• @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    “Remember those 3 years of 100% remote work during the COVID pandemic, where we broke record renevue 3 years in a row? Yeah, we need you back at the office twice a week. Why? Because we said so.”

    Sure, boss.

    • @[email protected]
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      5010 months ago

      I have a few complaints about my employer but I’m glad this isn’t one of them. Someone actually asked if we were planning to do an RTO during the quarterly town hall yesterday. Our CEO basically said, “We know there’s value to working in person, and that’s what I prefer to do, but here’s the thing: we have offices in 5 states and employees in 46 states. We’ve been able to recruit the best talent in the country because of our willingness to recruit outside our footprint. Companies that have mandated an RTO are not doing well. We’re not in that position and we have no plans to change our work policy.”

  • Vaggumon
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    10 months ago

    This just happened:

    • Wife was promoted to a managment position in the company 1 year ago.
    • Was given a list of things they wanted her to accomplish.
    • She not only checked off ever item on the list, but exceeded the expectations, sometimes by 10,000% and way faster then they expected.
    • Told weekly by her boss how impressed they are, and how great she is doing, and how much of an asset she is.
    • A meeting with the management team was held a month ago (mid August). Wife was not invited, despite being part of that team.
    • Merit raises are given out every year, between 3% and 10% depending on performance, wife finds out yesterday (9/21/23) that she is only getting the 3%.

    I’m more pissed then she is, and I don’t want to fight with her about it, but if it was me, I’d have quit on the spot.

  • Alien Nathan Edward
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    10 months ago

    A year into COVID they had an all hands where they congratulated us on exceeding our productivity goals after a year of WFH. Then they announced that everyone was gonna have to come back to the office, and that because a different OU screwed up and got their dicks sued off there wasn’t any money in the incentives budget and not to expect much in the way of bonuses that year.

    Edit: ooh forgot to mention that a bunch of us pushed back because we didn’t think it was safe yet, we got overridden by upper management, then after we came back in our state set a record for daily new COVID cases and daily deaths. It swept through the office, a bunch of my coworkers got really sick and one lady’s husband died.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    I’ve seen it 3 times. So now if a company I work at sells to another company, I quit.

    When this happens, senior staff get layed off. The hard workers finally get the promotion they’ve been slaving for and never getting!*

    *The hard workers are now middle management. Big company is trying to leverage their social standing in the company to deliver their morale killing new standards.

    Hard workers will ‘underperform,’ even if they don’t. They’ll be replaced by someone the new parent company hires. (likely the wayward son of one of their VCs)

    Nobody will like this person. They don’t know anything about how the company used to work, and they’re going to tell you how all the changes are gonna be great.

    This will widen the divide between senior management and the ‘boots on the ground.’ The remaining talent that didn’t get promoted and fired or played off will find new work. Soon your company will be a few dozen 20-somethings making $18/hr to do a job that you used to get paid $75k/yr to do.

    All for the shareholders.

    Edit: if this is your current situation, just bail. You’re not being setup for a career. You’re being set up to be taken advantage of.

    • @[email protected]
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      910 months ago

      This is one of the reasons I don’t leave my job even though I don’t love it. I have job security out my ass, it’s a huge company that has almost no chance of being bought (I think we’re the biggest company in our field but maybe 2nd), the pay is good enough and there’s no asshole middle management. I’m absolutely willing to do boring work for the rest of my life and not have to worry about that kind of stuff.

      • @[email protected]
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        610 months ago

        lol I’m a web dev in a union. I pay less than $1000/yr for healthcare.

        I’ll leave for, maybe, a 100% pay raise.

        Maybe.

    • @[email protected]
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      710 months ago

      I have suspected for a while now that the only way I will leave my current company is when it’s bought out and I am made redundant or downsized. Good to know the symptoms.

    • @[email protected]
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      510 months ago

      Feeling this hard right now. I’m gonna stick it out and see it until the end though while keeping my options open.

  • @[email protected]
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    5110 months ago

    Told everyone that they needed to be in the office a minimum of three days a week. Everyone lost their shit and now they’re grumpy and combative all the time. Used to be a chill place to work.

  • LucasWaffyWaf
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    4910 months ago

    Docked an hour of our pay because, after we’d caught up on all of our tasks and had no chores or customers to handle, we played a bit of cards in the gift shop office to kill a bit of time. Corporate didn’t like that we weren’t doing stuff, despite the fact that we had literally nothing else to do, so they retroactively took away an hour of our pay.

    I’ve already emailed the labor board about this since, looking into it, pay can only be docked before the time is worked, not after.

    • @[email protected]
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      3310 months ago

      You were also being “engaged to wait” if you had nothing to do.

      You weren’t free to go home, so you were on the clock.

      • Lemminary
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        610 months ago

        Can playing a game of cards that you can drop in a second be reasonably said to not be “engaged to wait”? I mean, they were literally waiting with cards in their hands for something to happen but nothing did. It’s not like they had left the premises, were unreasonably distracted or negligent.

        • @[email protected]
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          810 months ago

          I think you misunderstood.

          “Engaged to wait” simply means that you aren’t free to leave and must be paid. If you’re required to be at work, you need to be paid - even if you’re killing time playing cards.

          • Lemminary
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            110 months ago

            I see, but the other commenter didn’t say that anybody left, that they were only playing cards.

                • @[email protected]
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                  210 months ago

                  I think you’re agreeing with me.

                  I’m saying it’s illegal to deny them their pay because they were required to be at work. “Engaged to wait” basically means “Having nothing to do, but still on the clock.”

                  If they showed up to work 20 minutes early to play cards or we’re playing cards during their lunch break, then they’d be “waiting to be engaged” which wouldn’t require payment because they’re free to leave.

  • @[email protected]
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    4210 months ago

    When I worked in the convention industry, my boss quit a few weeks before an event and I had to absorb his workload. I worked 6am-11pm 3 days in a row and on the 4th morning I passed out on the floor and was taken to the hospital.

    HR accused me of being hungover despite not even having time to get drunk the night before. They banned alcohol at work events.

    I’m not a big drinker so…whatever. But of course the rumor spread and everyone silently blamed me.

    Then a year later a new coworker forcibly kissed me several times at an event. I was planning on quitting anyway so I didn’t report it but a different coworker did on my behalf after I asked her not to. HR told me it was my fault (“If you knew she was a messy drunk, why were you with her?”) and signed me up for a sexual harassment seminar because “clearly [you] don’t know what sexual assault is.”

    I regret not suing for the second one but I just wanted to put that job behind me.

  • @[email protected]
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    4110 months ago

    Former employer Introduced a bonus system that reduced the amount of the bonus for everyone for each costly mistake. Each bonus check came with a slip of paper that named the department, the mistake, and the amount deducted.

    Boss couldn’t understand that attaching an arbitrary name, shame, and punishment scheme took away all of the bonus’s power to make everyone happier.

  • @[email protected]
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    3810 months ago

    Promoted several top performers. To fill the vacancy left from this, they then hired several incompetent, inexperienced people to fill the leftover roles, who unsurprisingly underperformed.

    Well then wouldn’t you know it, our profitability went down.

    So then they start several rounds of layoffs where they fired all of the top performers who had been promoted accusing them of, ironically enough, poor performance for the first time in their entire career at the company.

    Throughout the entire process the same people who were eventually fired were reassured they were safe.

    The underperforming idiots still work here, they just shifted some of their responsibilities on to other people like me in other departments so they have less room to fuck up.

    The cherry on top of that which most of the company doesn’t know is that they considered firing the under-performers and demoting the people who were promoted instead of firing them, but they thought it would make us look poorly run in front of our clients.

    Oh and they froze our yearly raises and bonuses, meanwhile our CEO got a raise even while making more than double the average for a CEO of a company our size (8 figures).

  • @[email protected]
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    3610 months ago

    We were looking to replatform our aging e-commerce site.

    With management approval, we spent weeks researching and narrowed it down to two possibilities - Magento 2 and Sylius.

    We then divided our team in half. Half of us took one possible platform, the rest took the other. Each team was given an identical list of tasks, and the goal was to implement as much of the list as we could in two weeks.

    At the end of the period, the Sylius team had not only completed every single item on the list, but had so much extra time they were able to implement some cool “nice to have” features we’d always wanted on the site but never had time for.

    The Magento2 team didn’t even get the software fully installed and working much less even start chipping away at the list.

    We all met and stacked hands - Sylius was the way we were gonna go. We were a big enough fish that we even got the company that made the software to commit to flying one of their developers out to our office and working alongside us.

    Then the company put us all into a room and told us the decision would be Magento2 - now come to that agreement.

    3/4 of our team left within 2 months.

  • @[email protected]
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    2910 months ago

    I used to work in an animation studio, and one day the boss came down and said he had a zoom meeting booked with some LA producer who wanted to hear a pitch from us, and he needed ideas. So the whole room of animators all started pitching up ideas and it went super well, and after about an hour we had this idea that had us rolling on the floor that we all loved and the boss seemed really happy. So he went upstairs and got on zoom, but didn’t close the door so we could all hear him talking from our desks. He didn’t mention our idea at all, just pulled something out of his ass that sounded awful, which if it had been accepted we’d have to work on for the next year or so. Luckily they weren’t interested, but yeah we didn’t really pitch ideas with much gusto (is at all) after that.

      • @[email protected]
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        1010 months ago

        Haha I was being vague 'cause I still hope one of us will do it one day, but whatever! So we had this recurring main character who was like a big doofus type, and our idea was to have an alien invasion thing where the aliens come to try and steal Earth’s resources, but the twist was that they really needed carbon dioxide for whatever alien reason, so their plan was just to remove all the CO2 from our atmosphere and then be on their way. Our idiot hero would set out to stop them, while everyone else in the world was like “no!”

        There was some other character-specific stuff that wouldn’t really make sense out of context, but that was the broad idea. Maybe he thinks that everyone trying to stop him is an X-files type conspiracy, that kind of stuff.

  • Wolf Link 🐺
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    2410 months ago

    When the former boss had to quit due to health reasons, we got a two-faced lying PITA instead. He was an overall unpleasant employer in the first place, but the final nail in the coffin for the cashiers was that he demanded from them that they have to make sure customers stay 6 feet apart from each other during Covid.

    • If we didn’t pester everyone in line to keep their distance, we got shouted at in front of the customers for “not doing our job”. Customers that didn’t want to obey the rules after being asked nicely were automatically our fault.

    • If we DID try to enforce the policy, a lot of customers went to the front desk to complain about it, he did a 180° turn every time, apologized to the customers and handed out coupons. The more drama they caused, the bigger they were rewarded for it, and the cashier was chewed out for doing what HE wanted them to do.

    If you have the choice between “wrong” and “worse” and you WILL get shouted at for both, there is no room left for morale.

  • PorradaVFR
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    2410 months ago

    All hands meeting … “show of hands, who’s been here less than a year?”…”you’re all top notch, the best candidates from the best schools… we couldn’t get that caliber employee years ago!” [suggesting those who built the business to that level were what, inferior - including the VP that just said it?]

    It was meant as a compliment to the new folks…but it fell FLAT.

    • @[email protected]
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      310 months ago

      I could see that as a compliment? Like the existing team was so good that together they reached recognition they didn’t previously have?

      • @[email protected]
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        610 months ago

        I think it should be the goal of every organization that the next hire always be better than the last. They should get there by making sure that they train and build up every previous hire to be better than they were and making their teams be attractive to higher caliber recruits. A business really doing well should elevate all the employees - wages, skills, lifestyle - and that is what lets them hire well. But boy is it hard to communicate that scheme in two sentences at an all-hands pep talk.

        • @[email protected]
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          110 months ago

          As a wage slave, even spelled out like that it doesn’t sound great to me. I don’t care about how impressive the company is beyond it’s ability to pay me. “Hey, you did a good job of making my company look good enough to hire people better than you.” I’m not sure exactly how to put my discomfort with it into words, but being told I did a good job of improving the company’s image just feels like a pat on the head and a “good boy.” My goal here isn’t to help you, it’s to get you to give me money. Compliment me with a raise, not telling me how much more money you’re making because of me. Bragging to employees about quarterly profits only actually cheers up the ones who drink the company koolaid at every job they ever work at. For the rest of us it means that we won’t be out of a job because the company went under. I got an extra 2 hundred dollars from my salary this year from that and the guy announcing it got a hundred thousand dollar bonus. Great.

          • @[email protected]
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            110 months ago

            That’s what makes the communication so difficult to do well - when the boss comes in and says “We’re doing great,” the workers all assume he means corporate profits, but corporate profits don’t attract good workers. Salary, benefits, and working conditions do. If the boss wants to make that point at a pep talk, he’s got to go on a long tangent about how competitive salaries are, how much vacation everyone gets, yada yada, and by the end of that, saying “and we can hire really good entry-level workers,” is kind of anticlimactic. I mean, who cares if this year’s new hires graduated with median 3.2 GPA vs just 3.0 5 years ago? Better just not to phrase it that way, even if it is a positive metric for both new and established workers.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    They fired the social butterfly of the group. He was always good company. Most of us in the office were pretty quiet people but he knew how to bring us out of our shell. He would often organize lunch so we can all hang out together but there was a lot less of that when they got rid of him.