Anonymous wrote:Be careful doing the quiet quitting described in these articles. I did it and was promoted soon after I stopped caring. Now I'm in meetings all the time and responsible for teams of people.
Anonymous wrote:I did this once. Just stopped caring, stopped doing anything but the bare minimum. And my ratings went up. It was very illuminating
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Quiet quitting = making dinner, doing laundry, and doing school pickup all on the employer's time. My neighborhood is full of them.
No, that isn't it at all. It means setting boundaries. The term "quiet quitting" is ridiculous.[/quote]
I don't think it is ridiculous at all. It is perfectly exemplified by Peter in Office Space (the movie). The guy couldn't give a sh*t about his menial tasks, but he was definitely promotion material.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Business owner here and I think it's employees phoning it it. Look when you clock out and you see a mess on your way out you should take an extra hour or two to clean it up. Ok so you're off the clock, big deal. We're a family and we do things to help each other out. No one forces me to throw a once per month pizza party (one slice per employee) but I do it anyways. Also, I'm seeing employees not coming in early and helping to set up before they clock in.
Shitty trolling attempt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Business owner here and I think it's employees phoning it it. Look when you clock out and you see a mess on your way out you should take an extra hour or two to clean it up. Ok so you're off the clock, big deal. We're a family and we do things to help each other out. No one forces me to throw a once per month pizza party (one slice per employee) but I do it anyways. Also, I'm seeing employees not coming in early and helping to set up before they clock in.
This seems like such a caricature of themes from r/antiwork that it must be a troll post.
But if not - The biggest red flag to me is when management claims the team is a "family." No, you're not. You pay them to work during agreed upon hours, that's it. And they'd much rather go home on time than get a free slice of pizza once a month. Their time is worth much more than $2 a month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Business owner here and I think it's employees phoning it it. Look when you clock out and you see a mess on your way out you should take an extra hour or two to clean it up. Ok so you're off the clock, big deal. We're a family and we do things to help each other out. No one forces me to throw a once per month pizza party (one slice per employee) but I do it anyways. Also, I'm seeing employees not coming in early and helping to set up before they clock in.
Wrong dude - we are not a family. If I get sick you’re not staying up til 3AM checking my fever. If I can’t work you will fire me.
The entitlement to ask for an ‘extra hour or two’ is why so many young people (by that I mean 40 and under) are burnt out and broke to boot.
DP but I’m amazed how many ppl don’t realize this was a joke. I thought the one slice per person parenthetical pretty much gave it away