Zimbabwe
Banned
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2021
- Messages
- 2,382
- Reaction score
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- Age
- 28
There are definitely jobs where doing any more than what it takes to not get fired won't earn you any direct benefits in terms of pay or control. Also you run the risk of encountering 'the curse of competence' where a reputation for good performance earns you the honour of doing your work, and someone else's work too (The reward for hard work is more work).
You usually only get promoted if a manager-type quits, and they tend to stick around for years at a time. There is also the problem of effective work ending up reducing your pay. If you always do the work quickly, they may reduce your hours, effectively penalizing you for doing a good job. That may also upset coworkers who are sandbagging to milk the organization for pay (a common problem in manufacturing environments where piecework quotas are adjusted by average work rates). How you deal with that is up to you and your sense of ethics, but one option is to do the work to your personal high standard, and then do something that benefits you in the slack time. That way you get the benefit of the 'workout', the supplemental work, and also the pay and coworker approval.
Humans are lazy because billions of years of natural selection rewarded animals that would conserve energy rather than waste it, and so lazyness, up to a point, was an advantage instead of a disadvantage. (The point at which it stops being an advantage is the point where it interferes with eating, mating, or escaping danger.)
@BackInTheGame78
@MatureDJ
@richcohen
@Plinco
@SW15
@mrgoodstuff
You usually only get promoted if a manager-type quits, and they tend to stick around for years at a time. There is also the problem of effective work ending up reducing your pay. If you always do the work quickly, they may reduce your hours, effectively penalizing you for doing a good job. That may also upset coworkers who are sandbagging to milk the organization for pay (a common problem in manufacturing environments where piecework quotas are adjusted by average work rates). How you deal with that is up to you and your sense of ethics, but one option is to do the work to your personal high standard, and then do something that benefits you in the slack time. That way you get the benefit of the 'workout', the supplemental work, and also the pay and coworker approval.
Humans are lazy because billions of years of natural selection rewarded animals that would conserve energy rather than waste it, and so lazyness, up to a point, was an advantage instead of a disadvantage. (The point at which it stops being an advantage is the point where it interferes with eating, mating, or escaping danger.)
@BackInTheGame78
@MatureDJ
@richcohen
@Plinco
@SW15
@mrgoodstuff