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‘Who dreams this crap up?’: Kevin O'Leary slams new rule that allows employees to ignore their bosses after hours

55 comments
  • Who dreams this up?

    Nobody. Nobody dreamt it up. They are just remembering the hard reality of the early 90's and the before times.

    You know, before everyone was connected and online 24/7/365. Before "online" meant anything.

    When you left your 9-5 job, drove home listening to the radio, because you didn't have anything else to listen to, and got home to dinner on the table because you didn't need your spouse to work for a living to make ends meet, in your home that you were able to purchase, and food that wasn't largely artificial.

    The phone would ring during dinner, and it would just keep ringing, because you're spending time eating with your family. There was no answering machine, so it would just ring and ring.

    And if nobody ever answered it, they couldn't tell you to get back to the office because some emergency happened.

    Maybe you went to the park, maybe you were out to dinner with the Mrs... Maybe you just didn't care enough to pick up the phone. Anything could have happened.

    Unlike today, where we're bombarded by marketing and notifications constantly. All of which are demanding that you address them ASAP. Everything is an emergency, so put down your "three ingredients away from plastic" dinner, and pick up your master, and obey.

    I am all out of bubble gum.

  • Every job I've had that requires me to be on call, has paid me for being on call. If I was in an interview and they told me I was expected to pull call for no additional pay, I'd have to sue for injury after enduring the side pain from all the laughing I'd be doing in between them spewing that batshit insane expectation and me promptly walking my ass out of that room.

    Put that shit in the job description and reimburse accordingly... this ain't rocket surgery.

  • Guy who is the reason this rule is needed is upset about the rule dealing with some of his bullshit

  • Fucken power dial this Goober's number. Watch how quick he flips his shit.

  • Email me. If I deem it an emergency, I might answer. Keep in mind, my bar for emergencies is much higher than yours ever will be (unless physical harm to a human may occur, it's not an emergency). When I go to bed, my phone goes to bed (aeroplane mode).

    Edit: spelling

    • Emergency is they key word here that will be abused by those that have an issue with this rule.

      If I'm at work and receive a call that my partner/child/family member was in a car accident, that's an emergency. It is a rational and reasonable expectation that work understands I need a day or two (or more) to address this emergency.

      Similarly if I'm at home and something with our widget affects a human life, that's an emergency. But it's also a one time emergency. If we produce widgets that result in emergencies then the next step is to hire/pay employees to cover widget emergencies.

      As an invested employee I want the company to succeed. However if all I see is emergency after emergency. Failure to address emergencies. Or even false emergencies. Well then fuck off.

      Employees have traditionally given a lot of slack in this area. Abuse by employers are what have caused these more official rulings.

  • I can't imagine this old piece of shit slamming anything without breaking a bone. Why journalists insist on this word for headlines when there are so many better alternatives is beyond me.

55 comments