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Employee Teaches Manager A Lesson By Maliciously Complying To Her Rule About Clocking Out Only With Permission
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Employee Teaches Manager A Lesson By Maliciously Complying To Her Rule About Clocking Out Only With Permission

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After a long day at work, many of us want to go home, make a hot cup of tea, and unwind from the daily stress. But imagine walking up to your manager, telling them you’re about to clock out, only to hear them say you need to wait for permission to leave. Even after you’re done with your shift.

While this scenario might sound absurd, this is precisely what happened to user Brooklynisqueerr who recently shared her story on Malicious Compliance. The author works at a kitchen appliances store and always gives her supervisor a heads up once her shift has ended. Yet, one day, the user felt seriously baffled after the manager seemed annoyed by her words.

It seems that the boss didn’t want the employee to leave, so she made a new rule on the spot: “Next time, you need to wait for a manager to let you go home.” If there’s one thing we know about senseless work rules, they can backfire in the most beautiful way. Read on for how the author maliciously complied and share your thoughts in the comments below.

Recently, a retail worker shared a post of how her manager said she needs to receive permission to clock out, even when her shift has ended

Image credits: Oxana Melis (not an actual photo)

Instead of arguing with her supervisor, the author maliciously complied

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Image credits: Sharon McCutcheon (not an actual photo)

We managed to get in touch with Brooklynisqueerr, who was kind enough to have a little chat about this whole incident. The author told Bored Panda that she decided to create this post on Malicious Compliance because she enjoys reading and listening to stories on this subreddit. “I wanted to make my own contribution to add to the fun,” she said.

The user revealed that she did not expect her post to attract so much attention. In just a few days, the thread has amassed more than 23.3K upvotes and a few hundred comments. “I didn’t think people would find it as interesting as they did, to be honest,” Brooklynisqueerr mentioned.

But it looks like many enjoyed reading about this absurd situation that the user had to experience at work. While some commenters started sharing similar stories from their jobs, other Redditors mentioned that the manager should discuss new rules with the employees first. “It always pays off to treat your employees like people and with respect,” one user wrote.

“I spoke to my coworkers after my manager gave me that rule and they all seemed confused by it,” Brooklynisqueerr added. One of them even told the author, “Yeah, that manager enjoys making up her own rules sometimes.”

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We were curious to learn whether there were any updates on the story. The user told us that nothing else really happened. “The rule was dropped and I pretty much went back to asking to go home when my shift was over. This was what we normally did and my manager has never made a comment about it since.”

Brooklynisqueerr guessed that the reason so many people found the thread relevant could be because it’s always interesting to see how rules set up by the management backfire. “It’s a moment that everyone hopes to have, a moment where they can turn a manager’s rules back on them,” she said.

The user wanted to add that bosses should not be snippy to people “with nothing but free time and expect them not to try and use it against you.”

Later on, the user added some more updates to the story

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Rules should make your life simpler, not more complicated. Yet, according to CV-Library research, over 60 percent of Brits have worked for a company that carried out unnecessary and bizarre rules. Moreover, more than half of professionals were unhappy about having to abide by these rules.

The most ridiculous things that bosses in the UK were implementing were no food or drinks on the table, docked pay for being a few minutes late, and showing a doctor’s note for any kind of illness. As an employer, “you don’t want to make employees feel uncomfortable or untrusted by enforcing outrageous and unnecessary rules upon them,” Lee Biggins, founder and managing director of CV-Library, said.

“This could result in them leaving to find a more welcoming work culture elsewhere. So it’s important that you get the balance right.”

The survey also revealed that over 67 percent of employees believed that their bosses did not have the right to apply such rules at their workplace. Biggins mentioned that the results from the survey are concerning. “To avoid any conflicts, you need to ensure that your company rules aren’t discriminatory or disrespectful towards employees in any way.”

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He continued: “You should think about running the rules by your HR department for a second opinion – this may flag up anything you missed.” And, most importantly, bosses and managers need to have a conversation with their employees first. Otherwise, the workers could start feeling resentful or believe they’re being left out on purpose.

Here’s how Redditors reacted to this whole situation

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Ieva Gailiūtė

Ieva Gailiūtė

Writer, Community member

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Ieva is a writer at Bored Panda who graduated in Scandinavian studies from Vilnius University. After learning the Swedish language and getting completely lost in the world of Scandinavian mythology, she figured out that translating and writing is what she's passionate about. When not writing, Ieva enjoys making jewelry, going on hikes, reading and drinking coffee.

Read less »
Ieva Gailiūtė

Ieva Gailiūtė

Writer, Community member

Ieva is a writer at Bored Panda who graduated in Scandinavian studies from Vilnius University. After learning the Swedish language and getting completely lost in the world of Scandinavian mythology, she figured out that translating and writing is what she's passionate about. When not writing, Ieva enjoys making jewelry, going on hikes, reading and drinking coffee.

Kotryna Br

Kotryna Br

Author, BoredPanda staff

Read more »

Kotryna is a Photo Editor at Bored Panda with a BA in Graphic Design. Before Bored Panda, she worked as a freelance graphic designer and illiustrator. When not editing, she enjoys working with clay, drawing, playing board games and drinking good tea.

Read less »

Kotryna Br

Kotryna Br

Author, BoredPanda staff

Kotryna is a Photo Editor at Bored Panda with a BA in Graphic Design. Before Bored Panda, she worked as a freelance graphic designer and illiustrator. When not editing, she enjoys working with clay, drawing, playing board games and drinking good tea.

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Two_rolling_black_eyes
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This can happen anywhere but its a very American thing to do. We're slow so I'll send you home early and avoid having to pay you benefits by keeping you under 32 hours. We're a little busy and we understaffed on purpose so I'll force you to work 2 hours you weren't scheduled for. Its the hourly retail/service employee working a lower wage who gets treated like this more than the person sitting in an office working the 9-5. Its hard to plan both your life and your finances when both are arbitrarily changed without your consent. Emergencies happen so schedules change but many company's labor plan is based on not worrying about the employee.

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

Emergencies happen outside work, too, Never ask to leave then - inform that you are about to!

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

Business School grad: "I'm the boss! I'm the manager! Everyone has to do what I say!" (Workers maliciously comply, and the BSg is toast...)

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

Worked at a store that had a carpet area for departments and a floor area for the walkways between them. In their wisdom, they decided that the best way to save money was to have one employee working for every 3 department areas. However, we were only trained in one. So if you worked cameras, you were not trained on DVDs or Small Appliances even though they were near and we're often just showing people where something was or looking something up about it. But then we weren't in our trained for area. So it was made a rule that no employee could leave their carpet without permission and you could get fired for it. Cue all part timers standing right the other side of the floor from a customer and refusing to help them. "I'm sorry, if I leave my carpet I'll get fired."

Load More Comments
Two_rolling_black_eyes
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This can happen anywhere but its a very American thing to do. We're slow so I'll send you home early and avoid having to pay you benefits by keeping you under 32 hours. We're a little busy and we understaffed on purpose so I'll force you to work 2 hours you weren't scheduled for. Its the hourly retail/service employee working a lower wage who gets treated like this more than the person sitting in an office working the 9-5. Its hard to plan both your life and your finances when both are arbitrarily changed without your consent. Emergencies happen so schedules change but many company's labor plan is based on not worrying about the employee.

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

Emergencies happen outside work, too, Never ask to leave then - inform that you are about to!

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

Business School grad: "I'm the boss! I'm the manager! Everyone has to do what I say!" (Workers maliciously comply, and the BSg is toast...)

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

Worked at a store that had a carpet area for departments and a floor area for the walkways between them. In their wisdom, they decided that the best way to save money was to have one employee working for every 3 department areas. However, we were only trained in one. So if you worked cameras, you were not trained on DVDs or Small Appliances even though they were near and we're often just showing people where something was or looking something up about it. But then we weren't in our trained for area. So it was made a rule that no employee could leave their carpet without permission and you could get fired for it. Cue all part timers standing right the other side of the floor from a customer and refusing to help them. "I'm sorry, if I leave my carpet I'll get fired."

Load More Comments
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