• RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Funny that this is a complaint I just heard from a co-worker blaming a certain generation for being late, staring at their cellphone instead of working, etc. I generally lol at this studf because plenty of my co workers are cell addicts themselves. I guess the biggest difference is that most are more judicious about it.

    No generation is monolithic, just to be clear, despite some trends they might display.

    But yeah, we’ve had a few people fired because they unapologetically couldn’t get their shit together. My career isn’t one where showing up late is even remotely acceptable. There’s been a massive upheaval in my industry from shitty pay for decades and a grind to climb the ladder that very quickly got rid of people that weren’t committed to the job, to today where the industry has been throwing money at people, huge pay hikes for the former grinders, and rapid climbs up the ladder with job offers everywhere.

    So they’re spoiled in a way. No need to conform when people are handing you everything on a platter at some level. While I really appreciate the fact that these new people have it good, this job never should have needed the sacrifices it did, at the same time they really aren’t professional. On time is everything in this job.

  • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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    14 hours ago

    This article is just the same sentence over and over again. Must be those lazy millenials copy-pasting in their computers again.

  • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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    1 day ago

    Are we really trying to make this of all things a generational thing? Why?

    It depends on the job, if you have to say open a store then 10 min late is a problem. You have to say make a thing, then 10 mins is not an issue as long as the thing is done.

    I have seen people with no respect for other peoples time (so they where late often) and they where not of a single generation but more commonly of a class (the people with means tend to think they can be late).

      • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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        Its wild that people can think a whole ass batch of people (a generation) thinks being 10 min late to anything is not a bad thing. Like if you show up to meet someone and they are 10 min late, its not the end of the world but if it happens every time you are going to judge that person.

        I don’t think jobs should be tied to timecards (I hate time keeping systems, I had to fix some) but to job requirements.

        Some examples: Office work normally does not matter until it does. I once worked in a banks head office and had to at or shortly before 7:30am tell all the ABMs to change to the next business day (this would cause them to go offline briefly) and pull the reports for that day. If I was 10 min late the reports would not be there on time for 8am where they are needed for another task a co worker is expected to do before the bank opens (at 8am in some places).

        Any retail store that has some respect for their employees and customers needs people to not be late, showing up 10 min late might just mean rushing to open or relieve some co-worker but that also is likely increasing the risk of accidents. I don’t think its fair that someone gets to work an extra 10 mins or wait to buy whatever for 10 mins just because some one thinks “eh, 10 mins is close enough

        Task based jobs on the other hand (say programming, maintenance, sales, repair centres, etc.) should not really matter as much. When you start is less important then if you meet a deadline when finished. I used to work a job that wanted me to “start” every day at 7:42 AM (we used time units of 1/10th an hour) but would get real pissy when I did not leave my house until 8:30 or so since the stuff I was working on was in places that did not open until 9 or 10 am. They told me I should go to an arbitrary location (a warehouse or McDonalds where the examples they gave) by 7:42am to log in “in order to show I was ready for work”. That was stupid and irrational, so I did not do it. But I would also not show up 10 min late if I could help it for any appointment (work or otherwise) since I value my time and the peoples time I am interacting with.

            • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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              11 hours ago

              Oh, I was figuring you would take it right at face value. Not everyone you meet in life will find your weird obsession with time and schedules to be particularly fun or positive, and your personal obsession isn’t how everyone else is gonna live their life just because you want it. Seems simple enough. You’ve taken a very hard line stance on something that wildly large swaths of the population will disagree with you on (whether verbally or just in practice)

              • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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                11 hours ago

                What personal obsession? This is a comment on an article about being late. Did you expect no one to have a time based discussion here?

    • slackassassin@sh.itjust.works
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      I used to have to open a fishing pier at 5:30am. A line of angry fisher people at the gate will tighten you up real quick. I let everyone in for free if I was 10 minutes late, but I was more so motivated not to be late.

      These were the people who were fishing as a source of food and/or bait for later fishing for food. I got to know them and wasn’t late often because that would be shitty. They got to know me and knew I was working 3 jobs and going to college. So, they were sympathetic when it did happen.

      Life, man, turns out it ain’t all simplistic generational platitudes.

      • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        I wish more people saw the world this way.

        Every time someone divides an attitudes by generations.

        Every time someone divides driving capabilities by make of car.

        Every time someone divides work ethic by race.

        Every time someone divides action by class.

        There are good people and bad people and everything in between and they are not tied to specific demographics.

        You can witness a trend, but it does not define anything.

        People are just people.

        • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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          14 hours ago

          Tesla drivers are shit tho

          even before I wanted to translate that over to “Elon’s dickriders”

          For real though, it’s super annoying when people say bs like what you did about things you have a choice over. Dividing by race, bad. Dividing because you decided to get a raised short bed pickup truck with HIDs…well those people chose to be assholes. Same with Matt gaetz supporters of which there are thousands. They chose to support a rapist in multiple elections despite the evidence. I’m cool dividing people up by choices.

          In this case parent poster chose to overcommit and the people at his work chose to forgive that. I got no issue with that.

          • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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            13 hours ago

            I just can’t agree with that. Your choice of car doesn’t make you a dick head. Maybe a lot of dick head buy teslas, but so do none dickheads. I’ve heard the same thing said about audi drivers, and bmw drivers, and mercedes drivers and range rover drivers. There is no neat little box you can put all dick heads in when it comes to what car they drive. There is no venn diagram that would cover this.

            So the car you drive doesn’t make you a dick head. Being a dick head makes you a dick head.

            • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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              11 hours ago

              If you’ll note the for real statement, the example I provided was much more specific. If you can find me a single soul on this earth with a raised short-bed w/ hid (or equivalent LED since HIDs are old now) who isn’t an asshole I’ll take it back. But I doubt you’ll be able to.

              As for the teslas in particular, I’d say it’s more like 60% than 100% who just don’t know how to drive. And our brains are probability engines.

              • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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                11 hours ago

                A guy i work with in IT infrastructure lives on a small farm, he has a raised shortbed (assuming that just means a pickup with the back part that has no roof and three short side and tailgate, sorry the terminology is different in the UK so i had to google what it was so could be wrong) he is genuinely one of the nicest pwople i know. He is super helpful with any new staff that joins the team and is very smart. He uses this pickup on his farm, and it serves a meaningful purpose that is not better served by other means.

                So there’s at least one.

                Im not going to argue that there arent dickheads driving these things. But i will fight you on saying that its all of them.

                That kind of blanket statement is not helpful. I hope you take what i am saying and genuinely think about it because you are coming off as very intolerant.

                Sorry. I dont want to start an argument. Would much rather keep this at the discussion level, i just find it hard to convey context, tone, and intent in text form

    • spujb@lemmy.cafe
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      1 day ago

      Why?

      It’s a Fortune article. Their whole thing is keeping the class war active and right now a great way to do that is to make the older, capital owning generation, pissed off at the young ones so that they don’t think for a second this whole “widening wealth gap” thing might be unfair and oppressive.

      • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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        I think the issue is they are not “keeping the class war active” but trying to make the class war into a generational one. I have worked with, for and had worked for me people who are often late and never did I see one age group of people show up more late then another. Hell I have had issues with staff showing up over an hour early and that was only people under 25 so far (not an issue with them doing it, just an issue with feeling I am taking advantage of them).

        • spujb@lemmy.cafe
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          Sorry yeah I used badly unclear language there you are absolutely correct.

          I should have said “It’s a Fortune article. Their whole thing is keeping the class war at less than a simmer. They do this here by providing distracting ammo to fuel other wars and blaming [age/race/gender/migrant status] for economic troubles rather than the true oppressive force that is capital.”

          Thanks for understanding what I was trying to say before I even wrote it 😅

    • Jerkface (any/all)@lemmy.ca
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      In the 80s and 90s, Gen X were coming in late and the Greatest Generation was firing their our asses. It’s generational because every generation becomes more concerned with punctuality.

      • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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        Time clocks have been around since 1888 and people have been getting fired for being late even longer.

        Stop trying to make this a generational thing.

      • spujb@lemmy.cafe
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        1 day ago

        laziness is a feature, not a bug, and it’s literally how our brains are wired.

        (e: also it’s literally a study into generational differences. empirical data showing there is a difference in mindset. if you think that’s shitting on boomers then it’s you who made the value judgement in the first place. also if you read the article, if anything, it’s shitting on gen z for not getting work done on time.)

  • slingstone@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Is the work getting done? If so, what does ten minutes matter? Is it about productivity, or just about ensuring that work is sufficiently unpleasant to keep the peasants in their place?

    • postmateDumbass@lemmy.world
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      What else is the overseer supposed to do to justify their position besides add stress and create reasons to not raise wages?

    • 1ns1p1d@lemm.ee
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      Its probably just what everyone’s used to. I work in an ED. Fuck anyone who always turns up late. What does 10 minutes matter? It matters a lot actually. This is shift work. The work is never “done”.

        • 1ns1p1d@lemm.ee
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          14 hours ago

          Ladies and gentlemen, please give a warm lemmy welcome to FRAYED PICKLES whistles, whoops, cheers, applause

            • 1ns1p1d@lemm.ee
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              11 hours ago

              Well where I’m from its just what it’s called. Most people would know what it is. I’m actually English and we call it A&E for Accident and Emergency, or Casualty. That’s what I would have called it if I still lived there because that’s what everyone there is used to. What you’re basically asking for is for me to translate for you. Well, like I said, I’m English and live in the states. You think everyone thinks to translate American english for me? Use google. Its pretty clear I’m don’t work in an erectile disfunction - unless that’s a euphemism for America.

              • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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                11 hours ago

                It definitely could be a euphemism for America. Have you seen Florida?

                But uh… the big flaw in your story here is that “emergency department” is immediately understandable, ED isn’t. It’s also eating disorder. Recently in the news it’s been education department since DoE is taken and acronyms are ineffective. It’s also engineering design, encyclopedia dramatica, emotional disorder and I’m sure many more that I don’t know.

        • 1ns1p1d@lemm.ee
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          1 day ago

          Emergency Department. Its a Level One Trauma center, so down time is not predictable.

          • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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            14 hours ago

            Why not just say emergency room rather than an acronym nobody in the general population uses? There was a whole tv show about this for like 25 years.

            • 1ns1p1d@lemm.ee
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              Well no reason other than that’s what it’s called here. Most people where I live would know what I’m talking about. I can’t be responsible for all people who don’t understand me. Im going to use the language that is commonly used where I live aren’t I? It’s not a room it’s a department.

  • 4grams@lemmy.world
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    I am fresh off a rather interesting conversation with my boomer boss. I’m a new manager and I’m working on policy and process. I was basically shut down, told to not bother documenting, that we have a way of doing things and he would spend every day with me for weeks to get it right if he had to.

    I asked again, wouldn’t it be easier and more efficient to have these processes documented and accepted rather than force muscle memory? I even offered to document the process during our training sessions but was told that were a small company and no one will look at documentation if we create it (we’re a 2000 employee manufacturing company).

    Oh well, I know how to work around obstinance and he’s pretty old.

    • deathbird@mander.xyz
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      That’s crazy. Anyone who is against documentation should not have a job that requires literacy.

      • jj4211@lemmy.world
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        Think there’s a balance.

        I work at a company where they have a documented process for everything. The thing is once some thing is in a document, it’s like some written in stone mandate that becomes unchangeable and inflexible. The stuff in the “oral tradition” remains flexible.

        Every so often new blood comes along, sees how dysfunctional the documented processes are, and proposes to fix the processes. Now in principle, they are right, but those of us who have been through a few iterations dread the outcome. Invariably the changes they propose to replace stupid existing processes are instead just added to existing processes, because some folks recognize the improvement but no one wants the blame for a mistake caused by leaving the old process behind. So each time we end up with more redundant stupid work.

        So while in principle, documented processes are right, sometimes the political reality is stupid.

    • sudo42@lemmy.world
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      Both of you are right.

      You meed to document processes. The minute you put them to paper they will be out of date. No one will read them. It has always been so.

      • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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        But it does allow you to go, “Ah here’s where the process went wrong, step 6 in the SOP. Why don’t you use it as a guide for the next one?” It then isn’t me vs them, it’s me helping them understand the documented process collaboratively.

      • MadBigote@lemmy.world
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        I just started at a new company that really invests time in documenting their processes, but the are poorly made by people that don’t understand the process itself and, in some cases, the process itself is poorly planned and has to be changed over and over again, to the point where the DTP looks nothing like what’s actually done…

        I was instructed to review the documentation you twin myself, but advised the process did not actually describe the process itself…

      • 4grams@lemmy.world
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        That’s precisely what I’m after, and what I’m proposing. I don’t care about the outputs, I care about the process that gets them to us.

        Also why they need to be living documents, but if we have to reinvent the wheel every time we need a new one, it slows things down. I should mention, I’m on the IT side.

        • sudo42@lemmy.world
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          There are Process people and there are Get It Done people. Both are necessary. In their extremes, both are bad. When they work together they can do great things.

  • Margot Robbie@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    It depends on the job. For most office jobs, I don’t think it matters that much if you show up a bit late to go to the bank or if you’re stuck in traffic, especially now that holding online meetings are easy.

    But for a job where being late means holding up the work of hundreds of people, say, being an actor on set, then showing up ahead of time is very important.

    • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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      When I got my first office job (after working retail and the like), I was uncomfortable when people would have a conversation and not be productive. It was burned into me that one should work at all times while “on the clock.” I learned the phrase, “time to lean is time to clean,” when working at a restaurant.

      We really walk on people who work in service jobs. It’s not right.

  • OmegaLemmy@discuss.online
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    1 day ago

    I was either 10 minutes early or 20 minutes late

    A bus ride taking 40 minutes to go to work sucks

    But the workplace was great so I don’t have much to complain about

  • sumguyonline@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Well then the boomer bitches can pay enough for us to live 10-15 mins from work, not a 2 hr drive in rush hour. This close eyed brutal existence they are forcing on us is about to implode on them. The barbarians kicked over the oil, they dropped their torches into it, and they are currently sharpening sticks to roast the ruling class with. This is not a damn game. You stole our lives from us, now we want yours. (The actual life, not your quality of living)

  • bstix@feddit.dk
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    2 days ago

    What is actually needed is the flexibility to do it.

    It really doesn’t matter for the task if I’m physically present between 8:15-16:15 instead of 8:00-16:00.

    If I have to be at my desk at 8 sharp, I will hit the rush hour both ways, having to leave my home at least 20 minutes earlier and waste that time in congestion for no good reason. I’ll be home about the same time, because the only difference is how long I get to stare at the steering wheel.

    I don’t care if the one option that saves me 1-2 hours of unpaid time every week is considered “tardy” by boomers. In my gen-x point of view, a lot of their lifestyle is wasteful for no other reason than selfmade “traditions”.

  • stevedice@sh.itjust.works
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    Used to be a phone salesman. Got there at least 15 minutes late every day. It got so bad that one time I got there 15 minutes early and when my boss saw me get there he shouted “Steve?! What time is it?!”. Nobody cared because I outsold everyone else by so much that I was making double what they were, until the boss of my boss’ boss decided to start micromanaging the branch and basically told me I would be fired unless I started showing up on time. Boomers have weird priorities.

    • nthavoc@lemmy.today
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      Their weird priorities is because they were raised with the dumbass idea that showing up early somehow increased production and is rewarding. Hell I showed up 15 minutes early everyday and the boomer was still pissed because he didn’t want to pay the overtime. Can’t even make up their minds!

      • TexMexBazooka@lemm.ee
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        Meh. It’s all about power. Same reason tucking in your shirt and being clean shaven is a big thing for some boomer execs, it’s just some bullshit they can’t use to force people to conform

        • stevedice@sh.itjust.works
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          This seems more likely. The same guy also wanted me to buy a suit because jeans and military boots give clients a bad image of the company. We did all of our business through the phone.

      • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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        yeah we have this whole thing about being logged on by 8.30 to start stand up at 8.37, so everyone logs on between 8 and 8.30 and then has breakfast or doomscrolls until the stand up starts. Which nobody listens to, because it’s poorly run, and then immediately after goes an makes another cup of coffee, bathroom run, and probably starts actual work around 9.30.

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    Maybe if the fucking workplace wasn’t so fucking far from home, or if public transportation was decent, people would be much less likely to arrive late at work.

    The other thing is, as soon as you realize that your job could be remote, which is true for a lot of office stuff, being “on time” matters fuck all.

    • DeadWorldWalking@lemmy.world
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      Force employers to pay hourly wages for at home prep and commuting and they will suddenly start caring about hiring people in their area

      • TexMexBazooka@lemm.ee
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        I’ve always thought not compensating for commutes was ridiculous. Ive demanded 15k raises for jobs because they wanted me to drive.

    • Poem_for_your_sprog@lemmy.world
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      All of the neighborhoods within walking or cycling distance of my workplace are literal crack dens where I’d be mugged and/or robbed within a week.

  • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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    This really depends on what you’re doing.

    If you’re in IT nobody should care. If you’re doing an artillery barrage then being late could mean a lot of your people die.

    Highly dependent on what you do for work. But if Bob the Bookstore Manager wants me to treat a cashier job with the same respect as a military mission then he better be willing to issue me a rifle and a 400,000 dollar life insurance policy

    • TeenieBopper@lemmy.world
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      Millennials are five years away from Get Off My Lawn years old tho.

      I’m an elder millennial, a lot fi my friends are sharing very boomer-esque “back when I was a kid, things were better because of XYZ.” Millennials are not the panacea you want them to be. A lot of them are just as dumb as boomers and these problems are systemic, not generational.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    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.

    • Drusas@fedia.io
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      My mother raised me on the saying that (with occasional exceptions, such as dinner and parties) “if you’re not ten minutes early, you’re late.”

      I don’t entirely agree with it, but it did result in me taking other people’s time very seriously and me being a very punctual person. It also caused anxiety about being punctual.

      • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        It also caused anxiety about being punctual.

        Exactly. If I’m running late I get pretty stressed. It’s physically uncomfortable.

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        taking other people’s time very seriously

        This is a kind thing to do, but I also put it squarely in the “respect is earned” category.

        I wouldn’t give someone hell for being 10 mins late because traffic or whatever, but if their standard is expecting me to be there half an hour early, just staring at the clock, won’t let me clock in early and just get to it, burning time I’ll never get back, anxiously awaiting to clock in on the dot and not a minute more or else…

        …They clearly don’t think much of my time and therefore the relationship is going to be adversarial in nature.