Overtime Compensation
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No abuse intended, but if you worked for me, you would be high on the layoff list during a downturn. The reasons are: 1) You are obviously not a team player - you may have gotten your assignment done on time, but you could be helping others with their assignments. 2) You are undermining the moral of the rest of the team by holding yourself above the "pain" of getting the task done on schedule. 3) You are demonstrating that you are not interested in the success of the company; therefore the company owes no loyalty to you. Every aggressive company has crunch times when it expects its salaried employees to put in additional effort. As long as it is not an ongoing practice, it is the price you pay for not having to punch a time clock and a higher salary than a shop worker.
Melting Away www.deals-house.com www.innovative--concepts.com
modified on Sunday, August 2, 2009 11:48 PM
Lets be honest here. The additional hours added in overtime are more than offset by the lack of productivity caused by the destroyed moral. Does any one even argue that statement? So what is to gain by forcing overtime?
Trollslayer wrote:
Meetings - where minutes are taken and hours are lost.
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Shelby Robetson wrote:
How does everyone typically get compensated for overtime? Pay, time off, a thanks, more overtime...?
Generally none of the above. Although technically I am never asked to work overtime, however I do get in trouble if the job is not finished on schedule. It's usually my fault that I don't always take this into account when I am asked how long something is going to take. The problem with a fudge factor is if I make it longer than some time schedule dictates the project can and will get simplified in some way that looks on the surface to reduce the work however in reality it may or may not reduce the time it takes to finish.
John
This is an interesting point. I don't mind working overtime if it is the result of me making an estimate and I miss it. My irritation comes in when i make an estimate, it doesnt fit with in an arbitrary deadline, so my estimate gets "adjusted" then my boss is unhappy when the adjusted estimate is not hit.
Trollslayer wrote:
Meetings - where minutes are taken and hours are lost.
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I don't get compensated for any kind of overtime. But then again, I enjoy what I do and that is my only motivation to overtime. I don't care about time as a whole as long as I enjoy it and enjoyment is my reward. In general, I think highly motivated teams think beyond the issue of straight time and overtime. They enjoy what they do. But I do think, companies should give few things like a gift certificate to a restaurant or a store. Nothing too fancy and nothing too little. (This is of course in addition to the raises/bonuses).
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
But then again, I enjoy what I do and that is my only motivation to overtime. I don't care about time as a whole as long as I enjoy it and enjoyment is my reward.
Well, the fact that you enjoy the work and willfully work overtime doesn't change the fact that the company benefits from your work, and I'd expect the company to compensate you appropriately. I've come to realize that people take the enthusiasm and passion for granted :(
Regards Senthil _____________________________ My Home Page |My Blog | My Articles | My Flickr | WinMacro
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How does everyone typically get compensated for overtime? Pay, time off, a thanks, more overtime...?
Trollslayer wrote:
Meetings - where minutes are taken and hours are lost.
I was told that I could listen to the radio at a reasonable volume from nine to eleven.
_____________________________ Will work for ... BRAINS!!! BRAINS!!!!
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No abuse intended, but if you worked for me, you would be high on the layoff list during a downturn. The reasons are: 1) You are obviously not a team player - you may have gotten your assignment done on time, but you could be helping others with their assignments. 2) You are undermining the moral of the rest of the team by holding yourself above the "pain" of getting the task done on schedule. 3) You are demonstrating that you are not interested in the success of the company; therefore the company owes no loyalty to you. Every aggressive company has crunch times when it expects its salaried employees to put in additional effort. As long as it is not an ongoing practice, it is the price you pay for not having to punch a time clock and a higher salary than a shop worker.
Melting Away www.deals-house.com www.innovative--concepts.com
modified on Sunday, August 2, 2009 11:48 PM
Snowman58 wrote:
No abuse intended, but if you worked for me, you would be high on the layoff list during a downturn.
Is there a guarantee that I work overtime almost all days, and I will *NEVER* be on the layoff list? Oh OK. That depends on the severity of the downturn? :rolleyes:
It is a crappy thing, but it's life -^ Carlo Pallini
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No abuse intended, but if you worked for me, you would be high on the layoff list during a downturn. The reasons are: 1) You are obviously not a team player - you may have gotten your assignment done on time, but you could be helping others with their assignments. 2) You are undermining the moral of the rest of the team by holding yourself above the "pain" of getting the task done on schedule. 3) You are demonstrating that you are not interested in the success of the company; therefore the company owes no loyalty to you. Every aggressive company has crunch times when it expects its salaried employees to put in additional effort. As long as it is not an ongoing practice, it is the price you pay for not having to punch a time clock and a higher salary than a shop worker.
Melting Away www.deals-house.com www.innovative--concepts.com
modified on Sunday, August 2, 2009 11:48 PM
Snowman58 wrote:
- You are demonstrating that you are not interested in the success of the company; therefore the company owes no loyalty to you.
Hmm, this seems to have drawn lots of negative comments. I've been through plenty of layoffs. Usually the first ones out the door are the lucky ones because they are the first ones to hit the jobs that will last through the downturn. They are also usually the only ones to have a chance at any compensation packages. When the second round of layoffs comes the management doesn't feel nearly as guilty and more money has been used up. People left behind get MORE overtime. The work being done by the people who left still has to be done and guess who gets to do it? Since I became a consultant/contractor, I've survived far more layoffs than the employees. Turns out that even though my loyalty is bought by dollars instead of a (shudder) relationship, the company's loyalty gets stronger the more they pay me. Ronin, and loving it.
_____________________________ Will work for ... BRAINS!!! BRAINS!!!!
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How does everyone typically get compensated for overtime? Pay, time off, a thanks, more overtime...?
Trollslayer wrote:
Meetings - where minutes are taken and hours are lost.
I am a contractor. I get paid 1.5 rate for every hour I go over the agreed number of hours for a basic rate. Our project was (and is so far behind) when I got there, overtime is expected :) At a minimum I do at least 12.5% overtime for the last 7 months.
xacc.ide
IronScheme - 1.0 beta 4 - out now!
((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) -
By slacking off later.
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Eh... The mistake would be that he didn't really have to be "hard" on Gary at all: putting Gary in a hypothetical scenario and making assumptions as to his work ethic and attitude based on his response to a specific question wasn't at all necessary, if Snowman58's intention was to, say, emphasize the value of teamwork. This sort of response - "If i was your boss..." - is strangely frequent on CP, and i've never quite figured out why. Maybe because i've never been someone else's boss, it's hard for me to appreciate the temptation to look at everyone as a potential underling such work inspires... :-\
Shog9 wrote:
Maybe because i've never been someone else's boss
Same here. I nominally have a couple of minions at the moment, but it's more like I'm technical lead for the stuff they're working on.
Shog9 wrote:
the temptation to look at everyone as a potential underling
Cue the quote from Ghostbusters: "Are you a god?" "Well... no." "Then DIE!"
Software Zen:
delete this;
Fold With Us![^] -
3) You are demonstrating that you are not interested in the success of the company; therefore the company owes no loyalty to you. Loyalty from the company? Does that even exist anymore?
dighn wrote:
Loyalty from the company? Does that even exist anymore?
It reminds me of comic I saw ages ago, before the internet. "I work for money, if you want loyalty, get a dog."
xacc.ide
IronScheme - 1.0 beta 4 - out now!
((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) -
Did you miss the part where he stated he completed his assignments within the schedule? It's been my experience, without exception, that companies that "expect" employees to do overtime are both poorly managed and abusive.
A few years ago, I interviewed with a place where the interviewer said "We expect our employees to put in at least 50 hours per week". I responded that I was not some butt-munching ass-kissing plebe fresh out of college willing to take just any job that came along, and he was sorely mistaken if he thought a 50-year-old programmer with almost 30 years of experience in the business was going to agree to working conditions like that. While he was sitting there sputtering and turning a little pale (because I had stood up to continue my rant, and maybe because I was yelling), I left and took a higher paying job elsewhere. Two days later, these bozos called me for a 2nd interview. Amazing...
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001 -
I was told that I could listen to the radio at a reasonable volume from nine to eleven.
_____________________________ Will work for ... BRAINS!!! BRAINS!!!!
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3) You are demonstrating that you are not interested in the success of the company; therefore the company owes no loyalty to you. Loyalty from the company? Does that even exist anymore?
If you're treated right, it just naturally happens. I would not work overtime if asked, but I would probably volunteer if I saw a real need.
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001 -
I think people have been pretty hard on you here. I think all your points are valid. Your only mistake is that you were a little hard on Gary who is a regular. :)
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No abuse intended, but if you worked for me, you would be high on the layoff list during a downturn. The reasons are: 1) You are obviously not a team player - you may have gotten your assignment done on time, but you could be helping others with their assignments. 2) You are undermining the moral of the rest of the team by holding yourself above the "pain" of getting the task done on schedule. 3) You are demonstrating that you are not interested in the success of the company; therefore the company owes no loyalty to you. Every aggressive company has crunch times when it expects its salaried employees to put in additional effort. As long as it is not an ongoing practice, it is the price you pay for not having to punch a time clock and a higher salary than a shop worker.
Melting Away www.deals-house.com www.innovative--concepts.com
modified on Sunday, August 2, 2009 11:48 PM
See the crunch time can happen few times. People would fall sick to come through those phases. But if it starts to happen every week and every month, it's time to move on. Life's too short to get stuck with shit jobs that suck your blood. If the job is interesting? the coder loves it? then fine it's a different story.
Starting to think people post kid pics in their profiles because that was the last time they were cute - Jeremy.
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I don't get compensated for any kind of overtime. But then again, I enjoy what I do and that is my only motivation to overtime. I don't care about time as a whole as long as I enjoy it and enjoyment is my reward. In general, I think highly motivated teams think beyond the issue of straight time and overtime. They enjoy what they do. But I do think, companies should give few things like a gift certificate to a restaurant or a store. Nothing too fancy and nothing too little. (This is of course in addition to the raises/bonuses).
-
A few years ago, I interviewed with a place where the interviewer said "We expect our employees to put in at least 50 hours per week". I responded that I was not some butt-munching ass-kissing plebe fresh out of college willing to take just any job that came along, and he was sorely mistaken if he thought a 50-year-old programmer with almost 30 years of experience in the business was going to agree to working conditions like that. While he was sitting there sputtering and turning a little pale (because I had stood up to continue my rant, and maybe because I was yelling), I left and took a higher paying job elsewhere. Two days later, these bozos called me for a 2nd interview. Amazing...
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
-----
"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001It would have been worth it to go back for the second interview and watch the guy have a coronary when you told him your price had doubled.
Software Zen:
delete this;
Fold With Us![^] -
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
But then again, I enjoy what I do and that is my only motivation to overtime. I don't care about time as a whole as long as I enjoy it and enjoyment is my reward.
Well, the fact that you enjoy the work and willfully work overtime doesn't change the fact that the company benefits from your work, and I'd expect the company to compensate you appropriately. I've come to realize that people take the enthusiasm and passion for granted :(
Regards Senthil _____________________________ My Home Page |My Blog | My Articles | My Flickr | WinMacro
S. Senthil Kumar wrote:
I've come to realize that people take the enthusiasm and passion for granted
Yes! But it does not mean that you should stop from doing what you enjoy. Also if you do what you enjoy then it means that you can find other jobs easily as you become good at it. So now you can work on your terms and not on the company's terms and company has to compensate you fairly.
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Eh... The mistake would be that he didn't really have to be "hard" on Gary at all: putting Gary in a hypothetical scenario and making assumptions as to his work ethic and attitude based on his response to a specific question wasn't at all necessary, if Snowman58's intention was to, say, emphasize the value of teamwork. This sort of response - "If i was your boss..." - is strangely frequent on CP, and i've never quite figured out why. Maybe because i've never been someone else's boss, it's hard for me to appreciate the temptation to look at everyone as a potential underling such work inspires... :-\
Yes he is rude to Gary that is what I stated and so his point did not come across. In other words he tried to be John Simmons (in some ways) but he failed miserably at that. If I remove that rudeness from his post I find that he makes sense.
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smcnulty2000 wrote:
reasonable volume from nine to eleven.
PM? ;P
xacc.ide
IronScheme - 1.0 beta 4 - out now!
((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x)))Well they *are* management. They have risen to their level of incompetence... Familiar with Milton Waddams and his red Swingline Stapler ? http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0151804/quotes[^]
_____________________________ Will work for ... BRAINS!!! BRAINS!!!!