TxTarpon said:
What?
Watching millennials get offended is not a hobby?
It is an odd one
TxTarpon said:
What?
Watching millennials get offended is not a hobby?
If your mtg work requirement in one hr your employee needs to give you more **** to do.Teslag said:Street Fighter said:Well they aren't.Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
Where did it say they weren't meeting their work productivity?
Are we married to the same woman?bonfarr said:
My wife has worked remote for the last three years and from what I can see in a typical day she puts about 4 hours of real work in and that includes all of the Zoom calls. She logs in about 8:30 and puts together emails and any docs she might need to share on one of the calls she has that day. Then they have a Zoom call for about an hour. After that she has lunch, folds laundry, watches TV, plays with the dogs, etc until the afternoon Zoom call. Then she works feverishly for about an hour from 4:30-5:30 to finish any work for the day. I imagine that is probably similar to most remote workers and why it is such a touchy subject when anyone brings up ending remote work.
Street Fighter said:If your mtg work requirement in one hr your employee needs to give you more **** to do.Teslag said:Street Fighter said:Well they aren't.Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
Where did it say they weren't meeting their work productivity?
coconutED said:I'm pretty sure that where you live is very much your employer's business.ABATTBQ11 said:
Where they live and their personal lives are none of your GD business
ABATTBQ11 said:coconutED said:I'm pretty sure that where you live is very much your employer's business.ABATTBQ11 said:
Where they live and their personal lives are none of your GD business
No. It's not. Whether I choose to live in a camper, an apartment, a house, or a cardboard box is none of their business. The only thing that is their business is whether I'm doing the work I'm being paid to do.
ABATTBQ11 said:coconutED said:I'm pretty sure that where you live is very much your employer's business.ABATTBQ11 said:
Where they live and their personal lives are none of your GD business
No. It's not. Whether I choose to live in a camper, an apartment, a house, or a cardboard box is none of their business. The only thing that is their business is whether I'm doing the work I'm being paid to do.
Old May Banker said:Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
As a general rule, the man signing the front of their checks cares.
Hell the idea of working from a cruise ship now that Starlink is coming would make my wife happy. Oh well.mncag said:
I used to do that all the time in the late 90s early 2000s long weekends do a work call from a payphone even if needed it was easy before the internet became a thing
Win At Life said:
We can't do that at my company, because we've been 100% in the office after one day of work when covid hit. But I usually come 30 minutes late. I use the side door so the boss doesn't see me. Then I just space out while looking at my computer. It looks like I'm working, but I'm not. I'd say in a given week, I do about 15 minutes of real work.
pagerman @ work said:
Thank God no one ever screwed around in the office.
Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
If your employer says you can work remotely, but doesn't specifically define the location that the remote work needs to be performed, then pick a fun place and enjoy...TxTarpon said:Wrong. "Hush trips" are about fraud and deception.Robert C. Christian said:
Are they salaried or hourly? If salaried and deliverables and dates are met that isn't fraud. That is called doing your job.
If you are supposed to be in your Houston home doing work, but are secretly in Cancun, taking your work computer out of the US and telling your employer that you are home, then you are committing fraud.
If you work for an employer who says "I don't care where you live or work," then enjoy.Same with salaried lawyers and medical professionals who say they saw nonexistent patients.Quote:
If hourly and you are faking hours, that is fraud.
If they're doing their jobs, what load are their colleagues carrying?FrioAg 00 said:Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
The colleagues who carry their load until they the lazy freeloaders get caught
TexasAggie81 said:Old May Banker said:Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
As a general rule, the man signing the front of their checks cares.
I'm shocked, but I guess I shouldn't be, that some of you claim to have graduated from A&M and demonstrate that you unashamedly support such unethical conduct … including lying. Damn, people. If you're going to do that, don't tell anyone you graduated from my alma mater.
TxTarpon said:
If you subscribe to any BizJournal, then this was a featured article this week.
I found it posted without a paywall.
[url=https://www.prweb.com/releases/resumebuilder_com_survey_finds_1_in_6_generation_z_workers_used_a_virtual_background_to_fool_employers_while_taking_a_hush_trip/prweb19473377.htm][/url]In the old days this was called "theft of time" and these people were terminated immediately.Quote:
Survey Finds 1 in 6 Generation Z Workers Used a Virtual Background to Fool Employers While Taking a 'Hush Trip'
Based on survey results, 44 percent of Gen Zers surveyed say they have taken a vacation without their employer's permission. Of this group, 57 percent say they gave the impression that they were still working normal hours even when they were not. In fact, 4 percent say they worked less than one hour, 28 percent say 1 to 2 hours, 30 percent say 3 to 4 hours, and 23 percent say 5 to 6 hours. Only 14 percent say they worked seven or more hours.
Additionally, of employees who tried to keep up the appearance of working a full day, 65 percent say they used a virtual background to fool their employer.Shows how desperate employers are now to keep people. (or they don't have the sophisticated software to garner all the facts?)Quote:
Survey results also highlight the reasons why workers took 'hush trips.'
Of those who took an undisclosed trip,
51 percent say they did so because their 'PTO request was not approved,'
27 percent say they 'had no PTO to use,' and
20 percent say they 'didn't want to use PTO.'
Among all hush trip takers,
41 percent say their employer found out,
45 percent say their employer did not, and
14 percent are unsure.
Of those who were discovered,
71 percent say they were reprimanded, and
7 percent say they were fired.
When unemployment was 7-8% and employers had their choice of candidates.
The people I know still in industry say it is tough to find good workers.
This boils down to deception where these Gen Z workers are telling their employers they are working, but they are not working and are on vacation.
How much profit the company makes is irrelevant to what a worker's wage should be.Kvetch said:TexasAggie81 said:Old May Banker said:Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
As a general rule, the man signing the front of their checks cares.
I'm shocked, but I guess I shouldn't be, that some of you claim to have graduated from A&M and demonstrate that you unashamedly support such unethical conduct … including lying. Damn, people. If you're going to do that, don't tell anyone you graduated from my alma mater.
Is it lying when the employer doesn't give me access to the books so I can see how much profit the company makes and calculate a fair wage for myself on a more informed basis?
As long as the employee completes the tasks that are assigned, the employer doesn't have any valid complaint. Let's not pretend that employment is a situation of full transparency in both directions. You're contracting a person to complete tasks in a competent manner. You don't own them just because you sign their checks.
If the work isn't getting done, that's one thing. It's another to think you can dictate the every move of your WFH employees when they are completing the job as assigns.
Ag with kids said:How much profit the company makes is irrelevant to what a worker's wage should be.Kvetch said:TexasAggie81 said:Old May Banker said:Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
As a general rule, the man signing the front of their checks cares.
I'm shocked, but I guess I shouldn't be, that some of you claim to have graduated from A&M and demonstrate that you unashamedly support such unethical conduct … including lying. Damn, people. If you're going to do that, don't tell anyone you graduated from my alma mater.
Is it lying when the employer doesn't give me access to the books so I can see how much profit the company makes and calculate a fair wage for myself on a more informed basis?
As long as the employee completes the tasks that are assigned, the employer doesn't have any valid complaint. Let's not pretend that employment is a situation of full transparency in both directions. You're contracting a person to complete tasks in a competent manner. You don't own them just because you sign their checks.
If the work isn't getting done, that's one thing. It's another to think you can dictate the every move of your WFH employees when they are completing the job as assigns.
Wages are prices. They are related to how much value the worker produces. That's it.
I do agree with the rest of your statement though.
FrioAg 00 said:Kvetch said:
Who cares as long as they do their jobs?
The colleagues who carry their load until they the lazy freeloaders get caught