Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where is my my J1 J2 J3 man?
Probably working J1. He used to post when he was working remote J2, but then J1 found out and made him quit J2. Don't know if they ever found out about J3.
I was never caught. My J2 my boss was annoying me constantly setting up last minute meetings then canceling and switching. I also had three staff. I only got a 20k raise for job so not really worth it. I kinda was about to quit it as I completely zoned out of J1 for 7 months and then playing catch up and I was I interviewing at a J3, J4, J5 and a J6. Started dropping the ball at J2 and J2 gave me the “catch up” zoom call with boss and HR popped up. I thought I was busted. But HR just gave me mutual separation agreement with 8 weeks pay. I went back to focusing on J1 a few weeks.
I started J3 while I still had J1 and still getting paid J2 my 8 week severance. I liked the new job so I eventually resigned J1 and they countered. But I quit anyhow after bonus pay out.
I froze my TWN and Hibernated my LinkedIn.
It is totally legal. I was never caught.
Remember, first rule of fight club.
BTW I reported to CEO directly at two of these jobs. And all three jobs I was in charge of a small department.
I knew tons of people doing it. I think I read 80 percent remote workers have a second job.
In 2023 I got a sign on bonus, severance payout and a YE bonus. Three 401k matches for awhile.
Anonymous wrote:If you work for a brokerage firm or bank, you have to disclose other employment to your employer and get it approved. Failure to do so is grounds for firing and if you are registered it will show up on your U-5. This is a FINRA (industry regulator) rule. If a firm doesn't ask about and police outside business interests, the firm will get in trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where is my my J1 J2 J3 man?
Probably working J1. He used to post when he was working remote J2, but then J1 found out and made him quit J2. Don't know if they ever found out about J3.
Anonymous wrote:Where is my my J1 J2 J3 man?
Anonymous wrote:In order of your questions: Yes, yes, no, no.
There is no particular law entitling you to have a second job, and yes, employers can set job conditions that do not violate laws, so they can prohibit it or request disclosure as a condition of employment so they can decide if it is a problem for them or not.
In some cases, but certainly not all, it can be wrongful to have a second job, and it certainly can violate express or implied contracts or common law, particularly a "duty of loyalty" to employer or client not to act contrary to the employers best interest. Sometimes a second job does that, sometimes it doesn't. Disclosing the other job allows the employer to decide if it is a problem or not. One can certainly think of situations that would be a problem and others that wouldn't.
Easy examples:
Wrongful: moonlighting for a competitor and selling competing products to a common customer base.
Objectionable: high safety risk day job, moonlighting at a night job that deprives you of sleep, making you a higher risk employee in the day job.
Probably fine for most employers: 9-5 primary job, picking up non-competing retail shifts on the weekend, or tutoring in the evenings, etc. Something not competing with the primary business that also does not diminish your primary job performance.