March 23, 2026 at 7:15 pm

Admin’s Boss Keeps Asking If She’s “Motivated” To Work For His Company, But After His Only Salesperson Quit, He Started Pressuring Her To Take On Duties Outside Her Role

by Heather Hall

Owner of the company asking employee if she's motivated

Pexels/Reddit

When your boss keeps asking the same vague question, it can start to feel less like curiosity and more like a warning.

So, what would you do if your boss kept asking whether you’re “motivated” to work for the company, even though you show up, do your job well, and haven’t been told anything is wrong? Would you ask what he really means? Or would it leave you second-guessing your job?

In the following story, an admin is going through this very thing with her boss. Here’s the full scoop.

Boss keeps asking if I’m motivated to work with his company

I’ve been with this company for over two years, and occasionally, he keeps asking if I am motivated to work for his company.

This confuses me, as it basically asks whether I still want to keep a job without any context.

Am I not performing well? Did I upset his majesty? Is he insecure about me looking for another job? Is he trying to keep me on edge about losing my job so I will feel more stress to work harder than ever before?

She has no interest in being a salesperson.

I am motivated to work cause my job is easy and pays well. But of course, I have to give him the ol’ generic kiss up answer to make him happy. It’s just that he keeps asking this, and none of my responses seem to keep him quiet.

It’s a Monday in the winter. There is nothing for us to do, and anything I try to find falls flat, so it makes me look bad.

I’m just an admin, and he keeps pressuring me to do sales work… that ain’t my job, and his last salesperson quit on him, so now he only has me and a repair contractor.

I’m never going to look motivated enough to him if he can’t find us new salespeople to work for us.

Yikes! The question would get pretty old after a while.

Let’s see what the people at Reddit think about it.

For this reader, it’s really simple.

Work 3 Admins Boss Keeps Asking If She’s “Motivated” To Work For His Company, But After His Only Salesperson Quit, He Started Pressuring Her To Take On Duties Outside Her Role

According to this comment, they need to offer her more money.

Work 2 Admins Boss Keeps Asking If She’s “Motivated” To Work For His Company, But After His Only Salesperson Quit, He Started Pressuring Her To Take On Duties Outside Her Role

Good point.

Work 1 Admins Boss Keeps Asking If She’s “Motivated” To Work For His Company, But After His Only Salesperson Quit, He Started Pressuring Her To Take On Duties Outside Her Role

This could be true.

Work eb178f Admins Boss Keeps Asking If She’s “Motivated” To Work For His Company, But After His Only Salesperson Quit, He Started Pressuring Her To Take On Duties Outside Her Role

What an infuriating question!

If you liked this post, check out this story about an employee who got revenge on a co-worker who kept grading their work suspiciously low.

Heather Hall | Contributing Writer, Life & Drama

Heather Hall is a contributing writer for TwistedSifter specializing in internet culture, workplace conflict, and viral customer service stories. With over a decade of editorial experience in digital publishing, Heather excels at curating trending online discussions and providing insightful commentary on the daily dramas that capture the internet's attention.

Since beginning her career in 2011, she has developed deep expertise in SEO-driven digital content, having written for a wide array of publications covering lifestyle, business, and travel. At TwistedSifter, Heather focuses on synthesizing complex social media threads into engaging, highly readable narratives that highlight the human element of viral news.

When she isn’t analyzing the latest internet discourse, Heather is a dedicated mother of three sons who takes family gaming nights entirely too seriously—whether she is dominating in Mario Kart, exploring The Legend of Zelda, or jumping into Roblox.

Connect with Heather on Facebook and LinkedIn.