.xyz
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      195 months ago

      if my folks regularly add hours to their day/week to get their job done they’re not good at their job

      Or they have too much work

        • @thanks_shakey_snake@lemmy.ca
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          45 months ago

          I can see that you’re engaging thoughtfully and in good faith, but that’s a pretty glaring omission from your original post.

          Even in organizations that are healthy in many ways for most people, there can still be people who are stretched thin and don’t feel empowered to throttle their workload for whatever reason.

          • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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            25 months ago

            Culture for most people begins and ends at their boss. And if they don’t feel empowered it’s often because of their boss and the culture their boss creates.

            This topic like most are more nuanced than this, sometimes it’s that person’s own history and issues and not the bosses, like maybe past locations are childhood and so on. But this things aren’t really something a boss can do anything about. The boss is responsible for creating a healthy environment that encourages healthy boundaries and the measurement is that they are getting the results from the majority of the people the majority of the time.

            • @thanks_shakey_snake@lemmy.ca
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              25 months ago

              Is the measurement that they’re getting the results, or is it that they aren’t working extra hours? “Getting the results from the majority of the people the majority of the time” is exactly how I’d expect an executive to handwave employees burning out due to the kind of environment we’re talking about. Not everybody is going to manifest visible problems at the same time, so it will just look like a handful “not working out” every once in awhile, which is to be expected.

              It could describe a healthy environment equally well… But my point is just that your formulation (“Results from the majority of the people the majority of the time”) doesn’t seem to me to have the ability to distinguish between a healthy and a toxic environment.

              • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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                15 months ago

                The phrase applies to negative results not positive ones because the rest of the phrase is it’s not the people it’s the system which implies a problem not a good result. Going through all the details of the system is more than I’m willing to type. If you’d like to know more these are a few of my favorite resources.

                Multipliers by Liz Wiseman

                Beyond Command and Control by John Seddon

                First Break All the Rules by Marcus Buckingham

                The Effective Manager by Mark Horstman

                Dare to Lead by Brene Brown

                The Effective Executive by Peter F. Drucker

                You’re Not Listening by Kate Murphy

                Four Thousand Weeks by Oliver Burkeman

                • @thanks_shakey_snake@lemmy.ca
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                  25 months ago

                  Oh, sorry for misunderstanding you. I’m used to “getting results” as referring to achieving measurable business objectives, but the meaning changes completely if you meant the opposite, and I’m not sure I follow what you’re saying in that case.

                  Thanks for the recommendations. I will look at those.

    • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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      75 months ago

      I know lots of senior management and companies that only do a 40 hour work week. if you are doing 55 there is too much work for the staff employed.

      • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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        -15 months ago

        It’s a swing, see, 30 - 55. In 2023 I averaged 46 hours a week with a low of 30 hours and a high of 57 hours. That’s excluding the 5 partial weeks due to PTO and the full weeks off due to PTO and holiday weeks. I feel this for me is a healthy amount.

        • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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          If you want to put in more time, thats on you obviously. But I see CEO/CFO and othe4 senior management doing 40, and employees doing the same. it has to be driven top down as a culture. Thankfully I’m in BC so management/salary gets extra hours paid, but I still don’t want them.

        • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          25 months ago

          But also you mention the petty tyrants, keep in mind they demand from us what they voluntarily give. When executives associate dedication with 45 hours week averages they demand we show dedication too.

          I think there’s something serious to be said for even executives attempting to move all of our society towards a shorter work week. Though I acknowledge that that doesn’t fall into something any one person can do. I also am not sure whether it’s more likely to arrive top down or bottom up.

          • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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            25 months ago

            I think this is a great point. One thing I haven’t mentioned is I’m clear with my folks if it only takes 20 hours to get the job done they can do whatever they want with the rest of the time, they’re exempt afterall. I’ve only had one person fully take me up on it and he was referred to as 7’ Jesus. To be clear he was 6’6” but I guess rounding was fine. And he only worked about 25 hours a week for me but killed it with what I needed and was happy.

            Most people work about what I do but they know they can take time for themselves wherever and regularly do.

            One person has a new born and doing half Fridays for the foreseeable future which I think is great. I encouraged more but that’s all she wants.

      • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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        145 months ago

        Mostly irregularity of what needs to happen. Some weeks everything you can imagine needs to happen now, other weeks not much needs to happen. I’ve learned not to shove my slow weeks with irrelevant busy work so I can ebb and flow with the work.

        Last week with this SaaS implementation I was so busy I couldn’t see straight. Right now I’m chilling on Lemmy and thinking about what other famous movie scenes I can enhance with Muppets lol.

    • @poinck@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      Free advice: Don’t do unpayed overtime and it will regulate itself. I work 36h/week and if there was too much work planned for me in a 2 week sprint I use the overtime to get a free Friday now and then.

      Everything above 40h/week is unhealthy, at least for me, it is! In the near future I will ask for 32h/week; had that in a previous job and it was fantastic.

      • @BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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        25 months ago

        I sort of do that and have most of my career with my people. If I’m aware they’ve put in a bunch of hours I’ll ask them to take time off on me. I’m sure I’m not always aware and I know it’s against company policy but I’ve never been busted for it. But I don’t make it an official policy just to stay on the safe side of company policy. I’m sure if someone found out and complained I’d not be able to do it anymore.

  • @Marcbmann@lemmy.world
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    235 months ago

    My time management is great. I do my job and the job of the person underneath me, because we can’t find anyone worth a damn.

    • @CatZoomies@lemmy.world
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      185 months ago

      Make sure you highlight this in your one on one discussions with your manager and get compensated. You’re doing two jobs- your employer should not be taking advantage of you. Get paid my friend.

      • @NoFun4You@lemmy.world
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        155 months ago

        Nawh he’s the problem, complain? Attitude problem. We’ll find a new guy for half the salary and not tell him what he’s getting into.

          • @NoFun4You@lemmy.world
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            15 months ago

            Are you all looking for work now? Lol.

            I actually had to do something like that with a co worker once, we hired a lemon and nobody believed us that he didn’t do any work lol.

            • @Marcbmann@lemmy.world
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              15 months ago

              I honestly work at a company that would fit most ideals for the average anti-work/work-reform subscriber.

              Unlimited PTO, with minimum PTO usage requirements. Free medical. They pay for my gym membership. They pay for tampons for my household. Full time remote. I hold equity in the company. Annual performance bonuses. And they disclose the financials of just about everything to employees. It’s pretty wild

  • @RotatingParts@lemmy.ml
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    215 months ago

    I always wondered how bragging about how long you worked was considered by some as a good thing. The “higher ups” must have used some fancy tricks to get people to think that way. It never worked on me though :)

    • @MeetInPotatoes@lemmy.ml
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      145 months ago

      I always wondered how bragging about how long you worked was considered by some as a good thing.

      Somebody invented “Employee of the Month” and our competitive habits took over.

      • Flying Squid
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        35 months ago

        I never thought about this before, but if I worked somewhere and they gave me an ‘employee of the month’ award, it would piss me off because it would make me feel like I was being a kissass somehow.

    • @bus_factor@lemmy.world
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      105 months ago

      Management was handing out bullshit busywork recently, and some people were complaining. Then some guy was like “they pay my salary, so I do whatever they want!”

      What kind of bullshit wage slave mentality is that? I am the vendor in this scenario, my employer is paying for the privilege of using my services. There can be terms and conditions from both parties of that deal, and if they’re incompatible the deal is off.

      • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        45 months ago

        Ah I have the attitude of “you’re free to pay me engineer money to do this, but I’m leaving at 4 whether I was productive or doing weird bullshit you decided on.“

        • @bus_factor@lemmy.world
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          25 months ago

          Sure, if there’s a business need for cleaning the office toilets I’ll stop coding and do it for a day.

          In this case it’s “everyone needs to spend a few weeks getting points in the training portal, we don’t care what you do in there as long as you get points”. This clearly doesn’t fulfill any business need, people just do whatever BS is the least effort per point. And as you might expect from an internal training portal, spending 20 minutes in that thing makes me want to stab myself.

          Again, if there’s a business need for it that’s a different story, but useless mandates just to jerk people around are a deal breaker.

          • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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            35 months ago

            Ok that’s fair. I’m an engineer and I’ve told my line workers consistently that I’ll never ask them to do something I wouldn’t be willing to do, and at times I do have to help out because shit happens when you’ve got a skeleton crew. Hell I spend some days fabricating my designs.

            And yeah I’d love good training. Teaching me actionable skills. Or just send me to grad school or give me a subscription to my professional organization and let me read their magazine on the job. Hell, throw IEEE in there, they’ve always got something to say. But no I’ve spent days doing the training portal bullshit on everything from “here’s how to deal with the fact that technically you’re an arms trafficker, don’t do treason and don’t think about how you’re a legitimate military target” to “watch a too damn long video about workplace sexual harassment that was clearly not written by anyone who’s ever seen a factory floor” and it just made me want to bash my brain in.

            • @bus_factor@lemmy.world
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              25 months ago

              See, those are needed for compliance/CYA. That has business value, so I can work with that. What I’m referring to here is just training on useless stuff for the sake of racking up points.

    • @soggy_kitty@sopuli.xyz
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      85 months ago

      Modern day life is a competition, people always want to “1 up” the previous person. This is prevalent in society, don’t overthink it

    • @HuntressHimbo@lemm.ee
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      55 months ago

      I think people believe it is a sign you are striving to excel or that you care about the work you are doing.

      In my case I think I talk about how much overtime I work because I got insecurities about my productivity drilled into me as a child with undiagnosed ADHD. Constantly being told you don’t work hard enough regardless of the effort you put in will give you some weird hangups. I think subconsciously its about needing external validation that the time you put in was adequate, or insecurity around ‘work ethic’

      • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        45 months ago

        I can relate to that. I’m extremely glad I broke that habit. They told me when they needed me. I did what needed to be done within reasonable expectations. My failure past that point is on workload

  • @BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world
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    My CW gets to work at 630 am despite having absolutely no reason to do so as the role she does doesn’t start until 8 and she’s just there to check people in, and stays late to sanitize her desk every day. I wander in at 829 and clock out at 423. Fuck it. I’m in a union for a reason.

  • @Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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    175 months ago

    What about people that complain about how long they work (yeah, I do have some suboptimal time management skills, and I’m a little sensitive about it)?

  • @DuckOverload@lemmy.world
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    165 months ago

    Better yet, offer to help them with their time management. That way, it’s a positive and friendly offer, not an overt criticism. And it jams in a little more condescension.

  • Seigest
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    95 months ago

    My time management is poor because my project managers is even worse

    • @bus_factor@lemmy.world
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      45 months ago

      Do you brag about your long hours, or do you complain about the lack of predictability from management? Only the former matches the statement in the quote.

      • Seigest
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        45 months ago

        Bragging is subjective.

        Some take my bitching and moaning that I was up all night working on ____ because the project is a complete mess and they wanted it today as “bragging”.

        Its performance review time, i hate myself and rent is expensive.

  • @XEAL@lemm.ee
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    25 months ago

    STFU I’m hyperfocused on this stupid script that I can’t get to work and if I don’t finish it I will feel sad and frustrated.