Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the panic over receiving an email in off hours. It’s inherently asynchronous communication. You’re expected to respond when you’re available.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the panic over receiving an email in off hours. It’s inherently asynchronous communication. You’re expected to respond when you’re available.
The issue is that different workplaces, and even different employees, have different unwritten rules on when an email should be responded to. So it helps to clarify expectations.
For myself, if I'm sending an email at a time outside the recipient's work hours, I'll add a parenthetical statement at the top along the lines of "I know I'm sending this on a weekend, but I don't expect you to see or respond to this email until your next business day."
If someone still gets upset about me sending them an email outside normal hours, that's on them.
Anonymous wrote:Did op just arrive from 2002?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg turn on DND.
It’s 2025, it’s not my job to make sure your email is not arriving during dinner time. E-mail. It’s not a phone call. It’s not even a text. It’s the most non urgent communication imaginable. People work all hours now, for flexibility not necessarily urgency or long hours.
This. It's on you OP. I'm not fiddling with each email or Teams message to delay receipt when I have coworkers in just about every time zone (British Columbia to Australia).
I don't get alerts on personal devices. My personal routine is that I only see work things when I open my work laptop.
Anonymous wrote:Omg turn on DND.
It’s 2025, it’s not my job to make sure your email is not arriving during dinner time. E-mail. It’s not a phone call. It’s not even a text. It’s the most non urgent communication imaginable. People work all hours now, for flexibility not necessarily urgency or long hours.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the panic over receiving an email in off hours. It’s inherently asynchronous communication. You’re expected to respond when you’re available.
Anonymous wrote:Omg turn on DND.
It’s 2025, it’s not my job to make sure your email is not arriving during dinner time. E-mail. It’s not a phone call. It’s not even a text. It’s the most non urgent communication imaginable. People work all hours now, for flexibility not necessarily urgency or long hours.