| Yup, many emails after hours and on weekends in my company (management consulting). Generally do not expect responses over the weekend or late at night and others know that. |
Op. This is why we have tools to delay delivery. Look, it it’s the old guy in finance who still has his admin help set up his meetings, fine. But these are tech guys who have every tool imaginable to streamline their work. They shouldn’t need to send emails at midnight. |
If I got an email (work or otherwise) at midnight, I wouldn't know about it until the next morning because my phone is on DND. This is on you. Understand now? |
| I am in one of those companies where we are having a "let's see who can send an email at the craziest hour to prove they have blind loyalty to the firm" contests. Really, unless it is about a critical issue, why do it? |
Why are you even checking your email? |
This, op. Yes, I get emails at all hours. I reply either if it’s convenient for me to or it waits until I get online. If it’s important enough, people call. Our firm encourages flexibility. So sometimes working parent needs to be offline for a few hours after school, then they get back online and finish up their days. Set your boundaries. |
Manually setting each email to delay delivery is not "streamlining work." OP, if you really want to die on this hill and think it's a violation of HR policy, then go to HR and ask them to clarify the rules and/or take action to counsel these "tech guys." Or you could just use your judgement on a) when you're checking your email and b) what is and isn't urgent. |
Good lord, op. You can’t control other people only your response to them. |
Are you Gen Z? |
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OP, time to realize HR policies do not run your company unless it’s about something the company could get sued for.
Many of us use email to collaborate across time zones. The idea of colleagues in Sydney or Seoul or even London or LA being able to send/receive at the same time as I can is ludicrous. |
If it was urgent, it wouldn’t have been sent as an email. |
This. I don’t expect my colleague in CA to not send an email because he’s still working at 6pm. He sends it at the end of his workday, and I respond at the beginning of mine. Why would I panic over an email? |
| F500 consulting. Very normal to send and receive emails after hours. But no one is keeping track or care if you don't look/respond till the morning. Exception would be if you're working late with your team over a deliverable then yes, you need to be available. |
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Everyone? It's extremely common. You are NOT expected to answer right away, or even notice them, unless your job specifically requires you to be on all the time, with commensurate pay.
Most people aren't paid enough to be on 24/7, BUT the reason people send emails after biz hours is that otherwise they forget. It happens to me. It's too much of a hassle to fiddle around with the delivery delay. Just shelve the email until you get back to work, OP. It's not hard. |
| I get emails at all sorts of times. We have offices across the country. And not set hours for everyone. One of my contracts people works a second shift type schedule so she sends things at 9-10 a lot. I do not respond until my actual work time. People know to text my work phone in an emergency and that has a sound on. I have it set where emails don't make a sound. I try very hard to delay send to anyone junior than me to not bother their time off. For my management tho, I don't care as much. They make the big $& and are always working anyway. |