Moe Jzyslak said:
Boomers ******* hate it when people don't work in the office
Why do people keep misusing the Boomer label? Today there are almost no boomers in the workforce, they are all 70+ years old.
Moe Jzyslak said:
Boomers ******* hate it when people don't work in the office
fka ftc said:No you are not. Where on earth did this concept ever come from?Ag with kids said:If you're salaried, you're not getting paid an hourly rate...you're getting paid a yearly rate...TRADUCTOR said:
There is no integrity working 2hrs a day and getting paid for 8. That life requires rationalization.
You annual salary divided by 2080 is your hourly rate.
Holy hell there is no hope for the future if the above passes for logic.
bonfarr said:Moe Jzyslak said:
Boomers ******* hate it when people don't work in the office
Why do people keep misusing the Boomer label? Today there are almost no boomers in the workforce, they are all 70+ years old.
bonfarr said:Moe Jzyslak said:
Boomers ******* hate it when people don't work in the office
Why do people keep misusing the Boomer label? Today there are almost no boomers in the workforce, they are all 70+ years old.
DallasAg03 said:fka ftc said:No you are not. Where on earth did this concept ever come from?Ag with kids said:If you're salaried, you're not getting paid an hourly rate...you're getting paid a yearly rate...TRADUCTOR said:
There is no integrity working 2hrs a day and getting paid for 8. That life requires rationalization.
You annual salary divided by 2080 is your hourly rate.
Holy hell there is no hope for the future if the above passes for logic.
That's accounting, my offer letter lists a yearly salary. If you want to pay me hourly, I'd be subject to overtime. Two completely different types of employment contracts
Now continue your lecture...
No it doesn't.fka ftc said:
Congrats on the most nonsensical post I think I have ever read on TexAgs.
You can think of your salary as annual whichever.
Overtime is required in certain instances regardless of whether someone is salaried or hourly.
I can tell you your company's payroll system calculates your bi-weekly or semi-monthly check based on an hourly rate.
And I give two ****s if you want to listen to me or not. Others may find accurate information about how things work to be helpful even if you don't.
Reason I usually have you ignored. Today was a good reminder to make it permanent.
Sorry you don't understand that salaried people are paid an annual rate, not an hourly rate.fka ftc said:Ag with kids said:Well, if a software program converted it, then that's infallible...fka ftc said:Deputy Travis Junior said:
He's not incorrect. You claimed that salaried employees have an hourly rate that's equal to salary divided by 2080. That's not accurate (or even close to it) for a ton of salaried employees.
Sure, math is forbidden on an "annual" salary. I've used ADP, Paylocity, Paychex and Paycor and every single, solid one of those takes whatever you input as salary and converts it to hourly rate.
This is required for orgs that use PTO, particularly ones where your PTO is accrued per pay period.
I am perfectly fine knowing what I know. If others are fine to not know what they don't know, that's on them.
Sorry you don't like to admit how things work in the real world.
Wait...sounds like you're not making an hourly rate, there.Deputy Travis Junior said:fka ftc said:Deputy Travis Junior said:
He's not incorrect. You claimed that salaried employees have an hourly rate that's equal to salary divided by 2080. That's not accurate (or even close to it) for a ton of salaried employees.
Sure, math is forbidden on an "annual" salary. I've used ADP, Paylocity, Paychex and Paycor and every single, solid one of those takes whatever you input as salary and converts it to hourly rate.
This is required for orgs that use PTO, particularly ones where your PTO is accrued per pay period.
I am perfectly fine knowing what I know. If others are fine to not know what they don't know, that's on them.
It fits with some salaried employees, but for many many others (including me), the idea that the company is paying me X dollars every 2 weeks to get 80 hours just doesn't work. Some weeks are light, other weeks I have to travel, get home at 2am, and then wake up and be on a 7am call with somebody in a different time zone.
In short, they're paying me to do a job, the requirements of which vary from week to week. They aren't paying me to put in 40 hours every week.
fka ftc said:DallasAg03 said:fka ftc said:No you are not. Where on earth did this concept ever come from?Ag with kids said:If you're salaried, you're not getting paid an hourly rate...you're getting paid a yearly rate...TRADUCTOR said:
There is no integrity working 2hrs a day and getting paid for 8. That life requires rationalization.
You annual salary divided by 2080 is your hourly rate.
Holy hell there is no hope for the future if the above passes for logic.
That's accounting, my offer letter lists a yearly salary. If you want to pay me hourly, I'd be subject to overtime. Two completely different types of employment contracts
Now continue your lecture...
In Texas and most other places, unless you are an athlete or an executive, it is HIGHLY unlikely you have an employment contract.
You annual salary contemplates you working 2080 hours less holidays and vacation. But really it's whatever you want to think it is.
Offer letters are not worth the paper they are printed on. For the employee, they mean nothing other than helping you understand you comp. For the employer, it gives them documentation should you ever dispute the compensation terms and they want to shut up.
It's clear most folks do not work in accounting or have ever had the responsibility for hiring, firing employees, running payroll for a company or owning a company.
nvmbonfarr said:Moe Jzyslak said:
Boomers ******* hate it when people don't work in the office
Why do people keep misusing the Boomer label? Today there are almost no boomers in the workforce, they are all 70+ years old.
Okay, how ever you want to perceive it, that's your truth. In the real world of business, calucalting things for soley accoutnig porpoises and raisins can be as impurtent as spelling.DallasAg03 said:
I'm aware that accounting may calucalte pay hourly, this is done soley for accounting reasons. Do you take your hammer of integrity to depreciated assets?
Bout time for a lot of Millenials, Gen Zers and the like to learn what this is all about...AggieVictor10 said:
First quiet quitting and now hush trips? No one wants to work anymore.
Look...a made up number that may or may not have a relationship with how much that person is paid per hour of work...fka ftc said:Okay, how ever you want to perceive it, that's your truth. In the real world of business, calucalting things for soley accoutnig porpoises and raisins can be as impurtent as spelling.DallasAg03 said:
I'm aware that accounting may calucalte pay hourly, this is done soley for accounting reasons. Do you take your hammer of integrity to depreciated assets?
For your friend, I am sorry he also has herd tyme understanding basic concepts and seems to be gellus of people who runt their own bidnesses.
You kids make me laugh. The **** you choose to want to die on the swerd for is funny at times.
Annual Salary / 2080 hours gives you an hourly rate in every single company with a payroll department. But is an annual figure makes you happy, use it.
Nice ad hom. The CPA license on the law indicates I may know about depreciation.Deputy Travis Junior said:
"Annual Salary / 2080 hours gives you an hourly rate in every single company with a payroll department."
Yes and it's completely irrelevant to the majority of people on salary. When I have to do heavy reporting every quarter-end and my workload surges to 60-70 hours/week for a pay period, my paycheck is identical to the following one when I'm taking it easy and working maybe 35/week. That's because nobody outside the accounting department cares an hourly rate. everybody else knows I'm paid a salary to work as long as it takes to do a job, not to occupy a desk chair for 40.0 hours/week.
Wait until you get to chapter two of accounting for dummies and have to wrap your head around the fact that a 10% depreciation expense doesn't actually mean that a building is worth 10% less than it was the year before.
Finally, you're understanding how an hourly rate works...fka ftc said:Bout time for a lot of Millenials, Gen Zers and the like to learn what this is all about...AggieVictor10 said:
First quiet quitting and now hush trips? No one wants to work anymore.
fka ftc said:Nice ad hom. The CPA license on the law indicates I may know about depreciation.Deputy Travis Junior said:
"Annual Salary / 2080 hours gives you an hourly rate in every single company with a payroll department."
Yes and it's completely irrelevant to the majority of people on salary. When I have to do heavy reporting every quarter-end and my workload surges to 60-70 hours/week for a pay period, my paycheck is identical to the following one when I'm taking it easy and working maybe 35/week. That's because nobody outside the accounting department cares an hourly rate. everybody else knows I'm paid a salary to work as long as it takes to do a job, not to occupy a desk chair for 40.0 hours/week.
Wait until you get to chapter two of accounting for dummies and have to wrap your head around the fact that a 10% depreciation expense doesn't actually mean that a building is worth 10% less than it was the year before.
Not sure how many more times I can say it, if a one figure for annual pay makes you and your friends happy, go for it. Its just not how people I know, including myself, manage their business, budgets and expenses.
My controller, AP lady, HR person, hell even the office manager I have are all salary. Yet I plan the business based on our overall delivery of work calculating how many hours on average per widget those folks contribute and what those allocated overhead costs are.
But again, you do you.
And at the end of the year, you've paid them their annual salary rate.fka ftc said:Nice ad hom. The CPA license on the law indicates I may know about depreciation.Deputy Travis Junior said:
"Annual Salary / 2080 hours gives you an hourly rate in every single company with a payroll department."
Yes and it's completely irrelevant to the majority of people on salary. When I have to do heavy reporting every quarter-end and my workload surges to 60-70 hours/week for a pay period, my paycheck is identical to the following one when I'm taking it easy and working maybe 35/week. That's because nobody outside the accounting department cares an hourly rate. everybody else knows I'm paid a salary to work as long as it takes to do a job, not to occupy a desk chair for 40.0 hours/week.
Wait until you get to chapter two of accounting for dummies and have to wrap your head around the fact that a 10% depreciation expense doesn't actually mean that a building is worth 10% less than it was the year before.
Not sure how many more times I can say it, if a one figure for annual pay makes you and your friends happy, go for it. Its just not how people I know, including myself, manage their business, budgets and expenses.
My controller, AP lady, HR person, hell even the office manager I have are all salary. Yet I plan the business based on our overall delivery of work calculating how many hours on average per widget those folks contribute and what those allocated overhead costs are.
But again, you do you.
Jmo if you were born in the 60's likely not a boomer , my dad class of '58 graduated got married did 90 days active duty then started working in the oil tool sales / manufacturing. Under your definition my older sisters would be boomersLogos Stick said:bonfarr said:Moe Jzyslak said:
Boomers ******* hate it when people don't work in the office
Why do people keep misusing the Boomer label? Today there are almost no boomers in the workforce, they are all 70+ years old.
The youngest boomers are 59-60. They were born from 46 to 64.
terradactylexpress said:
You ****ing accounting nerds have completely derailed this thread
I'm an engineer.terradactylexpress said:
You ****ing accounting nerds have completely derailed this thread
Deputy Travis Junior said:terradactylexpress said:
You ****ing accounting nerds have completely derailed this thread
It was just a bunch of boomers yelling at clouds anyway
Sq 17 said:Jmo if you were born in the 60's likely not a boomer , my dad class of '58 graduated got married did 90 days active duty then started working in the oil tool sales / manufacturing. Under your definition my older sisters would be boomersLogos Stick said:bonfarr said:Moe Jzyslak said:
Boomers ******* hate it when people don't work in the office
Why do people keep misusing the Boomer label? Today there are almost no boomers in the workforce, they are all 70+ years old.
The youngest boomers are 59-60. They were born from 46 to 64.
Well, that IS the definition...Sq 17 said:Jmo if you were born in the 60's likely not a boomer , my dad class of '58 graduated got married did 90 days active duty then started working in the oil tool sales / manufacturing. Under your definition my older sisters would be boomersLogos Stick said:bonfarr said:Moe Jzyslak said:
Boomers ******* hate it when people don't work in the office
Why do people keep misusing the Boomer label? Today there are almost no boomers in the workforce, they are all 70+ years old.
The youngest boomers are 59-60. They were born from 46 to 64.
Logos Stick said:Deputy Travis Junior said:terradactylexpress said:
You ****ing accounting nerds have completely derailed this thread
It was just a bunch of boomers yelling at clouds anyway
I'm a boomer and agreed with your post on the matter. You yelling too?