TwistedSifter

His Boss Told Him He Was Working Too Fast, So He Decided To Give Him Exactly What He Asked For And Nothing More

Source: Reddit/Malicious Compliance/Unsplash/Sara Kurfess

We all want the freedom to make our own schedule, or at least be given a level of autonomy and treated like an adult at our place of business.

So when the boss decides to micromanage, stories like this one from Reddit tend to become commonplace.

It’s like these bosses will never learn.

Read the full story and find out if you think this one might!

I must take the full time to complete a task or I get penalized? Okay, free social media time.

For the longest time, my job has allowed us to take the full pay for completing work even if we finish early.

For context, I am assigned a zone and I complete all jobs assigned to me in that zone by a time limit, at many different locations.

I check in via GPS tracker to prove I’m at the location, they pay my mileage and I make my own schedule.

Pretty good gig. Seems like there’s plenty of trust given to the employees.

Each job has a time assigned to it.

Previously, they’ve always allowed us to claim the extra time.

If I’m given an hour to complete something and finish in 45, I claim the hour.

This makes a ton of sense if there is a time assigned to the job and motivates the employee to work efficiently.

Our managers have always said this is fine, saying if we are turning in good work and we are skilled enough to complete it faster than most, we should not be paid less for it, all enforcing that would do is encouraging people to work slow as possible or waste time.

And it does.

Well, of course it does. So if it isn’t broke, don’t fix it, right?

Now they say we need to use the full allotted time or take the cut in our check.

One big problem is we are given way too much time, it’s common for me to be given an hour to do something that takes 10 minutes tops.

My colleagues are not ashamed to admit they all run the clock, thinking it’s nonsense they should be paid less than people who don’t know what they are doing and stand around doing nothing, so they do it too.

This is what happens when management adds the micro to their title.

I started doing it too, I’ve been doing this for 6 years, I can do the work assigned to me in a quarter of the time they expect, doesn’t mean I deserve to make 25% the money I should make for doing the same work.

Now I do whatever on the clock, go grocery shopping, go get lunch, take a nap, read a book, gossip, whatever.

I don’t know if our new management will realize the policy is stupid, never enforced for a reason and literally cannot be enforced, but until then they’ll be paying the whole district to run the clock.

Why they made this change I will never understand, but it seems to have come back to bite the bosses.

Let’s hear from the commenters on Reddit to say how they appreciate this version of malicious compliance.

Top common says there’s nothing wrong with taking advantage of the situation.

Several commenters mentioned having similar experiences, which only served to help them learn to play the game.

And, as we often see in these stories, many folks chimed in to blame management.

While others questioned if management will start to see a problem here.

Some folks questioned whether one employee might have ruined what previously seemed to work well for everyone.

And lastly, advice on how to game the system without being corrupt.

It seems like management had a good thing going with their employees.

That is, until they decided to change things up and ended up costing themselves!

If you enjoyed that story, read this one about a mom who was forced to bring her three kids with her to apply for government benefits, but ended up getting the job of her dreams.

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