Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not leave and I would not ask to leave. But if one of the other two people were to text around and try and get permission for all of us to leave, I'd be happy about it.
^this- would be the best option
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would stay. However, companies that send the email same-day (or pass the word in person) really suck for this reason. Do you think it's fun to not know until that morning what time you're commuting home? Just tell people ahead of time so they can plan their lives.
100%. I remember so many long weekends where I got screwed out of plans bc we weren’t told until last minute. All it did was make me resentful. Either tell me early or just don’t do it.
As a supervisor who is not the who makes those calls, I do let my staff know that I’m not taking attendance if they happen to not be present in the afternoon. I’m not in a cancer-curing industry, people can scooch out early if they want.
Anonymous wrote:I would stay. However, companies that send the email same-day (or pass the word in person) really suck for this reason. Do you think it's fun to not know until that morning what time you're commuting home? Just tell people ahead of time so they can plan their lives.
Anonymous wrote:Only a fool leaves early if a young striver. I once was ONLY one in office who did not on a Holiday eve at 455 pm when a crisis happened and the CEO ended up calling me directly and I saved the day. This is where low level folks have chance to shine. When everyone is gone.
Anonymous wrote:I would not leave and I would not ask to leave. But if one of the other two people were to text around and try and get permission for all of us to leave, I'd be happy about it.