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"Capitalism for you I'm afraid" To be honest I wouldn't penalise staff for being a few minutes late. So long as they are good workers in general. | |||
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"Capitalism for you I'm afraid To be honest I wouldn't penalise staff for being a few minutes late. So long as they are good workers in general. " Then they'd be a couple of minutes letter than that then a bit more again. Where would you draw the line? | |||
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"Capitalism for you I'm afraid To be honest I wouldn't penalise staff for being a few minutes late. So long as they are good workers in general. " Same. I was in charge of an entire department of 50+ people. I never watched the clock for their arrivals/departures. I turned a blind eye if they needed a morning/afternoon/day off occasionally and they had no holiday or very little remaining. One guy had 3 days off for free when his other half walked out on him and it devastated him. They never let me down on delivery/deadlines and would often put in extra hours even though I told them they had to go home as soon as it hit 5:30. People often remarked on the productivity, camaraderie and general happiness of my team. | |||
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"Capitalism for you I'm afraid To be honest I wouldn't penalise staff for being a few minutes late. So long as they are good workers in general. Then they'd be a couple of minutes letter than that then a bit more again. Where would you draw the line?" Only the assholes tend to do that. And more often than not that’s the least of their assholism so they don’t usually last that long, either by being shamed my their more responsible peers or being let go for not doing their job. | |||
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"I've had this attitude directed towards me. I responded by getting to the office and not doing a damn thing until my start time comes around, including switching on my computer. I'll go to lunch exactly when I'm supposed to, even if I'm in the middle of something, and take my allotted time to the minute. Then I stop everything at the end of the day the minute I am allowed to. If they aren't going to have any flexibility then neither am I. I can be an irritating person when I want to be. They soon realised that they got more out of me when we were both flexible. It's not as if being two minutes late occasionally is taking the piss. " occasionally ......... | |||
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"Capitalism for you I'm afraid To be honest I wouldn't penalise staff for being a few minutes late. So long as they are good workers in general. Then they'd be a couple of minutes letter than that then a bit more again. Where would you draw the line? Only the assholes tend to do that. And more often than not that’s the least of their assholism so they don’t usually last that long, either by being shamed my their more responsible peers or being let go for not doing their job." Can I work for you? | |||
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"This is why people should join trade unions. " Having to deal with arsehole bosses (and Trades Unions) is one of the reasons i went self employed. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! " If you can’t make it on time for the job you get paid to do ( unless a very valid reason) then yes you deserve some sort of penalty | |||
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"This is why people should join trade unions. Having to deal with arsehole bosses (and Trades Unions) is one of the reasons i went self employed." The thing about being self - employed, you’re never that ill to take time off | |||
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"Capitalism for you I'm afraid To be honest I wouldn't penalise staff for being a few minutes late. So long as they are good workers in general. Same. I was in charge of an entire department of 50+ people. I never watched the clock for their arrivals/departures. I turned a blind eye if they needed a morning/afternoon/day off occasionally and they had no holiday or very little remaining. One guy had 3 days off for free when his other half walked out on him and it devastated him. They never let me down on delivery/deadlines and would often put in extra hours even though I told them they had to go home as soon as it hit 5:30. People often remarked on the productivity, camaraderie and general happiness of my team." This is how I try to run my team (unless someone higher up starts interfering). They have to be present and correct for timetabled lessons, meetings etc but even then, if someone has a reason why they need to miss such a thing (a good reason), then we can be flexible. My team cover each other's backs. | |||
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"This is why people should join trade unions. Having to deal with arsehole bosses (and Trades Unions) is one of the reasons i went self employed. The thing about being self - employed, you’re never that ill to take time off " The thing about being self employed; if i want to go to the beach instead of going to work i can, and no one can stop me (apart from the twats at Lyme Regis town council who thought it was a good idea to dredge the harbour last Friday on what turned out to be one of the hottest days in June on record). ![]() | |||
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"This is why people should join trade unions. Having to deal with arsehole bosses (and Trades Unions) is one of the reasons i went self employed. The thing about being self - employed, you’re never that ill to take time off " My son has days off for hangovers. | |||
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"Capitalism for you I'm afraid To be honest I wouldn't penalise staff for being a few minutes late. So long as they are good workers in general. " Yeah, it’s patterns that become a problem, not 1-off or occasional lateness. Output is more important, but if someone is a bit of a slacker and also regularly turns up late, then the lateness is an easy one to confront | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! " What sort of company / industry did this happen in? | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! What sort of company / industry did this happen in? " The article was office personnel. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! What sort of company / industry did this happen in? The article was office personnel. " Bit vague! Hard to come up with any meaningful thoughts based on so little info | |||
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"If I was ever late I would have expected a good spanking. " That sort of policy can obviously backfire, perfectly punctual employees starting to turn up late deliberately so that they can get their cheeks warmed | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! " To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal" Well exactly. Some people confuse start time with arrive time. Time keeping is important. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal" Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. " What management need to do is whip the lazy ones and throw em in the dungeon with cold soup and raw eggs. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. What management need to do is whip the lazy ones and throw em in the dungeon with cold soup and raw eggs. " Just need people to take a bit of pride in doing their job to the best of their ability. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. What management need to do is whip the lazy ones and throw em in the dungeon with cold soup and raw eggs. Just need people to take a bit of pride in doing their job to the best of their ability. " Being on time requires no skill and no special training. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. What management need to do is whip the lazy ones and throw em in the dungeon with cold soup and raw eggs. Just need people to take a bit of pride in doing their job to the best of their ability. Being on time requires no skill and no special training. " But it does require a decent transport infrastructure. The joys of a Sunday service timetable working in a 24/7 city. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. What management need to do is whip the lazy ones and throw em in the dungeon with cold soup and raw eggs. Just need people to take a bit of pride in doing their job to the best of their ability. Being on time requires no skill and no special training. But it does require a decent transport infrastructure. The joys of a Sunday service timetable working in a 24/7 city. " You set off on time to arrive on time to start work on time. It's not rocket science. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. What management need to do is whip the lazy ones and throw em in the dungeon with cold soup and raw eggs. Just need people to take a bit of pride in doing their job to the best of their ability. Being on time requires no skill and no special training. But it does require a decent transport infrastructure. The joys of a Sunday service timetable working in a 24/7 city. " If you’re late every day because of the transport system, then perhaps you need to get an earlier bus / tube / train | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal" This. I am always at work 10 minutes before my start time so I can get things ready for when the children arrive. Doesn't look good staff coming through the door at the same time of the children | |||
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"Capitalism for you I'm afraid" I didn’t realise capitalism was the cause for setting rules and expecting people to follow them The next time my niece misbehaves and is put in the naughty corner I’ll make sure to blame capitalism | |||
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"I had an old boss who considered you to be late if you weren't there 10 minutes before your shift. I could understand that in a previous job when you had to leave time to get changed but in that job I literally only had to switch on a computer so it felt a bit unfair. " My boss was same and tbh so was I as a boss | |||
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"In my day if you weren’t there before the boss you’d be sent home and told don’t bother coming back or too go home and think about weather you wanted the job or not " I worked for him for over 20 years and he never beat me into work | |||
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"I had an old boss who considered you to be late if you weren't there 10 minutes before your shift. I could understand that in a previous job when you had to leave time to get changed but in that job I literally only had to switch on a computer so it felt a bit unfair. My boss was same and tbh so was I as a boss" I didn't mind her wanting us to idealy be there 10 minutes before but it's a bit rubbish to be chastised for only being there 5 minutes before on occasion if the traffic was bad. I was still starting work at the time my shift started. Often before on the days I was there 10 minutes early as I'd get bored trying to kill 10 minutes. | |||
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"Often a failure in the ability of a manager to put meaningful metrics of performance in place - if it’s a repetitive pattern then you have a chat about any reason - maybe childcare and transport conspiring to make it impossible for them to be on time - in which case - offer an alternative - like a later start time or flexible working - but the title of this thread could just have easily read ‘ my boss is a pathetic underachiever who has no concept of the real value of staff’. Just my 2p " I agree. I've worked with people who are always there really early because they're chatterboxes and come in early to be social which is fine but that often continues through the day. They stop every hour to spend 20 minutes making tea and chatting yet the person who was a few minutes late in but works solidly through the day is the one told off. Madness. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. What management need to do is whip the lazy ones and throw em in the dungeon with cold soup and raw eggs. Just need people to take a bit of pride in doing their job to the best of their ability. Being on time requires no skill and no special training. But it does require a decent transport infrastructure. The joys of a Sunday service timetable working in a 24/7 city. You set off on time to arrive on time to start work on time. It's not rocket science. " You don't work Sundays then? | |||
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" MORE..... We are all late once in a while and no one would take any notice. " You haven't met my old boss ![]() | |||
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"Often a failure in the ability of a manager to put meaningful metrics of performance in place - if it’s a repetitive pattern then you have a chat about any reason - maybe childcare and transport conspiring to make it impossible for them to be on time - in which case - offer an alternative - like a later start time or flexible working - but the title of this thread could just have easily read ‘ my boss is a pathetic underachiever who has no concept of the real value of staff’. Just my 2p I agree. I've worked with people who are always there really early because they're chatterboxes and come in early to be social which is fine but that often continues through the day. They stop every hour to spend 20 minutes making tea and chatting yet the person who was a few minutes late in but works solidly through the day is the one told off. Madness. " Exactly this ![]() | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! To be honest, I think that you should always arrive early. You should be ready to start working at your start time, if you aren't arriving until your start time then you're starting work on time. I also think that you should be able to stop at the time you are contracted to finish. There can be no expectation that you do a few minutes extra for free... unless you're accruing flexible time from it. Cal Start time is start time, not turn up time. Our office staff are worse since they've all come back into the office. Still in the working from home mindset and seem very laid back and casual about thier jobs. What management need to do is whip the lazy ones and throw em in the dungeon with cold soup and raw eggs. Just need people to take a bit of pride in doing their job to the best of their ability. Being on time requires no skill and no special training. But it does require a decent transport infrastructure. The joys of a Sunday service timetable working in a 24/7 city. You set off on time to arrive on time to start work on time. It's not rocket science. You don't work Sundays then? " I've worked Sundays. Kind of bizarre to take a job that has fixed start times if you're not able to actually fulfil that part of your contract. I'd imagine it's quite rare to find an employer for whom start time is important and then say "I'll turn up when I can get here boss" | |||
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"I've had this attitude directed towards me. I responded by getting to the office and not doing a damn thing until my start time comes around, including switching on my computer. I'll go to lunch exactly when I'm supposed to, even if I'm in the middle of something, and take my allotted time to the minute. Then I stop everything at the end of the day the minute I am allowed to. If they aren't going to have any flexibility then neither am I. I can be an irritating person when I want to be. They soon realised that they got more out of me when we were both flexible. It's not as if being two minutes late occasionally is taking the piss. " Been there and done exactly the same thing. | |||
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"Our place docks 15 minutes if you're more than 3 minutes late. I've worked 10 minutes after my finish time and not been paid for it." I’d literally drop whatever I was doing the second it hit home time and tell them I don’t work for free if that’s how they operate | |||
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"Our place docks 15 minutes if you're more than 3 minutes late. I've worked 10 minutes after my finish time and not been paid for it." Standard practice | |||
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"Our place docks 15 minutes if you're more than 3 minutes late. I've worked 10 minutes after my finish time and not been paid for it." Similar to the last place where I worked back when I had a 'proper job'... ....if you clocked-in just one minute late, you lost 15 mins - and didn't get paid for working past the finish time unless it was authorised by a team leader/shift manager... | |||
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"My old commute to work was 75 miles on the M3 and M25, always left what I felt was a reasonable amount of extra time for unforeseens. I was always in the office early, except for over a 2 week period I was late in 3 times due to accidents, always made up the time by working through lunch or staying late. One day I get pulled into the bosses office and bawled out for being late. I apologised, pointed out the hazards of the M3 and M25 and that I'd made up any lost time, and often more than what I "owed" He lost his shit and pointed out in no uncertain fashion that my hours were 8 to 5. I tried reason, it fell on deaf ears. No problem, I'll not be late again. Next day at 5pm, I close down my pc and get up to leave. "Where are you going!!!!!!?" Home. "What about this job, its got to be out the door tonight????????" As you said yesterday, my hours are 8 to 5...... Flexibility and a cuntish attitude goes both ways. Winston" Lovely! I had a nice one in my last job, got in one morning to find myself copied on an email to one of our directors, flagging the fact that I was routinely sauntering in the door 20 minutes late each day. This came from a manager in another area, nothing to do with me or in role. My reply was simple. I wasn’t 20 minutes late, I was 10 minutes early. Different team, different hours. | |||
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"Just abuse of authority in my opinion " Who knows … probably a bit more than it than the basic headline. May have been discussions, encouragement, warnings, people taking the piss. Easier to blame the managers without knowing any of the details though | |||
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"Simple don’t be late I hate people who are late it’s so ignorant I’ve never been late in fact I’m always early " Agreed. I hate having to fire people , it’s horrible but if they cannot get to work on time (regularly) it is unlikely they are any good at anything else and they need to go. | |||
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"Initially I felt sorry for the office staff. But then I thought 'wow on some construction jobs I've been on, if you're late more than once over a couple of weeks they don't say anything, you just get a phone call to say "don't bother coming in tomorrow, you're fired"'!!! If you can’t make it on time for the job you get paid to do ( unless a very valid reason) then yes you deserve some sort of penalty" ![]() | |||
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"My old commute to work was 75 miles on the M3 and M25, always left what I felt was a reasonable amount of extra time for unforeseens. I was always in the office early, except for over a 2 week period I was late in 3 times due to accidents, always made up the time by working through lunch or staying late. One day I get pulled into the bosses office and bawled out for being late. I apologised, pointed out the hazards of the M3 and M25 and that I'd made up any lost time, and often more than what I "owed" He lost his shit and pointed out in no uncertain fashion that my hours were 8 to 5. I tried reason, it fell on deaf ears. No problem, I'll not be late again. Next day at 5pm, I close down my pc and get up to leave. "Where are you going!!!!!!?" Home. "What about this job, its got to be out the door tonight????????" As you said yesterday, my hours are 8 to 5...... Flexibility and a cuntish attitude goes both ways. Winston Lovely! I had a nice one in my last job, got in one morning to find myself copied on an email to one of our directors, flagging the fact that I was routinely sauntering in the door 20 minutes late each day. This came from a manager in another area, nothing to do with me or in role. My reply was simple. I wasn’t 20 minutes late, I was 10 minutes early. Different team, different hours. " Bloody busy body. | |||
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"Simple don’t be late I hate people who are late it’s so ignorant I’ve never been late in fact I’m always early Agreed. I hate having to fire people , it’s horrible but if they cannot get to work on time (regularly) it is unlikely they are any good at anything else and they need to go. " I had a guy who worked for me and came in late most days, blaming the trains. One day I dragged him into the office and said look, I’m not going to challenge you about being late this morning, as there may well have been a problem with your train, but there is simply no way that there are problems with your train 4 days a week, other people in the team come in on the same line and get here in time every day, so how about just getting an earlier train, fair enough? Shook hands. Never late again. Knew he couldn’t bullshit me. | |||
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"My old commute to work was 75 miles on the M3 and M25, always left what I felt was a reasonable amount of extra time for unforeseens. I was always in the office early, except for over a 2 week period I was late in 3 times due to accidents, always made up the time by working through lunch or staying late. One day I get pulled into the bosses office and bawled out for being late. I apologised, pointed out the hazards of the M3 and M25 and that I'd made up any lost time, and often more than what I "owed" He lost his shit and pointed out in no uncertain fashion that my hours were 8 to 5. I tried reason, it fell on deaf ears. No problem, I'll not be late again. Next day at 5pm, I close down my pc and get up to leave. "Where are you going!!!!!!?" Home. "What about this job, its got to be out the door tonight????????" As you said yesterday, my hours are 8 to 5...... Flexibility and a cuntish attitude goes both ways. Winston Lovely! I had a nice one in my last job, got in one morning to find myself copied on an email to one of our directors, flagging the fact that I was routinely sauntering in the door 20 minutes late each day. This came from a manager in another area, nothing to do with me or in role. My reply was simple. I wasn’t 20 minutes late, I was 10 minutes early. Different team, different hours. Bloody busy body. " Oh she was horrible. Loved sticking her nose in and regularity got kicked back like in this case. She was also queen of the appraisal process, the poor bastards who worked for her had to sit through 2 hours of shit. | |||
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"My old commute to work was 75 miles on the M3 and M25, always left what I felt was a reasonable amount of extra time for unforeseens. I was always in the office early, except for over a 2 week period I was late in 3 times due to accidents, always made up the time by working through lunch or staying late. One day I get pulled into the bosses office and bawled out for being late. I apologised, pointed out the hazards of the M3 and M25 and that I'd made up any lost time, and often more than what I "owed" He lost his shit and pointed out in no uncertain fashion that my hours were 8 to 5. I tried reason, it fell on deaf ears. No problem, I'll not be late again. Next day at 5pm, I close down my pc and get up to leave. "Where are you going!!!!!!?" Home. "What about this job, its got to be out the door tonight????????" As you said yesterday, my hours are 8 to 5...... Flexibility and a cuntish attitude goes both ways. Winston" Ha brilliant! Twats | |||
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"My old commute to work was 75 miles on the M3 and M25, always left what I felt was a reasonable amount of extra time for unforeseens. I was always in the office early, except for over a 2 week period I was late in 3 times due to accidents, always made up the time by working through lunch or staying late. One day I get pulled into the bosses office and bawled out for being late. I apologised, pointed out the hazards of the M3 and M25 and that I'd made up any lost time, and often more than what I "owed" He lost his shit and pointed out in no uncertain fashion that my hours were 8 to 5. I tried reason, it fell on deaf ears. No problem, I'll not be late again. Next day at 5pm, I close down my pc and get up to leave. "Where are you going!!!!!!?" Home. "What about this job, its got to be out the door tonight????????" As you said yesterday, my hours are 8 to 5...... Flexibility and a cuntish attitude goes both ways. Winston Ha brilliant! Twats" Same boss....... you have a doctors appointment, do you have a confirmation of that I can see? Here's the text reminder from the surgery. You have a hospital appointment for an operation, do you have confirmation of that? Yup, give me 5 minutes to redact it and I'll mail it over? Why do you want to redact it? Because why I'm going to hospital has fuck all to do with you. Oddly enough, I don't work there anymore. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | |||
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"Penny wise and pound foolish springs to mind in this case. Being that anal about your employes work time never ends well." Kind of depends on the job doesn't it? If you've got appointments at 9 but don't get to work for 9 then it doesn't work very well. If your job is not time sensitive then sure. | |||
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"My old commute to work was 75 miles on the M3 and M25, always left what I felt was a reasonable amount of extra time for unforeseens. I was always in the office early, except for over a 2 week period I was late in 3 times due to accidents, always made up the time by working through lunch or staying late. One day I get pulled into the bosses office and bawled out for being late. I apologised, pointed out the hazards of the M3 and M25 and that I'd made up any lost time, and often more than what I "owed" He lost his shit and pointed out in no uncertain fashion that my hours were 8 to 5. I tried reason, it fell on deaf ears. No problem, I'll not be late again. Next day at 5pm, I close down my pc and get up to leave. "Where are you going!!!!!!?" Home. "What about this job, its got to be out the door tonight????????" As you said yesterday, my hours are 8 to 5...... Flexibility and a cuntish attitude goes both ways. Winston Lovely! I had a nice one in my last job, got in one morning to find myself copied on an email to one of our directors, flagging the fact that I was routinely sauntering in the door 20 minutes late each day. This came from a manager in another area, nothing to do with me or in role. My reply was simple. I wasn’t 20 minutes late, I was 10 minutes early. Different team, different hours. Bloody busy body. Oh she was horrible. Loved sticking her nose in and regularity got kicked back like in this case. She was also queen of the appraisal process, the poor bastards who worked for her had to sit through 2 hours of shit. " Yeah as much as I imagine it was annoying I bet you were pleased she wasn't your boss. | |||
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"Penny wise and pound foolish springs to mind in this case. Being that anal about your employes work time never ends well. Kind of depends on the job doesn't it? If you've got appointments at 9 but don't get to work for 9 then it doesn't work very well. If your job is not time sensitive then sure. " I get in at 8 and have appointments at 9. The train breaks down en route or there's an accident on the motorway that blocks every lane. What's your answer? Winston | |||
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"Penny wise and pound foolish springs to mind in this case. Being that anal about your employes work time never ends well. Kind of depends on the job doesn't it? If you've got appointments at 9 but don't get to work for 9 then it doesn't work very well. If your job is not time sensitive then sure. I get in at 8 and have appointments at 9. The train breaks down en route or there's an accident on the motorway that blocks every lane. What's your answer? Winston " If it causes more than an hours delay then you're going to be unavoidably late. Nothing you can do is there other than let your appointments know and possibly rearrange. Presumably the 3 lane motorway closure and train breakdown don't happen on the same day? | |||
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"My old commute to work was 75 miles on the M3 and M25, always left what I felt was a reasonable amount of extra time for unforeseens. I was always in the office early, except for over a 2 week period I was late in 3 times due to accidents, always made up the time by working through lunch or staying late. One day I get pulled into the bosses office and bawled out for being late. I apologised, pointed out the hazards of the M3 and M25 and that I'd made up any lost time, and often more than what I "owed" He lost his shit and pointed out in no uncertain fashion that my hours were 8 to 5. I tried reason, it fell on deaf ears. No problem, I'll not be late again. Next day at 5pm, I close down my pc and get up to leave. "Where are you going!!!!!!?" Home. "What about this job, its got to be out the door tonight????????" As you said yesterday, my hours are 8 to 5...... Flexibility and a cuntish attitude goes both ways. Winston Ha brilliant! Twats Same boss....... you have a doctors appointment, do you have a confirmation of that I can see? Here's the text reminder from the surgery. You have a hospital appointment for an operation, do you have confirmation of that? Yup, give me 5 minutes to redact it and I'll mail it over? Why do you want to redact it? Because why I'm going to hospital has fuck all to do with you. Oddly enough, I don't work there anymore. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Ha 8 grand!! Fuckers. ![]() ![]() | |||
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"Penny wise and pound foolish springs to mind in this case. Being that anal about your employes work time never ends well. Kind of depends on the job doesn't it? If you've got appointments at 9 but don't get to work for 9 then it doesn't work very well. If your job is not time sensitive then sure. I get in at 8 and have appointments at 9. The train breaks down en route or there's an accident on the motorway that blocks every lane. What's your answer? Winston If it causes more than an hours delay then you're going to be unavoidably late. Nothing you can do is there other than let your appointments know and possibly rearrange. Presumably the 3 lane motorway closure and train breakdown don't happen on the same day? " Or multiple times in the same week. There will always be exceptional events that stop you getting where you need to be when you need to be there. These days, as soon as you realise you'll be late for your meeting, you can always let them know you'll be late and offer to rearrange. As long as you're not taking the Michael there should be some tolerance | |||
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"Penny wise and pound foolish springs to mind in this case. Being that anal about your employes work time never ends well. Kind of depends on the job doesn't it? If you've got appointments at 9 but don't get to work for 9 then it doesn't work very well. If your job is not time sensitive then sure. " My teachers have to be there to teach (and almost always are) but if someone is trespassing at Piccadilly or the M6 is closed due to an RTA, some of them might be (unavoidably) late, or even absent having to return to WFH. The good news is the team is collegiate and helps each other out with cover. Give and take. The take-takers learn very quickly how it works. | |||
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"100 employees all 3mins late working a 5 day week Less 20 days holiday per year,equals a loss of over 1000 hrs per year" Unless the 100 employees all make up the 3 minutes or more at the end of the day. | |||
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"100 employees all 3mins late working a 5 day week Less 20 days holiday per year,equals a loss of over 1000 hrs per year Unless the 100 employees all make up the 3 minutes or more at the end of the day. " Depends what happened in those 3 minutes. Was they all trying to clock in? Did the employer demonstrate a duty of care as to why 100 of their employees didn't arrive for work? | |||
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"100 employees all 3 mins late working a 5 day week Less 20 days holiday per year,equals a loss of over 1000 hrs per year" Employers who think exactly like this struggle to maintain a staff of 100. If 100 employees start on time and work 3 minutes after time each day, he owes his staff 1000 hours pay each year. Winston | |||
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"100 employees all 3 mins late working a 5 day week Less 20 days holiday per year,equals a loss of over 1000 hrs per year Employers who think exactly like this struggle to maintain a staff of 100. If 100 employees start on time and work 3 minutes after time each day, he owes his staff 1000 hours pay each year. Winston " So true | |||
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"My old commute to work was 75 miles on the M3 and M25, always left what I felt was a reasonable amount of extra time for unforeseens. I was always in the office early, except for over a 2 week period I was late in 3 times due to accidents, always made up the time by working through lunch or staying late. One day I get pulled into the bosses office and bawled out for being late. I apologised, pointed out the hazards of the M3 and M25 and that I'd made up any lost time, and often more than what I "owed" He lost his shit and pointed out in no uncertain fashion that my hours were 8 to 5. I tried reason, it fell on deaf ears. No problem, I'll not be late again. Next day at 5pm, I close down my pc and get up to leave. "Where are you going!!!!!!?" Home. "What about this job, its got to be out the door tonight????????" As you said yesterday, my hours are 8 to 5...... Flexibility and a cuntish attitude goes both ways. Winston Lovely! I had a nice one in my last job, got in one morning to find myself copied on an email to one of our directors, flagging the fact that I was routinely sauntering in the door 20 minutes late each day. This came from a manager in another area, nothing to do with me or in role. My reply was simple. I wasn’t 20 minutes late, I was 10 minutes early. Different team, different hours. Bloody busy body. Oh she was horrible. Loved sticking her nose in and regularity got kicked back like in this case. She was also queen of the appraisal process, the poor bastards who worked for her had to sit through 2 hours of shit. Yeah as much as I imagine it was annoying I bet you were pleased she wasn't your boss. " I could not, and would not, have worked for her. | |||
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"100 employees all 3 mins late working a 5 day week Less 20 days holiday per year,equals a loss of over 1000 hrs per year Employers who think exactly like this struggle to maintain a staff of 100. If 100 employees start on time and work 3 minutes after time each day, he owes his staff 1000 hours pay each year. Winston So true" Boss - You all owe me 1000 hours wages I paid and you didn't work. Staff - You owe us 1000 hours wages for when we worked and you didn't pay us. The boss is often on more swings than the staff are roundabouts. Winston | |||
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"100 employees all 3mins late working a 5 day week Less 20 days holiday per year,equals a loss of over 1000 hrs per year" You can't add individual minutes from exactly the same time frame together to create a length of time. The time lost was 3 minutes. | |||
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