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Boss Tried To Teach Late Employee A Lesson, Ended Up Having To Pay Overtime When Supervisor Saw His Team Helping Out Other Departments
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Boss Tried To Teach Late Employee A Lesson, Ended Up Having To Pay Overtime When Supervisor Saw His Team Helping Out Other Departments

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They say power tends to corrupt folks, and while that is true in some cases, in others, power doesn’t really corrupt as much as it just makes some folks fools in a myriad of ways. Some don’t think anymore, others start making somewhat, if not wildly, random choices, and yet others simply don’t know how to control it, but the end result is the same—it brings about a certain degree of chaos.

And chaos is the best environment for some malicious compliance, or, as one person demanded it be called, malevolent conformity. This time we have a boss who caught wind of an employee being a tad bit late for work, demanding a clock-in and clock-out inspection, which ended up working in the employee’s favor, all thanks to OP.

More Info: Reddit

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    While tracking time at work is important, there’s often that one dude who gets personally offended when someone is late, and then tattles on them

    Image source: TehBoris (not the actual photo)

    So, meet u/Danjcb, or Dan, as we’ll refer to him throughout the article. Some time ago, Dan used to be a supervisor of a small team at a workplace that did clock-ins to track work time. But despite the objective means of time tracking and management, some still get absolutely anal about it, demanding everyone clock in and out not a second too soon or too late.

    This is that story.

    Well, this is that story, except OP, when asked to double-check the clockings, did some malicious compliance

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    Image source: Danjcb

    Dan explained that he had a team of amazing people whose performance was outstanding, so he had no doubt in them, but this one other manager “caught” one of his teammates arriving to work late. This immediately led to them letting the boss man of the company know this happened, and even more immediately led to OP getting the order to check the time tracking to make sure they were docked for it.

    Now, the team had great people working there, so OP, as the supervisor, knew that nobody would ever slack off or come in a bit later without a good reason or without staying a few minutes extra after work, so there was no worry there. But something didn’t sit right with him either.

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    Cue mal-… malevolent conformity.

    You see, OP knew his team was all good, honest, hard-working employees, so the time wasn’t relevant, but what was was the surprise overtime

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    Image source: Danjcb

    So, OP got crackin’ on figuring out the actual work times. And, well, there were minutes off schedule here and there, but when you added it all up, it quickly turned into overtime. Overtime that sometimes went beyond the 1.5× tariff and shifted into 2× territory. You can guess why this would be a pain for the employer.

    Turns out, OP’s team were helping out in other areas when they could, so not only were they doing their jobs well at this point, but they were earning brownie points for helping others. And the result was “it added up to a lot.”

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    For good measure, OP also went through the proper channels, double checking it all with the folks down at financial, and then a meeting was called. The agenda was to let him know everything.

    “He was not pleased.”

    So, in good malicious compliance fashion, he did count the overall time, and, sure, there were some discrepancies, but there was a lot of overtime that the boss-man now needed to pay out

    Image source: Blake Patterson (not the actual photo)

    But it was worth it, not only because Dan defended his team, but also just because someone came in a bit too late to work doesn’t mean there has to be a huge investigation about it. But this time around, this investigation ended up favoring each individual in Dan’s team.

    Well, the wink wink belligerent conformity community love the story, not only because it’s a classic, yet not too long, tale of someone getting what they asked for, but also because there was a huge payout in the end.

    Others shared their own stories, albeit short, but still malligerently bellicious in some ways. And yet others were loving Dan and bashing on management who still didn’t learn that you can’t mess with your employees or else you will get complied with in the most mischievous ways.

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    And folks online loved the story, leading to 25K upvotes with 25 Reddit awards

     

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    The story attracted a lot of attention, more specifically in the form of 25,000 upvotes, 25 Reddit awards, and a bit shy of 500 comments. And you can check it all out here, or read our other bellicious conforpliance articles here.

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    But, don’t let me get you carried away, literally, without sharing your thoughts and opinions on Dan’s approach to teaching management a lesson or the story in general in the comment section below!

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    Robertas Lisickis

    Robertas Lisickis

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    Some time ago, Robertas used to spend his days watching how deep the imprint in his chair will become as he wrote for Bored Panda. Wrote about pretty much everything under and beyond the sun. Not anymore, though. He's now probably playing Gwent or hosting Dungeons and Dragons adventures for those with an inclination for chaos.

    Read less »
    Robertas Lisickis

    Robertas Lisickis

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Some time ago, Robertas used to spend his days watching how deep the imprint in his chair will become as he wrote for Bored Panda. Wrote about pretty much everything under and beyond the sun. Not anymore, though. He's now probably playing Gwent or hosting Dungeons and Dragons adventures for those with an inclination for chaos.

    Saulė Tolstych

    Saulė Tolstych

    Author, Community member

    Read more »

    Saulė is a photo editor at Bored Panda with bachelor's degree in Multimedia and Computer Design. The thing that relaxes her the best is going into YouTube rabbit hole. In her free time she loves painting, embroidering and taking walks in nature.

    Read less »

    Saulė Tolstych

    Saulė Tolstych

    Author, Community member

    Saulė is a photo editor at Bored Panda with bachelor's degree in Multimedia and Computer Design. The thing that relaxes her the best is going into YouTube rabbit hole. In her free time she loves painting, embroidering and taking walks in nature.

    What do you think ?
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    Random Anon
    Community Member
    2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is why sometimes it's better to just give and take on these things. You want staff to be in at 9 AM sharp? Then work stops at 5 PM sharp. If you cannot accept that, then be flexible. Personally I don't care if my people start work at 9 AM or 3 PM. As long as tasks get done and projects get completed so the company can make payroll with a little extra to keep the lights on, I'm fine.

    Remi
    Community Member
    2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is why work times shoud be tallied at all times. Not to police the workers, but to make sure they get paid fairly. Imho if a company advertises how they don't track the times claiming they're "chill like that", it's a huge red flag and you can bet you end up doing huge amounts of unpaid overtime

    Nefarious McFarious
    Community Member
    2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I feel like ESH. The guy knowingly didn't pay his team OT which amounted to "a lot". If he didn't have another job, how long would he have let it go unpaid...

    Callie C
    Community Member
    2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Nailed it. OP is just as guilty as the company that didn't want to track their time. He was part of the problem. So many massive violations of not only company policy, but actual laws. This isn't 'malicious compliance' or any of these other cute little buzzwords being tossed about trying to make the underdog employee the hero against the bad corporate evil... It's simply applying and abiding by the law.

    Load More Replies...
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    Random Anon
    Community Member
    2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is why sometimes it's better to just give and take on these things. You want staff to be in at 9 AM sharp? Then work stops at 5 PM sharp. If you cannot accept that, then be flexible. Personally I don't care if my people start work at 9 AM or 3 PM. As long as tasks get done and projects get completed so the company can make payroll with a little extra to keep the lights on, I'm fine.

    Remi
    Community Member
    2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is why work times shoud be tallied at all times. Not to police the workers, but to make sure they get paid fairly. Imho if a company advertises how they don't track the times claiming they're "chill like that", it's a huge red flag and you can bet you end up doing huge amounts of unpaid overtime

    Nefarious McFarious
    Community Member
    2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I feel like ESH. The guy knowingly didn't pay his team OT which amounted to "a lot". If he didn't have another job, how long would he have let it go unpaid...

    Callie C
    Community Member
    2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Nailed it. OP is just as guilty as the company that didn't want to track their time. He was part of the problem. So many massive violations of not only company policy, but actual laws. This isn't 'malicious compliance' or any of these other cute little buzzwords being tossed about trying to make the underdog employee the hero against the bad corporate evil... It's simply applying and abiding by the law.

    Load More Replies...
    Load More Comments
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