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^This. My previous boss was a divorced 55 year old women that LIVED for work. It was the reason she was divorced, and she was company all the way. Would call and text me at 8:00 at night on occasion. Its a very difficult situation because you are perceived as lazy to her if you work less than she does.
Oh jeez, I've worked for a number of these. I've realized that the only way around it is to work the hours you are supposed to work and show no signs of life otherwise. Brown nosing by answering emails/phone calls at 9pm doesn't work. For promotions, they will pick people they like over people that do the job better any day. Once you set the precedent that you can be reached only during work hours they will stop bothering you. If the boss calls you into the office and asks why you didn't respond to an email at 9pm at night, then you have the conversation about boundaries. At that point it can go either way, but unless it specifically states some where that you have to answer emails at all times during the day, I don't see what they can do. The people that live to work will never see your side of it anyway.
On a side note, if I was 55 divorced I would find a hobby. Who the hell wants to work all the damn time.
"Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part"
The only way to deal with managers like this is to adopt a dose of apathy and stand by your guns. It doesn't sound like he's directly ordered you to cover these unplanned shifts and threatened your job if you don't, so when he asks/begs just simply say sorry, no can do. Don't get upset, don't argue, don't ask why he let others off before securing their replacement, don't try to solve his problem. Just calmly and quietly say sorry. It sounds to me like you have been a bit of a pushover so far and given in to get him out of a bind. That will only make you the person he turns to in these situatiuons.
"Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part"
The only way to deal with managers like this is to adopt a dose of apathy and stand by your guns. It doesn't sound like he's directly ordered you to cover these unplanned shifts and threatened your job if you don't, so when he asks/begs just simply say sorry, no can do. Don't get upset, don't argue, don't ask why he let others off before securing their replacement, don't try to solve his problem. Just calmly and quietly say sorry. It sounds to me like you have been a bit of a pushover so far and given in to get him out of a bind. That will only make you the person he turns to in these situatiuons.
This is totally true. Don't get upset that other people get extra time off or whatever. I've learned to be this way. What my boss does for person A in no way applies to me. If he fails to have coverage, not my problem either.
"Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part"
The only way to deal with managers like this is to adopt a dose of apathy and stand by your guns. It doesn't sound like he's directly ordered you to cover these unplanned shifts and threatened your job if you don't, so when he asks/begs just simply say sorry, no can do. Don't get upset, don't argue, don't ask why he let others off before securing their replacement, don't try to solve his problem. Just calmly and quietly say sorry. It sounds to me like you have been a bit of a pushover so far and given in to get him out of a bind. That will only make you the person he turns to in these situatiuons.
Bingo. Considering that this manager has now at least twice allowed too many people time off he doesn't sound too bright.
The OP is a pushover. I notice he mentioned the manager didn't cancel his plans when he had no one to work, well that is what needs to happen. It might take the manager having to cancel his plans to learn how to schedule.
I e-mailed my boss back to explain the conflicts I had with the new schedule, and I am waiting for him to respond to me. We are in a busy time right now and have all worked different hours, so I was expecting a change in a few weeks after the busy season was over. But he just reached out to everyone and said "this is the new schedule effective immediately." Just a surprise to have it sprung on me right now.
So we'll see what comes out of it when we get a chance to talk.
Were the onsite colleagues consulted on the new schedule that your boss published? You stated that you were not consulted.
Permanent schedule changes in a multi-shift environment must be done with all participants. People do have obligations that are unmoveable (school, children, second jobs).
My theory has to do with the fact that you work remotely. The boss may be a talker/ negotiator type, so that those colleagues who are in the office can talk the boss into the concessions they want regarding scheduling. Since you are not physically there, and I suspect you mostly communicate via text/ e-mail like many remote workers, you are at a disadvantage. This boss may not be able to handle negotiation without face-to-face talk. How quickly does the boss reply to e-mails?
I've worked with a few of these people while working remotely, and it is maddening, especially when changes that affect everyone are made. You may have to go onsite for a few hours per week just as "face time maintenance." I've seen managers who only know "management while walking around" and who may as well be illiterate, with a complete lack of response to written communications. When pressed on something that was presented multiple times in writing, they might act totally surprised -- "I don't recall talking about this." For some people, talking is the only communication they do - both inbound and outbound.
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