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Reply to "European Expansion: Eye-Opening, Frustrating, and Possibly Not Worth It - Underperforming employee culture"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Working with our Europe branch has been quite an intense endeavor. As part of a large tech company expanding aggressively across the region, I’ve been leading hiring efforts for multiple new office locations — and I’ve hit a wall of cultural and structural friction. Simply put: they don’t want to work long hours. They don’t want to commit. And they have a lot of demands — mandatory holidays, strict work-hour rules, protected leave policies, the list goes on. Yes, salaries may be half the cost of U.S.-based employees, but in many cases, it feels like you’re getting half the output. And no, that’s not an exaggeration. Here are some of the realities we’ve faced: One employee took a full year of maternity leave, then extended it into a second year for a new baby — with no firm return date. A male employee took one year of paternity leave, returned just in time for “mandatory” summer PTO — a month off, like clockwork. In Spain, we’re required to offer additional vacation banks separate from standard PTO, and summer laws restrict work to no more than 5 hours a day. New hires often start with 20+ hours of vacation built in. Day one. The structure seems designed to protect mediocrity — not reward performance. Ironically, our best hires in Europe have been Americans who’ve relocated, or folks from post-Soviet countries who still bring hunger, accountability, and a willingness to go above and beyond. I get that Europe values work-life balance. But when that balance tilts so far toward comfort that productivity suffers, it raises a real question: Is it worth it? If you’re trying to run a business, grow fast, or compete globally, these restrictions are more than just frustrating — they’re counterproductive. No wonder the U.S. keeps leading. Say what you will about hustle culture — it gets things done. [/quote] Which country restricts summer work to 5 hours a day? I’m not sure I believe that one. [/quote]
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