Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon just gave its managers authority to fire workers who won’t RTO 3 days/week. It’s about time.
Why do you care about Amazon? Do you work there or something?
Don’t work there. It’s just an example of a company that pays great overall compensation, yet many workers seem to take it for granted. Same for other FANG and similar jobs. The people who work these jobs seem to think they’re a special class to whom the rules don’t apply. It’s time they’re humbled.
Actually the compensation is just ok, especially for the amount of hours most work. They are going to lose a lot of good people.
+100
It's an extremely stressful environment with long hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon just gave its managers authority to fire workers who won’t RTO 3 days/week. It’s about time.
Why do you care about Amazon? Do you work there or something?
Don’t work there. It’s just an example of a company that pays great overall compensation, yet many workers seem to take it for granted. Same for other FANG and similar jobs. The people who work these jobs seem to think they’re a special class to whom the rules don’t apply. It’s time they’re humbled.
So, you're jealous?
This is a common, overused retort by the chronic WFH/remote work promoters.
Jealousy means you want it too. I don’t want it.
What I want is a functioning workplace where everyone is accountable and carries their weight. I’m not going to get into a food fight about the productivity and availability of those who WFH, but it’s lacking relative to in-office peers. Thus, the frustration is not jealousy, but justice. I’m tired of co-workers half-a$$ing their job, getting paid obnoxiously well, and leaving their work for others. If the WFH crowd has suddenly discovered that the meaning of life is to screw their employers and peers and dig ever deeper into the pay/benefits cookie jar, then I support their dismissal. They’re no longer a team player and shouldn’t enjoy the fruits the team produces.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon just gave its managers authority to fire workers who won’t RTO 3 days/week. It’s about time.
Why do you care about Amazon? Do you work there or something?
Don’t work there. It’s just an example of a company that pays great overall compensation, yet many workers seem to take it for granted. Same for other FANG and similar jobs. The people who work these jobs seem to think they’re a special class to whom the rules don’t apply. It’s time they’re humbled.
Actually the compensation is just ok, especially for the amount of hours most work. They are going to lose a lot of good people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in year I got my biggest promotion 8 am to 8pm 70 weeks straight without a single vacation day or sick day or ever being late. My team of three was l leading a 250 person project with a hard deadline.
I left home at 640am and got home 915 pm.
You can’t get work done like this remote. All 250 of us were working long hours.
I like remote but I can’t do it in these type of projects. It was worth it and would do it again. I learned 10 years worth of things in 70 weeks.
Remote drags everyone to mediocre.
If you think this is something to brag about, that's pathetic. You were clearly overworked, and if you value your time at all, you were most definitely underpaid. There is not enough money in this world to convince me to spend a year of my precious life in that way.
And exactly what did I miss? I did not work weekends and I usually watch TV on weeknights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in year I got my biggest promotion 8 am to 8pm 70 weeks straight without a single vacation day or sick day or ever being late. My team of three was l leading a 250 person project with a hard deadline.
I left home at 640am and got home 915 pm.
You can’t get work done like this remote. All 250 of us were working long hours.
I like remote but I can’t do it in these type of projects. It was worth it and would do it again. I learned 10 years worth of things in 70 weeks.
Remote drags everyone to mediocre.
If you think this is something to brag about, that's pathetic. You were clearly overworked, and if you value your time at all, you were most definitely underpaid. There is not enough money in this world to convince me to spend a year of my precious life in that way.
And exactly what did I miss? I did not work weekends and I usually watch TV on weeknights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in year I got my biggest promotion 8 am to 8pm 70 weeks straight without a single vacation day or sick day or ever being late. My team of three was l leading a 250 person project with a hard deadline.
I left home at 640am and got home 915 pm.
You can’t get work done like this remote. All 250 of us were working long hours.
I like remote but I can’t do it in these type of projects. It was worth it and would do it again. I learned 10 years worth of things in 70 weeks.
Remote drags everyone to mediocre.
If you think this is something to brag about, that's pathetic. You were clearly overworked, and if you value your time at all, you were most definitely underpaid. There is not enough money in this world to convince me to spend a year of my precious life in that way.
And exactly what did I miss? I did not work weekends and I usually watch TV on weeknights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in year I got my biggest promotion 8 am to 8pm 70 weeks straight without a single vacation day or sick day or ever being late. My team of three was l leading a 250 person project with a hard deadline.
I left home at 640am and got home 915 pm.
You can’t get work done like this remote. All 250 of us were working long hours.
I like remote but I can’t do it in these type of projects. It was worth it and would do it again. I learned 10 years worth of things in 70 weeks.
Remote drags everyone to mediocre.
If you think this is something to brag about, that's pathetic. You were clearly overworked, and if you value your time at all, you were most definitely underpaid. There is not enough money in this world to convince me to spend a year of my precious life in that way.
Anonymous wrote:I would love anyone who can to WFH. Get off the roads! I have places to go!
Anonymous wrote:I worked in year I got my biggest promotion 8 am to 8pm 70 weeks straight without a single vacation day or sick day or ever being late. My team of three was l leading a 250 person project with a hard deadline.
I left home at 640am and got home 915 pm.
You can’t get work done like this remote. All 250 of us were working long hours.
I like remote but I can’t do it in these type of projects. It was worth it and would do it again. I learned 10 years worth of things in 70 weeks.
Remote drags everyone to mediocre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in year I got my biggest promotion 8 am to 8pm 70 weeks straight without a single vacation day or sick day or ever being late. My team of three was l leading a 250 person project with a hard deadline.
I left home at 640am and got home 915 pm.
You can’t get work done like this remote. All 250 of us were working long hours.
I like remote but I can’t do it in these type of projects. It was worth it and would do it again. I learned 10 years worth of things in 70 weeks.
Remote drags everyone to mediocre.
Actually you can, especially if you don't have commute time in. Just because you cannot does not mean others can't.
The commute time irrelevant as that’s my time. When I lived 5 minutes from work or 5 hours I still did same work. Ironically when remote I work at best 30-60 minutes a day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked in year I got my biggest promotion 8 am to 8pm 70 weeks straight without a single vacation day or sick day or ever being late. My team of three was l leading a 250 person project with a hard deadline.
I left home at 640am and got home 915 pm.
You can’t get work done like this remote. All 250 of us were working long hours.
I like remote but I can’t do it in these type of projects. It was worth it and would do it again. I learned 10 years worth of things in 70 weeks.
Remote drags everyone to mediocre.
Actually you can, especially if you don't have commute time in. Just because you cannot does not mean others can't.
Anonymous wrote:I worked in year I got my biggest promotion 8 am to 8pm 70 weeks straight without a single vacation day or sick day or ever being late. My team of three was l leading a 250 person project with a hard deadline.
I left home at 640am and got home 915 pm.
You can’t get work done like this remote. All 250 of us were working long hours.
I like remote but I can’t do it in these type of projects. It was worth it and would do it again. I learned 10 years worth of things in 70 weeks.
Remote drags everyone to mediocre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon just gave its managers authority to fire workers who won’t RTO 3 days/week. It’s about time.
Why do you care about Amazon? Do you work there or something?
Don’t work there. It’s just an example of a company that pays great overall compensation, yet many workers seem to take it for granted. Same for other FANG and similar jobs. The people who work these jobs seem to think they’re a special class to whom the rules don’t apply. It’s time they’re humbled.
So, you're jealous?
This is a common, overused retort by the chronic WFH/remote work promoters.
Jealousy means you want it too. I don’t want it.
What I want is a functioning workplace where everyone is accountable and carries their weight. I’m not going to get into a food fight about the productivity and availability of those who WFH, but it’s lacking relative to in-office peers. Thus, the frustration is not jealousy, but justice. I’m tired of co-workers half-a$$ing their job, getting paid obnoxiously well, and leaving their work for others. If the WFH crowd has suddenly discovered that the meaning of life is to screw their employers and peers and dig ever deeper into the pay/benefits cookie jar, then I support their dismissal. They’re no longer a team player and shouldn’t enjoy the fruits the team produces.
So you’re jealous and a busybody.
So you struggle with basic definitions and reading comprehension. Did WFH rot your mind?