Anonymous wrote:Business owner here and I think it's employees phoning it it. Look when you clock out and you see a mess on your way out you should take an extra hour or two to clean it up. Ok so you're off the clock, big deal. We're a family and we do things to help each other out. No one forces me to throw a once per month pizza party (one slice per employee) but I do it anyways. Also, I'm seeing employees not coming in early and helping to set up before they clock in.
Anonymous wrote:Business owner here and I think it's employees phoning it it. Look when you clock out and you see a mess on your way out you should take an extra hour or two to clean it up. Ok so you're off the clock, big deal. We're a family and we do things to help each other out. No one forces me to throw a once per month pizza party (one slice per employee) but I do it anyways. Also, I'm seeing employees not coming in early and helping to set up before they clock in.
Anonymous wrote:I am an employee and I think of quiet quitting more as setting good boundaries and doing what is expected but not necessarily more than that, unless there is good reason.
Anonymous wrote:Business owner here and I think it's employees phoning it it. Look when you clock out and you see a mess on your way out you should take an extra hour or two to clean it up. Ok so you're off the clock, big deal. We're a family and we do things to help each other out. No one forces me to throw a once per month pizza party (one slice per employee) but I do it anyways. Also, I'm seeing employees not coming in early and helping to set up before they clock in.
Anonymous wrote:I was out with friends discussing this and it seems there isn't a consensus on what quiet quitting is.
A few think it's "phoning it in". Doing the absolute bare minimum to not get fired. Not having a good work ethic and not producing high quality work.
Other friends think it can be high performers who are creating boundaries and no longer willing to work above and beyond - either due to burnt out or the realization that the extra work didn't get them a promotion or a larger raise than other employees who didn't work as hard.
What's the general take on this?
Anonymous wrote:I was out with friends discussing this and it seems there isn't a consensus on what quiet quitting is.
A few think it's "phoning it in". Doing the absolute bare minimum to not get fired. Not having a good work ethic and not producing high quality work.
Other friends think it can be high performers who are creating boundaries and no longer willing to work above and beyond - either due to burnt out or the realization that the extra work didn't get them a promotion or a larger raise than other employees who didn't work as hard.
What's the general take on this?