Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends how critical it is. Last week I had a few important requests.
I sent an email with request. I gave it five minutes no response I walked to your office We are two days in person so a 40 percent chance you are there.
Back to desk, check if you are in a meeting, if not send you a teams message.
But 30 minutes I follow up with your boss for a response and cc any co-workers who could also help.
I alerted everyone last week I had critical requests coming in that will need answers quickly. Not my problem you decided to take the day off to WFH and watch Trash TV and eat potato chips and snacks in your pajamas.
In a normal situation I wait a day or two but urgent I need it now
Hahahaha good luck with that
Anonymous wrote:Depends how critical it is. Last week I had a few important requests.
I sent an email with request. I gave it five minutes no response I walked to your office We are two days in person so a 40 percent chance you are there.
Back to desk, check if you are in a meeting, if not send you a teams message.
But 30 minutes I follow up with your boss for a response and cc any co-workers who could also help.
I alerted everyone last week I had critical requests coming in that will need answers quickly. Not my problem you decided to take the day off to WFH and watch Trash TV and eat potato chips and snacks in your pajamas.
In a normal situation I wait a day or two but urgent I need it now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Within an hour, if you need longer than that then please give an acknowledgment email within the hour.
No expectation to respond outside of 9-5.
All these people who want a response within an hour - do you ever pick up the phone? If it's urgent, I call people. If it has to be a written request, I still call to make sure they're available and that they saw my email or know to expect it.
I don’t call because at my workplace the culture is to never answer the phone. Voicemails are transcribed and sent to email, and the response comes as an email.
Anonymous wrote:Depends how critical it is. Last week I had a few important requests.
I sent an email with request. I gave it five minutes no response I walked to your office We are two days in person so a 40 percent chance you are there.
Back to desk, check if you are in a meeting, if not send you a teams message.
But 30 minutes I follow up with your boss for a response and cc any co-workers who could also help.
I alerted everyone last week I had critical requests coming in that will need answers quickly. Not my problem you decided to take the day off to WFH and watch Trash TV and eat potato chips and snacks in your pajamas.
In a normal situation I wait a day or two but urgent I need it now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Within an hour, if you need longer than that then please give an acknowledgment email within the hour.
No expectation to respond outside of 9-5.
All these people who want a response within an hour - do you ever pick up the phone? If it's urgent, I call people. If it has to be a written request, I still call to make sure they're available and that they saw my email or know to expect it.
Anonymous wrote:Depends how critical it is. Last week I had a few important requests.
I sent an email with request. I gave it five minutes no response I walked to your office We are two days in person so a 40 percent chance you are there.
Back to desk, check if you are in a meeting, if not send you a teams message.
But 30 minutes I follow up with your boss for a response and cc any co-workers who could also help.
I alerted everyone last week I had critical requests coming in that will need answers quickly. Not my problem you decided to take the day off to WFH and watch Trash TV and eat potato chips and snacks in your pajamas.
In a normal situation I wait a day or two but urgent I need it now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The expectation is a response by EOD (even if it’s just saying that you’re looking into it/noting that it’s in progress and won’t be ready until X).
At most a response the next day, especially if the original email was sent late on day one.
This seems like a basic expectation, I’m surprised by a lot of these responses.
The bigger an org is and the more emails people are getting, the less feasible it is for "someone in your org sends you an email asking for something" to create a time-sensitive obligation.
If your org is that big, shouldn’t there be more segregation of duties and enough employees to handle tasks accordingly?
If you’re that high up, have the requests go to your subordinates so you’re not wasting your time with junk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The expectation is a response by EOD (even if it’s just saying that you’re looking into it/noting that it’s in progress and won’t be ready until X).
At most a response the next day, especially if the original email was sent late on day one.
This seems like a basic expectation, I’m surprised by a lot of these responses.
The bigger an org is and the more emails people are getting, the less feasible it is for "someone in your org sends you an email asking for something" to create a time-sensitive obligation.
Anonymous wrote:mAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Within an hour, if you need longer than that then please give an acknowledgment email within the hour.
No expectation to respond outside of 9-5.
All these people who want a response within an hour - do you ever pick up the phone? If it's urgent, I call people. If it has to be a written request, I still call to make sure they're available and that they saw my email or know to expect it.
That’s so annoying, though. I hate when anyone cold calls. If you want something urgent, text me. I’m going to ignore your call.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The expectation is a response by EOD (even if it’s just saying that you’re looking into it/noting that it’s in progress and won’t be ready until X).
At most a response the next day, especially if the original email was sent late on day one.
This seems like a basic expectation, I’m surprised by a lot of these responses.
Anonymous wrote:The expectation is a response by EOD (even if it’s just saying that you’re looking into it/noting that it’s in progress and won’t be ready until X).
At most a response the next day, especially if the original email was sent late on day one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Within an hour, if you need longer than that then please give an acknowledgment email within the hour.
No expectation to respond outside of 9-5.
All these people who want a response within an hour - do you ever pick up the phone? If it's urgent, I call people. If it has to be a written request, I still call to make sure they're available and that they saw my email or know to expect it.