Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people over on the "why don't people respect SAHMs" thread really ought to read all this about how much people mess around at work! Many on that thread are arguing how much more important it is to society that they are in their jobs rather than with their kids.
This is a actually a factor in why I SAH. I don't want to surf the web and do sudokus when I'm paying a daycare to hold the baby I wish I was holding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people over on the "why don't people respect SAHMs" thread really ought to read all this about how much people mess around at work! Many on that thread are arguing how much more important it is to society that they are in their jobs rather than with their kids.
This is a actually a factor in why I SAH. I don't want to surf the web and do sudokus when I'm paying a daycare to hold the baby I wish I was holding.
Anonymous wrote:The people over on the "why don't people respect SAHMs" thread really ought to read all this about how much people mess around at work! Many on that thread are arguing how much more important it is to society that they are in their jobs rather than with their kids.
Anonymous wrote:When I worked, it was hours and hours and hours a day. I was midlevel. Me and my coworker shared enough work for basically 1.1 people. It was just a smidge too much for 1 person, so they had 2 of us.
Anonymous wrote:I work in a business that is sort of at the nexus of HR, IT, and consulting. A huge shock is coming in the next few years to people who waste hours and hours online. As things continue to be automated, and when we hit the next downturn, those names will be first on the chopping block with no unemployment or severence because they wI'll be let go with cause.
Companies are collecting this info now as a hedge for the future. If you are wasting a lot of time make sure you are doing it on your phone, on your cellular network, and make sure you are still using work applications (like Outlook, word, proprietary programs, etc) at regular intervals. Don't let 15-20 mins of each hour show your computer idle.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the week. This week has been slow with folks out on vacation and general summer slowness. Next week will be busier.
Anonymous wrote:I work for a very large organisation and probably only do an hour of work a day. It's not for lack of trying as I keep asking for more work but never get given any. I'm mid level and have degrees from good schools. I don't think we'll ever get to a stage where employers can meaningfully monitor what you do on your computer unless you work in a very small office.
Anonymous wrote:I work in a business that is sort of at the nexus of HR, IT, and consulting. A huge shock is coming in the next few years to people who waste hours and hours online. As things continue to be automated, and when we hit the next downturn, those names will be first on the chopping block with no unemployment or severence because they wI'll be let go with cause.
Companies are collecting this info now as a hedge for the future. If you are wasting a lot of time make sure you are doing it on your phone, on your cellular network, and make sure you are still using work applications (like Outlook, word, proprietary programs, etc) at regular intervals. Don't let 15-20 mins of each hour show your computer idle.