Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone who says that their employer pays them to be available but not necessarily to work and their work typically takes 2-3 hours a day is 1) an attorney who no longer works in private practice and is working for and taking advantage of a federal agency, and 2) is grossly overpaid (at $250k/year, excluding benefits and bonus, and working one-third of a day, their effective salary is $750k+).
Disagree. Know many white collar workers only working 2-3 hrs a day max.
What kind of jobs do they have?
Sales
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone who says that their employer pays them to be available but not necessarily to work and their work typically takes 2-3 hours a day is 1) an attorney who no longer works in private practice and is working for and taking advantage of a federal agency, and 2) is grossly overpaid (at $250k/year, excluding benefits and bonus, and working one-third of a day, their effective salary is $750k+).
Disagree. Know many white collar workers only working 2-3 hrs a day max.
What kind of jobs do they have?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone who says that their employer pays them to be available but not necessarily to work and their work typically takes 2-3 hours a day is 1) an attorney who no longer works in private practice and is working for and taking advantage of a federal agency, and 2) is grossly overpaid (at $250k/year, excluding benefits and bonus, and working one-third of a day, their effective salary is $750k+).
Disagree. Know many white collar workers only working 2-3 hrs a day max.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone who says that their employer pays them to be available but not necessarily to work and their work typically takes 2-3 hours a day is 1) an attorney who no longer works in private practice and is working for and taking advantage of a federal agency, and 2) is grossly overpaid (at $250k/year, excluding benefits and bonus, and working one-third of a day, their effective salary is $750k+).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When we used to be in the office everyday, my next door neighbor was always reading novels. Not on the computer, actual hard copy novels. In most offices, no one cares as long as you get the work done.
Years ago, I read all of Pride and Prejudice at the office by copying it into a word doc.
That's amazing.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone who says that their employer pays them to be available but not necessarily to work and their work typically takes 2-3 hours a day is 1) an attorney who no longer works in private practice and is working for and taking advantage of a federal agency, and 2) is grossly overpaid (at $250k/year, excluding benefits and bonus, and working one-third of a day, their effective salary is $750k+).
Is this the poster who’s bitter they can’t work at SEC? What do you do all day? Your fixation on one very specific job is bizarre.
Is this the poster that makes $750k as a financial regulatory attorney, writes on DCUM all day, and pumps WFH? Can you not find something else to do with your time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone who says that their employer pays them to be available but not necessarily to work and their work typically takes 2-3 hours a day is 1) an attorney who no longer works in private practice and is working for and taking advantage of a federal agency, and 2) is grossly overpaid (at $250k/year, excluding benefits and bonus, and working one-third of a day, their effective salary is $750k+).
Is this the poster who’s bitter they can’t work at SEC? What do you do all day? Your fixation on one very specific job is bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone who says that their employer pays them to be available but not necessarily to work and their work typically takes 2-3 hours a day is 1) an attorney who no longer works in private practice and is working for and taking advantage of a federal agency, and 2) is grossly overpaid (at $250k/year, excluding benefits and bonus, and working one-third of a day, their effective salary is $750k+).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I earn $250k (realize this isn’t a lot on here) and have never worked more than 4 hours a day. Typically more like 2-3. In the office I used to spend a lot of time on budgeting and personal investments. I read a lot of articles. Sometimes I’d read a book discretely. I figure part of what they are paying for is for me to be readily available.
Now I go on walks, clean and organize things at home and prep for a nice dinner.
What do you do?
Financial regulatory attorney. Yup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I earn $250k (realize this isn’t a lot on here) and have never worked more than 4 hours a day. Typically more like 2-3. In the office I used to spend a lot of time on budgeting and personal investments. I read a lot of articles. Sometimes I’d read a book discretely. I figure part of what they are paying for is for me to be readily available.
Now I go on walks, clean and organize things at home and prep for a nice dinner.
What do you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When we used to be in the office everyday, my next door neighbor was always reading novels. Not on the computer, actual hard copy novels. In most offices, no one cares as long as you get the work done.
Years ago, I read all of Pride and Prejudice at the office by copying it into a word doc.