Is Your Time "Free"?

  • Comments posted to this topic are about the item Is Your Time "Free"?

  • My previous employer did not value my time (even though I did,) if I were a vindictive sort I could probably have gotten them in hot water for fraud (OT worked but not paid, I was hourly.)

    My current employer may not value my time, but they at least DO compensate for working off-hours or extra hours in the form of comptime.  They also don't try to prevent me from using any comptime, when I want, but if it interferes with something important, they will ask "could you perhaps use the comptime another day?"

    Largely speaking, as I've gotten older, my mindset has shifted from "be a nice guy and do what needs to be done even if they don't pay for your time because it'll look good come annual review time" (spoiler alert, it never did), to "{bleep} you, compensate me."

  • Or "no", I'm not being paid to do that and so I won't.

  • This is a sensitive topic for me. My current employer doesn't value my time. And I am hourly. My supervisor has tried to bully me into working overtime, without actually telling me that I have to work overtime. I think she wants me to put in the extra time, and make me feel guilty for not working overtime, but without having to claim the overtime pay that I am due. And I'm seeing this same tactic being used by other managers on their hourly employees, so I get the feeling its sort of an unpublished strategy. It isn't easy working like this, because you're damned if you do and your damned if you don't.

    Rod

  • I think it's really important when you start a new job that you show them you're willing to work hard and get stuff done, but at the same time establish boundaries so they don't take advantage of your time.  Work is a means to an end and nobody wants to end up with a eulogy about how much of time they spent at work.

    Be still, and know that I am God - Psalm 46:10

  • As somebody who supports 24-7 production manufacturing operations, some after hours and weekend work is part of the job.  The goal always being to make the after hours work a planned event.  When it happens we are always told to grab back our time and the fact that it is a regular part of the job has resulted in the DBA team remaining full time WFH with flexible schedules.   An hour or two after hours work in the evening, turns into an extra long lunch the next day for grocery shopping.  An all day server migration on the weekend means I won't be online one day the following week.  Been doing this here long enough that it is just how life works now.

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