open thread – April 3, 2026 by Alison Green on April 3, 2026 It’s the Friday open thread! The comment section on this post is open for discussion with other readers on any work-related questions that you want to talk about (that includes school). If you want an answer from me, emailing me is still your best bet*, but this is a chance to take your questions to other readers. * If you submitted a question to me recently, please do not repost it here, as it may be in my queue to answer. You may also like:my office has a burn book we all have to read and signmy employee sent me a "letter of intent" to look for another jobneed help finding a job? start here { 383 comments }
should my boss message me before calling on Teams, how to accommodate an autistic meltdown, and more by Alison Green on April 3, 2026 It’s four answers to four questions. Here we go… 1. Should my boss message me before calling on Teams? My boss recently called me very early in the morning (7:50 am) through Teams without notice. I was working already; I got online at 7 (my work hours are 7 am – 4 pm) but it bothered me and got me a little anxious. I let it go as a missed call and wrote to her immediately after saying that I was ready now. Was that okay or is it okay for her to call without messaging me first to ask if I’m available? Or just because she’s the boss is accepted? The fact that was so early caught me by surprise, because she’s usually online later, but I think it would have bothered me regardless of the time because she didn’t message me first. Many offices have a cultural expectation that people will message first to check if you’re available before calling, but even then there are still times where your boss may need to just call you and won’t message first. If it’s during your work hours, that’s not an overstep. The assumption isn’t necessarily that you’ll be available on the spot (you might be on another call or away from your desk), but it’s not wrong or inappropriate for her to call without warning. (That would also be true if she were a peer, not your boss, but your boss in particular has the leeway to do it.) 2. How to accommodate people who have outbursts for medical reasons I’m asking a question on behalf of my community of autistic folks. Some people with autism experience violent panic attacks when exhausted or profoundly overstimulated. Within the autism community, these attacks are called “meltdowns.” Most people with relatively mild autism don’t suffer from these attacks to a debilitating extent, but some autistic people, especially those who are more profoundly impacted by their autism, do. These attacks are involuntary and often cannot be controlled. Sometimes they can sometimes be lessened or managed with therapy or medication, but not always. Because these attacks are violent and potentially dangerous, and because there is so much misunderstanding around them, people who experience regular meltdowns are frequently unable to work, even if they are otherwise highly qualified. Autism community boards often feature posts by people with meltdowns trying to figure out how to make a living in spite of these attacks. What advice would you give people in this situation? Is it legitimate to ask for accommodations to deal with these attacks–perhaps remote work, or off-hours/night work? Are there any other accommodations that might be possible? Is there anything else to suggest? It’s absolutely legitimate to ask for accommodations, and remote work sounds like it could be one of them if it’s feasible for the job. Also, if a person’s meltdowns are likely to be triggered by something in the work environment, an effective accommodation could be minimizing or removing that trigger (for example, if a noisy environment or disruption to routine can cause them, you could look at accommodations geared toward avoiding those triggers — like a quieter workspace or at least a more sensory-friendly space you can move to when needed, the understanding that you sometimes may simply need to get up and leave, or advance notice when there will be changes to a routine). Not every accommodation will be possible for every job, but an employer should be willing to enter into the ADA-mandated interactive process to try to find a solution, and there are lots of options between the extremes of “coworkers are exposed to violent outbursts” and “otherwise qualified person who has autistic meltdowns just can’t work.” 3. Mentioning in an interview that a good friend works on the team My partner was invited to an interview for a supervisory position in their field with a new organization where a mutual friend of ours also works. As it happens, we both know this friend from a previous job all three of us worked at about eight years ago. The role would make my partner and friend co-supervisors to a shared pool of employees, which actually kind of mirrors the job situation we were in all those years ago (it’s a small industry!). Should my partner disclose the friendship to the hiring committee? On one hand, this doesn’t seem like it raises any conflict of interest issues, it’s just a job where they’d be working with a good friend. On the other hand, would a hiring committee think it weird if they don’t mention it at all, and it comes out on the first day of work that two of the supervisors are good friends and have known each other all along? To be clear, we haven’t sought out our friend’s advice on how to prepare for the interview, or asked anything of them to help my partner out in any way, so we’re wondering what you would recommend as the safest choice in this situation. It should really come from the friend — because it would be pretty weird if your partner’s friend knows their good friend is interviewing for a job where they would be co-managers and doesn’t mention that to anyone else involved in the hiring. The hiring committee deserves the opportunity to be aware of the dynamic and think about how it might impact things, and if the friend has any input into the hiring decision, it would be a problem not to acknowledge a personal relationship with one of the candidates. So it’s primarily the friend who should be doing this. But your partner should also find an opportunity to mention in the interview that they worked closely in a similar role with Valentina Warbleworth eight years ago. 4. I work different hours than my boss My job doesn’t pay very well for my skills. It is sales and I have good results, but my company doesn’t make enough money to pay me accordingly. I put in an honest effort, and try to limit my time at work to what is reasonable given my salary. As a result, I leave work to work out earlier than others. I arrive around 8-8:30 and leave around 3:30-4. I probably work a little less than others, though am typically the first in the office and I don’t know when others leave. I have a new manager, and he comes to the office 1 to 1.5 hours later than I do. This results in me leaving way earlier than he presumably does. I’ve been honest about my salary and time approach (I actually have discussed with my former and new bosses that I don’t think I should be working full-time given my pay, and they didn’t object), but I don’t want to look like I leave ludicrously early. How can I get credit for the time and effort I put in earlier in the day? Or should I just get a new job that I can feel good about putting more effort into? I generally like what I do, and less working out isn’t an option. People work different schedules, so the fact that you’re in earlier and leaving earlier than others shouldn’t be an issue as long as your boss is fine with your hours. If you’re working less overall, that could be an issue, but it sounds like you’ve been straightforward with your boss about your schedule and the reasons for it and he hasn’t objected. You can certainly make a point of ensuring he knows you’re there at 8-8:30 even if he’s not — like by sending timestamped messages around 8 and so forth. But it sounds like you have reasons for what you’re doing, you’ve laid them out, and you can continue on with it until and unless he expresses concern. (Of course, it’s possible that he doesn’t like it and just hasn’t told you — and that you won’t find out until you’re suddenly on a layoff list or something like that — but you could also ask him directly if he foresees your schedule being an issue or not.) Whether you should get a different job is a whole different question but, based on what you’ve said, it doesn’t sound like this schedule would need to be a reason to. You may also like:my employee accidentally sent a rude message about me ... to mecan I tell a coworker to read his emails and stop calling me?my boss flirts with (and sometimes sleeps with) our vendors -- and tells me all about it { 400 comments }
as a manager, when should I delegate work versus doing it myself? by Alison Green on April 2, 2026 A reader writes: I’m a relatively new manager, and I’m still finding my footing when it comes to shifting from being an individual contributor to overseeing a team. One thing I struggle with is knowing when it’s appropriate to delegate tasks to my team versus doing them myself. I manage a communications team of four at a university. When my manager assigns me work — things like drafting communications on a specific topic or reviewing copy from another department — I’m never sure whether she expects me to do it personally or for me to assign it to someone on my team. I feel like she is expecting me to delegate them: these tasks fall squarely within my team’s remit, and I do handle the more strategic or planning-focused work that she asks for. But because my manager phrases things as “can you…,” I end up second‑guessing myself. Even when I do decide to delegate, I feel awkward about it. My team balances daily work with long-term projects, so it’s not always easy for me to gauge their weekly workload. I often find myself over‑apologizing or softening the request, and sometimes I just do the work myself because it feels easier than navigating the conversation. Complicating things further: one team member is on long-term sick leave, one works part‑time on mainly long-term projects, one is very junior, and so the fourth ends up taking on most of the ad‑hoc work that comes in. As a general rule, work should flow downward to the lowest-level person who can do it well enough, so that more senior (and more expensive) people’s time is freed up for work that only they can do. But then you need to balance that against the rest of the person’s workload and how it should all be prioritized. Beyond that, you can also balance it against things like “I know Jane really loves this topic” or “Jane really hates writing on X but Barnaby has said he doesn’t mind it” or “Barnaby has been asking to develop his skills in this area and I have enough time this week that I could coach him through it.” There may be some things that have to stay with you, like when something has complicated or sensitive messaging, or when you’re the only one with the skills to do it, or when everyone else’s plates are fuller than yours (and if you’re not sure what someone’s workload looks like that week, ask straightforwardly — it’s fine to say, “If you took this on this week, what would have to move back, if anything?”). But ideally over time, as you develop the skills of the people on your team, the goal is that you’re guiding the work more and doing it less yourself. (Of course, if a chunk of your time is supposed to be allocated to independent-contributor-type work, that changes that calculation.) Also, it is a favor to people on your team to just be matter-of-fact and not apologetic when assigning work. Think about how you feel when your boss delegates work to you: it’s not weird because it’s normal for both your roles, right? And it would feel awkward and probably a bit tiring if she always seemed apologetic about it and like you had to reassure her that it was okay to assign you work, so be sure you don’t do that to your team. Also, these could help: how to delegate when your team is already overloaded should managers ask or tell when assigning work? the “delegating” tag You may also like:someone or something is deleting our work emailshow far does “other duties as assigned" in a job description go?I’m in charge of assigning work to my manager, but he won't do it { 50 comments }
updates: my boss made me verify that I’m really exercising, the work meeting in a church, and more by Alison Green on April 2, 2026 Here are three updates from past letter-writers. 1. My boss made me verify that I’m really exercising (first update) A happy update. Today we had our spring quarterly all-staff meeting, where HR announced the return of the flex-time exercise program. Two changes were made to the program: 1. Structure around verification requests, include who may request verification and why. (Only your direct manager may initiate the request, which must be routed through human resources.) 2. A “exercise program log” is now the only document that we must produce for a verification request. This is a spreadsheet provided by HR that we can complete electronically or by hand, and simply includes the date and a brief description of the activity. Our executive director remains, but his one-year contract is up early this summer. Last year, I found it notable the management board’s renewed his contract for one year when the standard for his position (the only contract position in the organization) is two years. He spoke at length today about how important family is, so we are all hopeful he will opt to “spend more time with his family” instead of pushing for another contract renewal. 2. Our next work meeting is being held in a church (#2 at the link) Thank you all so much for responding regarding the church meeting space. I wanted to provide more context and an update. I should have written that this meeting was going to be the second one in that particular space, and I did attend the first. It is located more in the community hall than the sanctuary as commenters specified. There was some religious signage, mostly unobtrusive. After that first meeting, I learned that one of our leaders is a member there. I chalked the location up to being the best they could do on short notice, and moved on. For me, the issue is that after 3-4 months they didn’t bother to ask about the venue or look for other options in that time. This was going to continue indefinitely unless someone said something. So I wrote here, and then I wrote to HR asking for some guidance. It was my first experience with my HR and it was a positive one. I was mostly expecting that, best case, future meetings would be changed and wrote off this one, but they intervened and with even shorter notice (literally 2 days) we met on a local university campus. It felt like a normal meeting. And I’ll give credit to my leadership team and HR for making that happen. Thank you again for all of your insights on this. 3. How should I explain why I’m leaving my job? (#5 at the link) Your post went up after I gave notice but I did game plan it out with my therapist, who had much the same advice — don’t over-explain. I was hoping I could somehow give notice without anyone being upset, but their feelings are not mine to manage. I did end up being a bit more forthcoming about the fact that my new position was a step back in responsibility, and that is what is best for me and my family. That felt right to me as a way to model that different choices outside of the constant grind up the ladder are valid. I also acknowledge that I am in a privileged position to be able to take that step back without taking a pay cut, which often isn’t the case — but for anyone feeling trapped by their salary, don’t let that stop you from looking, because you never know. Thanks for publishing and for those who responded in the comments! You may also like:my boss made me verify that I'm really exercisingmy team is requiring us to do a diet/exercise/"mental toughness" programmy new boss is an elder in a sexist church { 85 comments }
managing ADHD at work when you can’t use medication by Alison Green on April 2, 2026 It’s the Thursday “ask the readers” question. A reader writes: I am looking for advice on managing ADHD at work, but the caveat is that I’m still nursing a baby, so most medication is off the table and when I do stop (hopefully soon – he’s over a year old and I’m actively working on weaning), I know it may take me months to find something that works. So I am really looking for non-medication strategies in the meantime. I recently got diagnosed with ADHD (in my late thirties) after having my second child and going off the executive functioning cliff deep end (thanks, hormones!). I’ve always had symptoms and have nearly always managed okay enough, but after coming back to work post-baby I would just spend hours in front of the computer and get absolutely nothing done. Cue the diagnosis. It’s been an eye-opener and such a relief, and I’m working through years of internalized shame, obsession with perfectionism, and anxiety. I did initially get on some rapid-release Adderall, taken just for work as needed (the only thing I can take while still nursing, since it gets out of my system fast enough between feedings). It was an absolute miracle at first, lifting my mood and getting me to concentrate seamlessly. And then a couple of months ago, it just stopped working, and if anything made things worse. So now here I am typing this out at noon, on double my original dose, having not even opened my work the whole morning. I’ve tried blocking websites, but then I find workarounds. Trello used to work, and just doesn’t. I’ve given up on zero-inbox. I find myself either deep-diving into the task and hyper-focused for hours (sometimes the right task, and sometimes not), missing appointments and calls, or jumping from one irrelevant thing to another like some squirrel on steroids. My kids and I have lots of medical appointments, and missing them is a big deal and not something I’ve ever done before in my life, so I’m absolutely reeling from missing three (out of about 10) in the past two weeks. And I know I’m coming off as kind of manic during phone calls and emails. (My contact recently called an email to a colleague “unnecessarily dramatic”… and it was! I’m a very high-functioning professional at a world-class organization. What am I doing?!) My work situation doesn’t help. I’m a contractor, working from home half-time, with most of my contacts six hours ahead of me in Europe. I love, love, love my field and my job; it’s truly meaningful, full of passionate and incredible people, prestigious, and pays well enough. I need the flexible, limited hours to manage my health. However, I am working solo the vast majority of the time and I am the one in charge of driving the timeline for the project and getting other people to get things to me, and … so when I drop the ball, there is no one to prod me on it until something falls behind spectacularly. I’m currently primarily working on a non-urgent, least-liked task (writing an academic paper), and I’ve gotten maybe 10 hours of work done in the past two weeks total, when I should be averaging about 20 per week. If I damage my reputation with this organization – through dramatic emails, late work, poor quality, or otherwise being difficult – I will never get another contract with them and I’m unlikely to get another opportunity even close to this good. Our field has been decimated by the recent Trump funding cuts, and jobs are scarce and competition is unbelievably intense. I’m worried it’s already happening, as I wasn’t invited to join another project that I really would’ve been a natural fit for, and I think the contracts will stop coming once my current multi-year project comes to an end sometime this year. The readers have always been so kind and full of information and strategies, so I’m really hoping someone has been in my shoes and people can recommend things to try, so I can throw them all at the wall and see what sticks. I actually would also love to hear about experiences with medications, especially on what worked if rapid-release Adderall stopped helping. Readers with firsthand experience, what’s your advice? You may also like:should I tell future managers about my ADHD?how do I manage someone with poorly controlled ADHD?new job’s insurance doesn't cover my medication, a 6 a.m. training, and more { 428 comments }
changing a company as the owner’s son, are some people just not motivated by anything, and more by Alison Green on April 2, 2026 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. How do I change a company’s culture as the owner’s son? My father owns a production company with roughly 200 employees, multiple factories, and a strong international client base. We are based in a country with limited workers’ rights, but are trying to adopt American labor standards to attract higher-profile clients. I work here part-time with largely undefined responsibilities, but usually end up handling emails, editing product photos, interviewing potential interns, and arranging internal events. My position alone raises red flags, as I make more than my work would merit any other employee. My father has asked for my perspective regarding the company’s growth and sustainability, and while I have a few ideas, I just don’t know where to start! We don’t have an HR division, our core staff’s responsibilities keep expanding, our prices are falling short of competitive, and boundaries are blurred relatively often. When I was a child, company truckers would pick me up from school on my father’s behalf, and no one seems to think it’s weird that employees are tasked with washing his car or photocopying his children’s medical documents. Even if it’s normalized in the local culture, something tells me a greater separation between work life and personal life would do wonders. I would appreciate some pointers on what to focus on first. Do I tell my father to talk to a consultant? Do I convince him to hire trained HR personnel? Do I document all the cases of blurred boundaries and tell him companies in the U.S. would never let them happen? I don’t intend on working here for much longer, but I care about this company. I just don’t know what I can do when I majored in something other than business and am just working here until I get admitted to a postgraduate program. I don’t think you’re well-positioned to change such fundamental things about the company’s culture, so you should take the pressure off yourself to somehow find a way to! You can certainly point out the things you’ve described here, but unless your father really has a quite deep respect for your opinion on this stuff, I’m skeptical it’s going to make much of a difference. There’s also a really wide range of issues here: boundaries, job descriptions, workloads, pricing … those are all each their own areas and there’s no one person equipped to fix all of them unless they’re very high-level in the company and your father places a huge amount of trust in them (and even then I’d expect an uphill battle). You could suggest he bring in outside consultants and/or hire someone to work on professionalizing their operations, but I wouldn’t expect to be able to fix this stuff from where you’re standing. That said, you didn’t actually write that your dad is asking you to fix this stuff; he just asked for your perspective. Go ahead and share your perspective on as much of this as you’d like! If your sense is that he’ll be more responsive to some pieces than others, focus on those. But know that even an experienced consultant coming in wouldn’t be able to fix these things without significant buy-in and commitment from your dad. 2. Are some employees just not motivated by anything? My company is a small design agency. For the last 10+ years, I’ve managed Jim. He’s quiet and does okay work most of the time — nothing stellar or particularly creative. I’ve coached him to get out of his comfort zone, showed examples of what I (and our clients) are looking for, and things improve for a hot minute before he reverts right back to uninspired work. What stumps me is that nothing seems to excite him or motivate him to grow or progress in his career. I’ve talked to him many times about what I’d like to see in terms of progress in the quality of his work, offered him professional development opportunities, asked what kinds of assignments he most enjoys so I could steer them his way, and included him in client meetings so he could be involved in some projects right from the start. None of that has made any difference in his level of engagement or work quality. He frequently overlooks tasks he’s solely responsible for (like scheduling our social media posts) and just apologizes when asked why something wasn’t done. Annual reviews seem like we’re having the exact same conversation every year. He hasn’t qualified for a raise in the last four year and has never asked why or what he could do better. Is it possible that some employees simply aren’t motivated by anything? Yes. It’s also possible he just doesn’t have the skills or aptitude for what you need — or the interest in putting in the work on an ongoing basis (since he does occasionally improve for a short time but doesn’t sustain it). You say he does okay most of the time, but it doesn’t really sound like it if he’s not producing what clients want and regularly misses tasks he’s in charge of. If I’m wrong about that and his work is truly fine and the issue is only that he’s not improving over time — but his current level of skill is perfectly acceptable for the job and will remain perfectly acceptable even if he never grows — then your best move is to accept that this is Jim and he’s probably not going to change, and he doesn’t need to be constantly improving if his base level is acceptable. But what you described sounds more like someone who isn’t well-suited for the job he’s in — a performance problem, not a motivation problem — and at this point I’d move to what you want to do about that. Personally, I’d want to replace him with someone who’s better at the work. Related: how do I motivate someone who doesn’t bother to do his work 3. Can I ask for a demotion out of management? I’ve worked for the same large institution for about 16 years. A few years ago, I made a move from one closely-related department to another to take on a junior managerial role. I’m proud of a lot of the work I’ve done here, but it hasn’t been easy, and after several years of managing, training new staff, designing new procedures, being the point person for questions, and collaborating with my boss, I am so deeply burned out on management. I want out. The only parts of the work that I still find enjoyable are the bits where I’m basically doing the same tasks as all the other team members (I have the same daily and weekly rotational tasks that they have, plus my management responsibilities). The management parts just feel draining. It probably doesn’t help that I have chronic health conditions that have negatively impacted my work in the past and have the potential to do so again. I found out recently that one of our team members is leaving, and I caught myself daydreaming about what it would be like if I could be gloriously demoted to that job (an independent contributor role) instead — no more exempt status that only ever benefits my employer and never me, no more giving negative feedback and coaching, no more being solely responsible for all training and logistics… If it would even be possible, it would mean a pay cut, but I could make do with that. What I’m not sure is how I would explain the desire to take that step down. How do you say “Give me less responsibility and money, please”? And how would I explain that change on my resume when applying for other roles in the future? I don’t want to leave because I’m awful at my job, I want to leave because the job is eating my life and I’m miserable. I want to go back to a nice non-exempt role with clearly delineated boundaries. Even if it’s not this role, I badly want to move to something that’s not management, and it will likely involve a step down the hierarchy and possibly a pay cut. How do I explain to prospective managers that my interest in these kinds of roles is serious and that I genuinely want to make that move out of management? This is a thing people do! Anyone with any amount of thoughtfulness who has managed people knows it’s not easy and should be able to imagine just not wanting to do it anymore. As long as you make it clear you’re not expecting to stay at a management-level pay rate, this is a reasonable thing to raise. Say this to your boss: “I’m interested in being considered for Jane’s role when she leaves. I’d really like to return to being an independent contributor; I understand it would mean a pay cut. Is that something we could talk about?” For applying for non-management jobs outside your company, you can be open about targeting non-management roles specifically (as opposed to just being willing to take one if that’s all that’s available): “I’m looking for an independent contributor role where I can focus on XYZ” / “I’ve realized what what I most enjoy is XYZ and am deliberately seeking roles that don’t include management” / “I worked as a manager for the last two years, which helped me realize that what I really want to focus on is XYZ — management took me away from that, and I’m excited to get back to it.” Related: how to explain why I want a lower-level, lower-responsibility job 4. Rejecting applicants who don’t include a cover letter I used to manage the recruiting process here at my small (12 people) social housing organization, but luckily we now have a staff member who is half finance and half HR (and she actually has gone to school for HR, unlike me). I’m very happy to be out of the HR tasks, since I’ve never had any HR education; it was just a gap that I helped fill. We currently have two positions we are recruiting for, both at the level where we ask for a resume and cover letter. Many applicants don’t include a cover letter and they are usually sent right to the “no” file. What are your thoughts on an email as cover letter? Most of the applications come into our general email, which I manage – though I gave access to the HR staff member so, during the recruiting process, she can grab all the applications – so I see many of them. When an applicant types a short “intro” or note in their email, and only attaches a resume, should she count that email as the cover letter? Any thoughts on her practice of not considering applicants who don’t follow the instructions in the posting to include a cover letter? If it’s something like “I’m applying for the llama wrangler position; attached please find my resume,” that’s not a cover letter. If it’s at least a few paragraphs with actual substance in them, that’s a cover letter even though it’s just in the body of an email. Cover letters don’t need to be a separate attachment; it’s about length and substance, not where the words are. And I’m in favor of your coworker’s practice of not considering applicants who don’t include a cover letter when they were specifically told that’s part of your application process, doubly so if the job involves any form of written communication skills. (That said, if you’re accepting applications through sites that make it difficult to include a personalized cover letter, you should factor that in. In those cases, you might respond to otherwise strong looking candidates and ask them to complete their application by submitting one.) 5. Dealing with tremors in an interview I will have my first in-person job interview since 2019 soon. I have been remote since 2022. In the intervening years, I have developed a visible, left-dominant tremor down my arm, into my hand when I am walking or sitting. It also appears in my jaw at times. This either (1) leads my jaw to chatter or (2) leads me to clamp my jaw shut, which does not look too friendly. These can look like anxiety even when they are not and are constants regardless of emotion, but worsen during high stakes settings. I can hide them well on Zoom, but less so in-person. It takes a great deal of effort to keep them hidden, and when I get distracted they pop out. My interview will be with a team very familiar with my work but less so with my tremors. My hand also likes to curl up, which can look like fidgeting or discomfort. Doctors don’t know why this happens, but so far it seems benign. Any advice for dealing with these visible symptoms it in an interview where they may be misinterpreted? As a younger woman, I have learned anxiety is always everyone’s first assumption even if it’s rarely the case. At the start of the meeting, say this cheerfully and matter-of-factly: “Since we don’t normally see each other in person, I should mention I sometimes have tremors in my hand and jaw — it’s just a medical thing and nothing to worry about!” That way they’ll know what’s going on and won’t draw the wrong conclusions and they won’t worry about what might be happening. By taking a matter-of-fact tone, you’ll demonstrate that it’s no big deal, and most people will follow your cues. 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the aggressive applause, the secret meal access, and other stories from event workers by Alison Green on April 1, 2026 Recently we heard from people who work at events — their horror stories and wins — and here are 10 of my favorite stories they shared. 1. The applause I was part of a round of lightning talks. The event organizers told us we had five minutes apiece, and for enforcement they told the audience to applaud violators off the stage. I was done in 90-odd seconds because I’m cool like that. “Blowhard Bob” the CISO, however, adored the sound of his own voice and did not believe time limits applied to him. He was barely halfway through his slides when the applause started. He tried to talk over it, being Blowhard Bob, but the audience only raised the volume of clapping until he had no choice but to leave the stage. I saw his thunderous face as he left the event venue. I never liked Blowhard Bob, so it was a petty treat to see him so uselessly offended. 2. The secret access I’m a vegetarian in a company that frequently hosts customers or suppliers (on the order of 100+ per week) for all-day meetings, where they are very much trapped and unable to get their own food. A large number of our visitors are also vegetarian/vegan. I have the fortunate ability to bring my own food, but the visitors cannot. There is almost never a veg option for our catered lunches. The options exist at every location we cater from, but the hosts never select one. I attempted for a year to get the hosts to start adding vegetarian options, but for unknown reasons this ask is impossible. Finally, I appealed to my network admin friend to give me backdoor access to the catering request website. Each Monday, my Good Deed of the Week is to log in and edit every single new catering form to include a veg option. The hosts often make surprised noises at finding themselves with a tray of veg food (and take the credit when it comes in handy), but no one ever tries to figure out how it keeps happening. Going on 2 years now executing my petty act of good will. 3. The nature soundtrack Each year, Big Corporation honored retiring 25-year employees with a fancy dinner and dancing at an expensive venue. The location chosen that year was an exclusive brand new hotel, and the company was excited to be able to show it and themselves off. As the guests arrive to the lounge for drinks, oohing and ahhing about the luxurious appointments suddenly stops as the piped-in music becomes audible. Tradition held that the music chosen for the cocktail hour be top 40 hits from the year these folks started at the company, but the intern charged with assembling the playlist decided that because the big new hotel displaced a wetland, recorded sounds of a swamp including croaking frogs and chirping crickets filled the cocktail lounge. People were confused as they held crystal champagne flutes. 4. The medical simulation One year, we invited a medical simulation team (similar to an emergency simulation, but for medical events) to present at the nursing conference I used to run. They did not tell us the simulation they would be running would involve copious fake blood – which got squirted in lots of different places, including the people sitting in the front row. I think the venue ended up charging us for carpet cleaning too. 5. The grape Kool Aid and the geese At a corporate headquarters campus preparing for the July 4th outdoor concert and fireworks, that summer had been extremely dry, and special permission and pre-show requirements were needed for the fireworks display to happen to prevent grass fires. Coincidentally, the campus ponds and fountains were attracting huge flocks of Canada geese because of the drought. Did you know that goose droppings are the size of small dog droppings? Before the hundreds of families came ready to spread their blankets to picnic on the lawns before the concert, vast quantities of goose doodoo had to be removed and said geese needed to be convinced not to return until July 5th . A two-pronged approach was to bring in border collies to scare off the fowl and then sprinkle huge quantities of grape flavored Kool Aid powder, because of course that would send the geese back to Canada (they hate one of the ingredients). Luckily, the problem with this plan was realized before the day of the concert when the landscape crew were doing the required lawn watering in compliance with the fire marshal. 6. The mini figurines Several years ago, I worked at a nonprofit where we spent all day, every day doing hard (rewarding) work with kids. Once a year, we had a fundraiser that revolved around Legos. We had 1000+ people (kids and adults) come in and pay to do Lego activities with us. That year, the fundraiser had an add on where you do a minifig (mini figurines) scavenger hunt type thing — join a session, help find minfigs and pick one to take home with you. For budget reasons, they were knockoff minifigs. They were things like Spiderman’s head on a construction worker body on purple and pink legs. Randomly put together pieces that had come in a giant grab bag. In the second session of scavenger hunt, someone pointed out that some of them were apparently historical figure minifigs? And someone handed me one and I looked carefully … huh, it had a red armband and double lightning bolts. Crap. Off brand Lego knockoffs provide minifigs for historical dioramas and apparently if you get the “grab bag,” they have Nazis mixed in with the superheros. We shut things down for a few minutes for us to panic and find all the hidden minifigs. They were replaced with “safe” figs, and we had one poor staff person spend the rest of the day sorting through the offensive and non-offensive minifigs, keeping us one session ahead of the scheduled sessions of scavenger hunt. As far as we know, no Nazis were sent home with children. Apparently the organization now only uses official minifigs for the Lego event. 7. The cast wrap party The catering company I used to work for was hired to cater the series wrap party for Game of Thrones. All the stars were there and most of us caterers were fans of the show, so we were psyched to be there. On the night itself, we wondered why the energy in the room seemed so off and oddly subdued. Then of course, the final season came out a few months later and we understood. 8. The invitation I worked in higher education development at an institution where the fellows had strongly resisted appointing a professional fundraiser and instead appointed a senior fellow in History as development director – a charming chap but not a fundraiser at all. This manifested in many ways, but perhaps the best one was the event we held to thank a major donor who had contributed a significant sum. We booked a nice location, sorted out some catering, briefed team members ahead of the event, arrived on the day and waited. And waited. And waited some more. DD had one job, which was to invite the donor; he had not done it. I left soon after this. 9. The chickens I run a small performing arts venue that hosts over 200 performances/events per year. Here is a recent favorite story that, while low-stakes and neither full disaster nor victory, exemplifies the weirdness of running a public event space. We had an event that was a collaboration between two very large, community-focused performance groups. Our venue has a strict no pets except licensed service animals and pre-approved on-stage animals policy. One of the performers had a service dog who came to the venue. This was fine. But it wasn’t clearly stated to the myriad other performers that this was a service dog. All of a sudden, the next day, several other cast members brought their dogs and then got deeply offended when we made them take them home. The next day was the public performance and, as audience started arriving, a man walked in with a hard-sided cat carrier. Imagine my surprise when I approached and discovered that it contained two chickens! Turns out his wife was in the show and wanted a picture in costume with her pet chickens. She had told her husband to wait outside for her, but he ignored that fact and was quite rude when we asked him to do so. So here I am, running all over the building, trying to figure out whose chickens these were and having to explain over and over again that no, I wasn’t joking. Yes, chickens. And then my staff kept pulling me aside and going, “Um … there’s a dude with chickens in the lobby?” It all worked out – they went outside and got their chicken picture and then the husband and the chickens went home and they were never free range in our venue … but its become an ongoing joke whenever things go sideways: Look out for the chickens! 10. The teenager I used to work fundraising walk events and we’d usually have a grab bag of random volunteers to help us run the event. One year, this older teenage boy who’d been signed up by his mum as part of his community service requirement (I think he was working off a traffic ticket) was assigned to my area. This kid was only supposed to be there for a short shift of a few hours and since I’m sure it wasn’t his first choice of how to spend his Saturday, I wasn’t expecting too much. He wound up being one of the last people to leave the site, having worked for something like eight or nine hours hauling a lot of stuff around and doing a really good job at whatever we told him to do, all on a really warm day. He said that he had a great time and he really enjoyed himself. I always wondered if that day was the start of his events career. You may also like:our motivational speaker got drunk and went off the railsI had to quit a job because of aggressive nesting geeseI accidentally ditched a peer at a conference and then cried publicly, foot-touching coworker, and more { 187 comments }
how to respond to requests to “pick your brain” by Alison Green on April 1, 2026 A reader writes: A few years ago, I appeared in a series of videos about “how I got my job.” My job is pretty niche and there really isn’t a ton of institutional information about it yet, so it got a lot of attention. Since then, I’ve consistently gotten two to three LinkedIn messages per week from people looking to break into my field. About 20% are just saying that they found the videos inspiring (which I love to hear!), 30% are just asking to connect, and the remainder are asking for more career advice — but in a very general way. Think “I’d love to get your thoughts on how to break into the industry/get hired at your company.” I’m of two minds: I really want to help, but the volume of requests I get is much too high to respond to every single one. (I am working on a template email with generic info.) Also, maybe I’m being a bit of a Grinch here, but I bristle at how general the requests are. They make me feel like the person writing hasn’t actually done any of their own research (which, incidentally, is a huge part of this job). There even seems to be a trend now of people asking to grab 30 minutes for a phone call in their opening email! So, it’s probably not my place, but part of me wants to say, “Hey, this is not how to do it.” Any advice for how (if at all) to respond to the more labor-intensive requests? I answer this question over at Inc. today, where I’m revisiting letters that have been buried in the archives here from years ago (and sometimes updating/expanding my answers to them). You can read it here. You may also like:how to handle requests to "pick your brain" from new gradshow to respond to unclear "let me know when you have some time" requestshow do I handle endless rounds of nitpicky questions from coworkers? { 39 comments }
my angry boss uses AI to write kinder emails … and it feels weird by Alison Green on April 1, 2026 A reader writes: My manager, Athena, has pretty poor soft skills and often comes across as aggressive, interrogating, micromanaging, and dismissive. This happens both in person and over email and instant message. In writing, her spelling and grammar are also inconsistent and her phrasing is often curt or abrupt. Lately, my coworkers and I have noticed a huge improvement in some of her emails and chat messages. Emails and messages that previously would have been curt and aggressive are now warmer and softer, with perfect spelling and grammar. It’s theoretically the exact change her direct reports have all been desperately wishing for, except that her in-person communication has not changed. Her tone is still angry, her approach is still aggressive, and feedback discussions still feel like an interrogation. We’re pretty sure she’s using AI to rephrase her written communication, because she’s talked openly about using Claude to help with writing emails and project reports. It’s also not consistent — most of her text communication is the same as before, with maybe 30-40% being the new and improved version. Even though it’s technically better to be getting at least some non-aggressive emails from our boss, it feels weird and disingenuous. On one hand, it’s good that she recognizes a need for improvement, and it’s a relief that some of her emails sound like they come from the pleasant, patient manager we wish we had. On the other hand, the contrast is so obvious that it feels like putting a false veneer over the deeper problem of what she’s really like. As one coworker said, “I get email from Athena or I get email from Claude.” I know there’s not much we can do either way, but are my coworkers and I justified in feeling creeped out and vaguely insulted by the clearly AI-generated emails and texts we’ve been getting? Would love to hear your take on the ethics and optics of this sort of AI use. I don’t know, this feels like at least a partial win to me. You used to get emails from negative, dismissive Athena but now you (at least sometimes) get emails from kinder, more socially appropriate Claude. The problem is that negative, dismissive Athena is still manages you the rest of the time. I’m actually really interested to know if people like Athena who use AI this way will over time start to learn how to adopt a warmer tone themselves. I have long been convinced that people who default to Athena-like communication genuinely don’t know how to envision what different language or a different tone would sound like. They think being warmer means making lots of disingenuous chit-chat (when that’s not at all what it needs to mean) or that they’d have to sugarcoat everything to the point of it becoming meaningless (also not what it means). And so over time, there might be significant learning advantages to her seeing what Claude does to her communications. Or not, who knows. But I’d be really interested to watch how that plays out. You see the opposite of this, too: people who are very passive and indirect in their communications can’t picture a healthy, assertive version of their communications; instead, what they picture in their heads feels confrontational (often because the models they had for conflict growing up were very bad ones). It’s one reason why I try so much to give sample language here, because I think there’s real value in saying, no, it could just sound like this. I have many, many ethical issues with generative AI, but since it’s here, I am very interested to see if using it in this way over time can help people envision better language on their own at some point. Anyway … is it disingenuous of Athena to be using AI to revise her emails? I don’t know that it is! I’d call it that if she were rolling her eyes while sending them and thinking, “These delicate flowers require such careful handling.” But if she’s running her language through AI and thinking, “Okay, that sounds good, I’ll send that,” I don’t think it is disingenuous. But I can also understand why it feels that way to you, especially since the rest of her communications have remained the same old dismissive Athena. Ultimately, your problem is that you have a manager who’s angry, interrogating, micromanaging, and dismissive, not that she sometimes uses a tool to improve her tone. Is there anything you can do about that, like having a discreet word with someone above her? If not, I’d try to embrace the times where she’s at least letting Claude help her — or, if that’s not possible, at least see the humor in the extreme contrast between her and her robot assistant. You may also like:how can I write warmer emails without resorting to emojis?how do I deal with a boss who "yells" in angry emails?what should your tone sound like when you're the boss? { 285 comments }
coworker was upset that she wasn’t told to go home early, colleague asked if I have a “side piece,” and more by Alison Green on April 1, 2026 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. My coworker was upset that she wasn’t told to go home early after getting bad news I have a coworker who recently found out she’d likely have to put her dog to sleep. She was crying at work, understandably so, and it was quite upsetting to see. I went through something similar about three years ago and losing a pet is devastating. For the rest of the day after finding out, she was berating management for not offering her the opportunity to go home early. The thing is, it’s common knowledge at my job that if you need, or even just want, to go home early, management always says yes. All she had to do was ask, but she thought they should have offered without her asking. She’s an adult (34 years old) and I think she should just ask for what she needs. She’s not a new employee, has asked to leave early several times before, and she has never been told no. That leads me to believe it was not a case of her thinking she’d be denied leaving early if she asked. Do you think management was wrong for not offering to send her home early? Not particularly. I mean, yes, if her manager knew what was going on or how upset she was, it would have been kind to say, “Would you rather go home early for the day?” But it’s not a huge deal that they didn’t offer it proactively. If she wanted to leave, she needed to say that herself. Is she often irrational? If not, I’d write this off to her just being in an upsetting moment; grief sometimes grabs on to unrelated things. 2. My coworker asked if I have a “side piece” Is it okay to ask a coworker if they have a “side piece”? Background: I’ve only been working at this company for a short time. I keep my personal life almost totally separate from work. The coworker who asked me this, Lesley, doesn’t know me well at all. We’ve worked together a few days total. I was told secondhand that Lesley has a romantic interest in me, and I let the wingman know the feelings weren’t mutual. We were working together one day when Lesley asked if I had a side piece. I was already annoyed and walked away without replying. Should I have said something? I’m just curious if this is okay, but I don’t want to ask HR and make it a big deal. On one hand, it seems too personal of a question for work, and a quick google makes it seem like “side piece” is kind of offensive and refers to cheating. On the other hand, maybe it’s not really more offensive than asking about a boyfriend or girlfriend (I’m not trying to be judgmental). No, that’s a rude and inappropriate question to ask someone in most circumstances — and particularly at work and particularly someone who you barely know. What the hell, Lesley?! 3. Should I let my boss know this mistake was my coworker’s, not mine? I work on a team of two. Technically three, but our manager leads another team as well and leaves most of the day-to-day work to me and my colleague. I am the newest member of the team and joined less than a year ago. My colleague has been on the team for close to five years and has a more established relationship with our manager. We are responsible for launching compliance courses to the company and we take turns creating and assigning the courses. The last course launched by my colleague was missing some of the people who should have been assigned to it. The stakeholder reached out to us when she noticed people missing on the course completion report. I happened to be the one to see the email first and did the research to find out what happened. After identifying and fixing the error, I replied-all to the email, which included my manager. My manager then responded directly to me asking what happened. I confirmed it was a mistake on our end, as opposed to a system glitch. I included a screenshot to show the error, but it also displayed the name of the person who created the course (not me). My manager thanked me for doing the research but also mentioned, very seriously, that we can’t allow these mistakes to happen in the future. I agreed. My colleague was not given the same reminder, as far as I’m aware. Coincidentally, she left the office later that same day to go on a week-long vacation. She did not see the email about the error before she left, so I can’t just wait for her to take ownership of the mistake. My manager does not seem to be aware that the error did not originate with me, although it should have been clear from the screenshot. I am a firm believer in letting my work speak for itself and not bringing anyone else down to elevate my own reputation. However, I’m afraid this could affect my performance review if I don’t set the record straight. Should I speak up or will doing so make me look like a tattletale? How big of a deal is the mistake? If it’s a big deal, then you can say something like, “I’m taking seriously what you said about what happened with the course assignment, and I’ll make sure Jane knows this happened when she’s back.” Otherwise, though, if it’s not a huge issue and is more the kind of thing that your boss is unlikely to be thinking about a week from now, just let it go (although you also could have said, “I’ll make sure Jane knows this happened when she’s back” in the moment; there’s just less need to go back and say it now). 4. Pregnancy when you’re remote and no one sees you I work for a matrixed multinational company that has a strong WFH culture and very limited travel budgets. In my core role, I manage a global team and work with other global teams who I almost never meet in person. I am also affiliated with a local office where I am active in a secondary role and see colleagues in person whenever I choose to go into the office. I work much more closely with the colleagues in my primary role than with the colleagues in my secondary role. I give birth in a couple months. I shared the news with my manager and direct reports at the three-month mark, but did not bring it up in most other work meetings unless someone directly asked me, “What’s new with you?” At this point, colleagues at the local office have put two plus two together because I have morphed into an anthropomorphic beachball, but virtual colleagues often remain unaware. How you would approach pregnancy awareness in offices when so many people work from home and have cross-functional projects that are intense but kept on relatively short timelines, with limited-to-no interaction on a personal level? My primary motivation in having others know is to check/set their expectations on my current and future project capacity and energy levels. I have now added an email signature that shares my parental leave dates (waited until one month out from the start date) but I am curious if there are any other suggestions. Just with a matter-of-fact email about your leave, sent to anyone who might be impacted from it. For example: “I want to let you know that I expect to be out from X to X on maternity leave. You can contact ___ in my absence.” That’s it! 5. How should my resume handle a year where I had nothing to do at work? For about a year, I was on an “experimental” team that sounded right up my alley when I transferred into it … but then we had no direction and almost no work to do, and spent most of the time “training” on skills that we never used (which have been useless to me in my current role). In the whole time I was on that team, we had, generously, maybe 2-4 weeks’ worth of work. And now I’m updating my resume for the first time in years, and I’m unsure what to do. Part of me wants to pretend I was still in my previous role that year, or in my current one, but I worry that adding in that extra year to either without anything to show for it would look bad, too. (I’m not worried about titles; mine was never changed from one role to the other.) So is that what I should do? Or should I leave it in my resume and just address it as it comes up in interviews? If your title didn’t change, that is a complete non-issue! You don’t need to specify that you were on a different team for that year; since your title remained the same, you can just not mention it. It’s just your title and the dates you held that title, followed by bulleted accomplishments from your time with that title. They don’t need to know that none of those accomplishments happened during a particular 12 months in that overall period. 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