• @[email protected]
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    40 minutes ago

    A lot of these differences are regional and industry specific. I worked on the east coast in more traditional industries and 9am on the dot was expected. Moved west and switched to tech and I was the only one in the office at 9am. I had coworkers showing up at 11 and noon. Despite the late arrival, people would still leave at 3 and 4pm. Were they working any less hard? No, in tech people are online til midnight and 2 am regularly. Tech attracts a lot of folks with night owl chronotypes. Their brains are literally not functioning optimally until 7pm rolls around. Boomer work ethic doesn’t have a lot of understanding of this fact.

  • @[email protected]
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    223 hours ago

    Just common sense should be enough.

    If your job doesn’t require you to be there on the dot, who care?

    If you keep being late for meetings and you’re wasting your colleagues time, get your ass out of bed earlier.

    It’s not hard. But it’s super annoying to be waiting for people who just don’t care to be on time.

    • @[email protected]
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      554 minutes ago

      It’s also super annoying to be hounded about being on time when it makes no fucking difference.

  • @[email protected]
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    826 hours ago

    I’m gen x. I’m always anxious about being on time because of how I was raised (thanks Mom). My partner is older than me and she’s ok with being late. This isn’t an age thing. It’s a personality thing.

    They’re trying to divide us by sowing division amongst generations. The most wealthy are the enemy. They own everything and we must join together to take it back.

  • @[email protected]
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    144 hours ago

    I manage Gen Z, Millenials, Gen X, and Boomers. Yes, all of the above. My experience is that the Gen Z types strive for quality of work and will give you their best once they understand the mission and accept it. The Gen X and Boomers very often get stuck int he performative parts of work: dress, dates and times, etc, and focus less on the quality of work. Millenials are a bit of a mix.

  • DarkThoughts
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    165 hours ago

    Sorry, but if you’re expected at 10 you should arrive at 10. Doesn’t matter if it is work, a meet-up with friends or family, a date, or whatever. People schedule things around you, they’ll expect you at 10, not 10 minutes later. So if you come late, it means you’re not respecting other people’s time, which means you don’t respect other people.

    • @[email protected]
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      124 hours ago

      It’s work, not elementary school. Just don’t be late for your first meeting. But also don’t throw meetings on people’s calendar at 8am. It’s a dick move.

      • @[email protected]
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        33 hours ago

        Try working at a company that has staff on the opposite side of the planet. I’ve missed meetings scheduled for 7am (I start at 8) that were sent in the middle of the night. That’s what I call a dick move.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 hours ago

      My favourite is when the person who we’re all working around sets the time and then doesn’t show up on time of the meeting. That’s the epitome of entitlement to disrespecting everyone’s (and the company) time. And this is a millennial that pulls this shit regularly at my job. It also costs the business a stupid amount of money when all those people aren’t producing revenue just to come sit in a meeting that isn’t going anywhere.

  • @[email protected]
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    196 hours ago

    If you need to be there at a specific time, be professional and be there. If other workers are depending on you to be there, be there. Being tardy just ‘cause, is pretty pathetic. In an ideal world, none of us would have to work. But we do, so show up.

    • @[email protected]
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      154 hours ago

      Depends entirely on the job.

      If you are interacting with people or have meetings, sure, promptness is important and polite.

      If you are doing design work, or coding, or data driven jobs where you don’t really interact with anyone and just work for 8 hours, then who gives a shit if you work from 8-4 or 8:10-4:10? Fuck off if you think that makes a difference. 8 hours is 8 hours. End of story.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 hour ago

        Further, if you don’t need 8 hours to finish the work, then nobody should care if you’re there or not, as long as your outcomes are achieved.

    • @[email protected]
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      94 hours ago

      And likewise, any employer unexpectedly asking you to stay late is just as unprofessional.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 hour ago

        I think that depends on the nature of the work, but also whether it’s a regular pattern of being late.

  • @[email protected]
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    256 hours ago

    I’m Gen X and the last job I had that required me to work a specific shift was in the kitchen of a pizza place in 1988.

    In my first job after college, I asked the business administrator what hours I was expected to work, and she was noticeably confused by the question. She told me most folks show up around 9.l, but made it clear that it was up to me.

    In my next job, I asked how to request PTO, and my boss told me he doesn’t care about the record keeping. He said just let him know when I won’t be there, and as long as everything keeps working he doesn’t care if I’m ever there.

    Even in my current position when they introduced time clocks and we had to clock in before our start time, we were allowed to specify our start time. I chose 10:00am. I normally get in around 7am, so I figured if I’m not going to be in by 10, I’ll just take the day off.

    • @[email protected]
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      146 hours ago

      Damn, what field are you working in that has that much flexibility? That’s pretty unheard of, at least in the US.

      • @[email protected]
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        54 hours ago

        My last job for a software company was like this. We had to file for PTO, but we got so much I took nearly every Friday off and didn’t bother looking at my totals.

      • sunzu2
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        66 hours ago

        Prolly High end professional type jobs although those require experience before daddy will permit this level of autonomy

  • @[email protected]
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    8 hours ago

    Hang on Gen X once the boomer population dies out you’re next in the ongoing war to keep generations hating each other. You may get lucky and the future articles will skip over you and go directly to the “uptight, low tolerance Millennials”

    These articles are such overgeneralized bullshit just to get people mad at each other. I bet there are older workers that are always late to work and I bet there are young workers that are on time and do amazing work. Yet nuance like that doesn’t drive angry clicks and comments.

    • @[email protected]
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      248 hours ago

      I’m looking forward to it. GenX here, fuck all of you and fuck all of this. I just want to spend time with my family and friends.

      I don’t think anyone outside of GenX understands how fucked GenX is. We are jaded AF You’re free to come for us but fuck around and find out.

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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      86 hours ago

      I bet there are older workers that are always late to work

      I’ve employed several, and in my experience they’re usually the ones who spend most of their time at the bottom of a bottle.

    • @[email protected]
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      47 hours ago

      Low tolerance millennials?

      If anything millennials are just becoming more and more radicalized against the elites and the unhealthy work “ethics” they had to endure.

      Good on the next generations if they dare standing up for themselves.

  • @[email protected]
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    65 hours ago

    They can fuck off with that. Everyone else is there on time because they’re adults, why are you special? All those people left 10 minutes earlier than the absolute minimum of time in order to account for traffic problems, etc. So can you.

  • @[email protected]
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    126 hours ago

    The C-suite boss where I work complained about being in the office at 7 am and seeing empty desks.

    This was pre-pandemic.

    The thing was, policies in place at the time allowed employees to work from home up to two days per week, and flex hours were permitted as long as the core hours of 9am to 3pm were covered. It just sounded insane to everyone.

  • @[email protected]
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    107 hours ago

    I personally don’t want to hear anything about coming in late when I usually am the last one to leave the office in the evening.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 hours ago

      I’m the other way around. I’ve agreed to work for these hours, so I’m showing up on time and leaving on time. They seem to value this higher than more total time spent.

  • @[email protected]
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    168 hours ago

    If I’m always expected to work half an hour late, showing up to work ten minutes late is early as long as no one is waiting on me.

  • @[email protected]
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    12 hours ago

    The mouth pieces for the ruling class really love pumping out articles to drive division between us…

  • @[email protected]
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    4810 hours ago

    Ten minutes late to a meeting? Go somewhere else and make someone else’s life harder. Ten minutes late to holding a chair down? I don’t care if you’re on the moon, just get your shit done.

  • Stern
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    7812 hours ago

    As a millennial I’m on team, “Work starts at 9, show up at 9”… but if you’re a little late here and there, whatever. So long as the work gets done.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 hours ago

      I show up 30 minutes early because everyone at my job is incompetent so I have to see how things are going so I can plan my day. Im mid 20’s

    • @[email protected]
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      116 hours ago

      I would be this way but I started my career in Boston and the T and the busses and the tunnels there make anything close to this impossible. If you actually wanted to be on time you’d be showing up 20 minutes early just as often as 15 minutes late. To truly always be on time would mean planning to get there an hour early every day.

      Companies downtown here know just not to put meetings between 9 and 10 because it’s just impossible that every single member of a team will make it to work without issues even once a week. I’d guess even hourly jobs give more flexibility than you’d expect from a standard employer here because it’s just such a clusterfuck to transit in Boston

      The further into the burbs you get, the more hardcore companies are about enforcing a 9-5.