my job sent police to my home when I was 2 hours late

A reader writes:

In 30 years, I have been late to work twice.

The first time, management used my emergency contact number to track me down when I was one hour late. I believe this was a misuse of my personal information, and I removed this contact information from the company systems.

Now, years later, it has happened again. My manager sent police to my home for a “wellness check” because I was two hours late. In this day and age, when federal agencies are claiming that they can come into your home without a warrant, it’s more than a bit alarming to see police at one’s door.

Is this even remotely acceptable? I do realize that some employers will simply terminate on a no call/no show, but these actions have me not wanting to share any personal information at all, and have me questioning whether it’s even worth waiting the 10 months I have till retirement.

Both these incidents were due to scheduling confusion, and I am not completely blameless. But I work third shift, and it was freaky being awakened at 1 am by police at my door.

Both of these were bizarre overreactions. Calling your emergency contact after one hour? And sending police to your home for a wellness check after two hours?

The point of a wellness check or calling emergency contacts is supposed to be, “We’re genuinely concerned about this person’s safety because we haven’t heard from them for an extended period of time.” Two hours — let alone one hour — doesn’t meet that standard.

If you’re an hour or two late, they should call you. If they don’t reach you, they should leave a message. In most cases, I wouldn’t think about calling emergency contacts unless you’re still not reachable the next day. And escalating to a police wellness check should take longer than that and should only come after they’ve attempted to reach your emergency contact (and in the current moment comes with a particularly high to be cautious about your safety). In both cases, we’re not talking about acting after only a few hours.

That said, this is fact-specific and there are situations where the circumstances could warrant acting more quickly — like if you’re someone known to have a potentially life-threatening health condition and you normally show up like clockwork — but we’re still not talking about taking those steps when you’re only an hour late.

Acting within one to two hours reads like they were using your emergency contact and the police as ways to get you to work, not because they were genuinely concerned for your welfare.

the team I manage prefers remote work — but I prefer working in-person

A reader writes:

My office is returning to a physical space in the fall and they are giving managers a lot of leeway to decide on remote/hybrid work.

I manage eight people on my team and I know a number of them would be happy to never come into the office again. They have all proven themselves more than capable to work from home. However, I personally work best when I can see/talk with people in person, at least periodically. What balance can I strike between giving my team what they want and what I need in my own work style? I would love to ask each team member to come in at least once every 1-2 weeks, but unless there’s a true need is that out of line? I guess my question is, as a manager, when does my own work style matter and when do I need to get over it?

I answer this question — and two others — 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.

Other questions I’m answering there today include:

  • My company ghosted a candidate I recommended
  • How do I gracefully reject a former employee who keeps applying for a new job with me?

interview with someone who works in the corporate gifts industry

In the comment section on a recent letter from someone whose coworkers were upset about her work anniversary gift, there was a lot of discussion about corporate gift programs. I heard from a reader who works for one of the larger companies that organizes these programs, and they generously offered to answer questions about it. Here’s our interview.

To start, what are these programs all about, and how do rewards and recognition companies like yours fit in?

Rewards and recognition (when done well!) helps companies build better cultures, decrease attrition, and improve employee engagement. The idea is, if you appreciate employees for their work regularly, they will be happier, more loyal, and more productive. Some vendor names you might find surprising: Tiffany’s used to offer service awards, Hallmark offered recognition before that part of the business was bought, Jostens owns a recognition company. Rolex used to be a very popular service award or retirement award, but a few years ago, they stopped doing B2B sales (it was diluting their brand). No recognition vendors can now offer Rolexes — and some companies find that very upsetting.

The rewards and recognition industry tries to relieve the burden of administration from HR and automates the program flow, so its easy for employees to use. Rewards and recognition software generally has two components (and companies might do one or both):

A. Performance recognition. This is focused on publicly recognizing employees for good work. A user can write up a note thanking a coworker for something (things like “thanks for covering while I was out” or “good job on that presentation”), attach an amount of points to that note, and then send it off. The note is then published on a feed so other coworkers can see it, like it, and comment on it. The points go into a bank, so users can save them up and redeem them from a catalog of items.

B. Service awards. This recognizes employees for how long they have been with the company, usually starting at five years and every five years after. One of the easiest/most common approaches is a points deposit. Say you are celebrating five years at your company. On your anniversary, you would get an email that says something like, “Congrats on five years! Here’s to another five!” and a notification that 500 points have been deposited into your points bank. This could be a specific bank that now has 500 points for you to redeem in the catalog, or the points could be deposited into your recognition bank, so you can use your service award and recognition points together to redeem for something bigger.

What challenges do you see companies run into most often with corporate gifts and rewards/recognition programs?

I think the biggest challenge is a lack of commitment. There are all sorts of proven benefits to these types of programs (lowered attrition, improved business outcomes, etc.) and some companies think they can get those benefits by just purchasing a software. They don’t want to spend the time or money on creating a comprehensive strategy — and since every company culture is so different, you really need to make a strategy that focuses on what’s right for your specific organization.

So instead, they end up wasting money on a platform that doesn’t get used, because no one knows it exists or how to use it. And because they’re not getting the ROI they want, they get mad and fire their vendor, move onto another one, and have the same issues because they won’t commit, all while losing money on the software shift and confusing any users who where engaging.

Executive buy-in is also a big issue. I can’t tell you how many times a CHRO has been ready to sign a contract when the CEO comes in and shuts everything down. Along with that is making sure they stay bought-in. A lot of larger organizations with long-standing programs have started questioning the value of recognition programs. When the economy gets rough, this is usually one of the first things to get cut, as it seems extraneous. But companies who kept up with recognition during the pandemic saw improved morale and increased employee loyalty.

What do you think are some of the “secrets of success” of the companies that do it well?

1. Communicating to employees not only that this program is available, but also offering info on the best way to use it. This might be paper guides, email reminders, formal training — whatever is best for that company’s culture.

2. Having a reasonable budget. Being stingy will make employees feel less appreciated than if there had been no recognition program at all! Healthcare is notorious for having tiny budgets. Imagine working endless shifts saving people’s lives and being thanked with nothing more than a branded pen.

3. Celebrating a variety of events. Not everyone will end up being recognized for everything, but celebrating different things with different types of rewards (company milestones, service awards, promotions, personal life events, department wins, company challenges, etc.) will give each employee more chances to feel appreciated.

4. Letting everyone send recognition. Some companies set their programs up so only managers can give recognition and/or points. So if your manager doesn’t see or hear about something great you did, you will never receive recognition for it. If peers can instead recognize each other, then the volume of recognition greatly increases. And so does employee goodwill!

5. Ensuring recognition doesn’t feel transactional. We all know the feeling when you receive a birthday card and it’s a bunch of signatures vs. receiving one with actual, thoughtful notes. Companies with expectations of how recognition should be done have more sincere interactions. For example, if their policy is to mail someone a plaque for the 10th anniversary, the item becomes just another thing to set on the shelf and forget about. But if they instead present the plaque in person to the celebrant, maybe along with a handwritten card from the manager or by sharing some achievements with the team (if the person enjoys being recognized publicly), then that plaque feels a lot more significant.

Essentially, throw enough money at it that it makes an impact, but throw that money strategically.

One thing that comes up over and over on Ask a Manager is that there’s no one gift that everyone will like (except for more money and time off!). As soon as one person mentions a gift that sounds amazing to them, someone else will be ready to let them know they’d hate it. How can companies navigate that thoughtfully?

Offering a variety of options is the best way to do this. Let’s say the company is celebrating their hundred year anniversary. Rather than giving everyone the same branded jacket, the company could instead offer a few different types of jackets, maybe a vest and pullover, and then other things that could be branded, like a cooler, a Bluetooth speaker, a suitcase, an expensive blanket, etc. and throw in some things that aren’t branded at all! (I personally love a branded item, but I know many, many people hate it.)

What’s something that’s surprised you about working in this field? And/or something that you think would surprise people outside of it to learn about?

Receiving recognition points counts as reportable income, so you get taxed on it. Seeing that on your paystub without knowing why its there can be kind of upsetting (one of those things that I don’t think companies tell their employees about). It’s especially upsetting if it ends up being a burden on you, rather than your employer. That’s why R+R providers recommend organizations “gross up,” i.e. if you are awarded $100 of points, the company actually pays something like $140 for those points, so the employee receives the full $100 and the $40 goes to covering the income tax portion.

Service/milestone awards have their own tax situations. In the U.S. and Canada, if a milestone award meets certain requirements, there is no income tax on it.

Also, this industry is cutthroat, which is funny for an industry ostensibly focused on helping create positive employee experiences. The R+R industry is not super large and there’s maybe five really big players. Lots of employees move between these different companies, so plenty of company secrets get passed around.

It is always funny when the executive of one company goes on LinkedIn and writes a rant about another company being mean to them, or stealing their idea, or spreading rumors. It happens more than you would expect!

When you say companies run into trouble because they don’t commit to a good strategy, what does that look like in reality (when it’s done well and when it’s done badly)?

First, most important thing: recognition cannot be used as a substitute for a living wage, raises, bonuses, or benefits. You have to first make sure you are adequately providing those things, or else spending money on recognition (especially when your employees are paycheck to paycheck) is only going to breed resentment.

Signs a company has a good strategy in place:

  • Users know how to access the software and use it regularly
  • Can find worthwhile items to redeem for in the catalog
  • Career anniversary gifts/trophies become a point of pride, rather than a useless tchotchke
  • Employee satisfaction scores usually increase

Signs a company has a bad/no strategy in place:

  • Users don’t know about the software or can’t access it easily
  • Limited users can send recognition
  • Budgets are so low that recognition points are quickly spent
  • Point values or gift options are so low that it is offensive
  • There is no company culture around recognition, so people feel disappointed when their work is not recognized or their anniversary goes by without comment
  • Career anniversaries are non-existent or don’t start for a long time, like year 10
  • There are no regular notifications nudging employees to take action, such as giving recognition, approving recognition, or redeeming points (companies like to turn these off)
  • Holidays, employee appreciation day, and company milestones are not celebrated

Example of bad strategy: My sister was at her job for three years before realizing she’d received hundreds of points she could redeem. There was no communication on the software (that it existed, how to access it, or how to use it). Giving recognition is limited to managers and above. Since she works different hours from her manager, they rarely saw her work and thus could not recognize it in person. For her first anniversary, she received a tiny bonus and doesn’t know what people receive on other anniversaries.

The company is spending money on this software, but probably receiving very little ROI. In this case, they’d probably have better ROI if they forewent the software and gave that money directly to employees via raises, increased PTO, or better benefits.

You mentioned stingy gifts, and I hear about this all the time (like a hospital that gave its doctors hospital socks for Christmas or a company that gave everyone “cheaply-printed gratitude journals” during Covid). Any insight into what these companies are thinking?! It seems like it should be obvious that really cheap gifts are going to harm morale more than if they did nothing at all.

I think this is the same mindset that leads to giving overworked employees a pizza party rather than rewarding them with bonuses. It’s that paternalistic “They should be grateful for anything I give them” sort of feeling. The people making these decisions can be very out of touch about what actually matters to employees.

How to fix that? When coming up with the recognition strategy, companies should involve employee feedback (surveys, focus groups, town halls, etc). They should also keep doing this (some vendors have features to help with this) throughout the program and adjusting as needed.

You recommended letting peers send recognition. Do companies worry that if they set it up that way, people will abuse it? Does that ever happen in reality?

Yes, they worry about abuse, and no, it doesn’t really happen that often. There’s ways to flag if recognition looks suspicious; you can put checks in place like all recognition has to be approved by a manager, and you can put caps on how much recognition people can give and/or receive.

I think this worry comes from that same mentality that leads to sick leave policies requiring a doctor’s note; some employers think their employees are unruly children that need to be managed with a firm hand rather than responsible adults you can trust.

Does your company do amazing employee gifts for you and your coworkers? I feel like the expectations must be very high!

My company loves doing gifts. There are some events that have the same gift every year, but they go all in for big milestone events. There was a large anniversary a few years before I started and people still talk about the items they got. One person uses the collapsible wagon they ordered all the time, and I am jealous whenever they wheel it into the office.

They really commit for service awards, and I’ve never heard anyone complain about their experience.

They also do gifts for Employee Appreciation Day, and sometimes they miss the mark, but the gesture is always appreciated. I have received more water bottles than anyone could possibly need, but they’re always high-quality, so I can always find a friend or family member who would like one.

demoting a dedicated employee, asking for more vacation time, and more

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. We have to demote a really dedicated manager

I’m involved in a small, local nonprofit animal shelter. I started as a volunteer and am now an officer of the board. Two years ago, our very competent office manager quit. After two crash-and-burn failed hires, one of our part-time kennel help wanted to try to step up into the position. On a trial basis. Over a year ago. And while she was never officially given the job, things just … limped along. Kasie is awesome in many ways, great with people and incredible with the animals. But she lacks the initiative and judgement to successfully fill this role. I will add she is open about having ADHD, which (from what I’ve read) is probably the source of her shortcomings.

For the last year or more, we have been operating with the board president fulfilling way too many of the manager responsibilities for Kasie, which is not sustainable. One of our long-time board members, Jane, is willing to step into the job and has been hired with a tentative start date soon.

Kasie is a very dedicated employee, and being manager of our animal shelter is way more than just a paycheck to her. I’m comfortable stating this is her dream job. She knows Changes Are Coming and has voiced she has no plans to leave, but I want to make this change as smooth as possible.

I guess I’m looking for advice on moving someone who is dedicated to a cause to step down to a lower position and accept a new manager. I’m also wondering if ADHD is (or should be) a factor in dealing with any of this.

Has someone been giving Kasie feedback all along and is she aware that the board didn’t think she was performing the role successfully? If so, this is a lot easier because it will be a logical extension of that conversation, which you can frame as, “As you know, we’ve been concerned about X and Y and need someone in this role who can do Z. The work has been suffering in ABC ways and we’re now at the point where we need to bring in someone to run things differently. We’d like you to move to focusing on DEF while Jane takes over the manager role.”

But if no one has been giving Kasie clear feedback, this is messier! You’d still use the basic framing above (without the “as you know”) and be candid about the ways in which things haven’t been working … but in that case, the board should recognize its own role in making this harder, and use this as impetus to commit to being more forthright about concerns in the future.

Also — make sure you’re not hiring Jane just because she stepped up, or you risk the same situation you had with Kasie. The board needs to be really clear with Jane (and with itself) about what doing the job well looks like and needs to be more hands-on about ensuring the new staffing decision is working out.

2. Our training about hostile work environments feels like a hostile work environment

I work at a small but thriving business with a small group of employees at headquarters (myself among them) and a larger contingent of contract workers at other locations.

Our city and state require all employers to adopt a sexual harassment prevention policy and to provide employees with sexual harassment prevention training. While most places I’ve worked complete this requirement using an online curriculum consisting of pre-recorded videos and multiple choice questions, this business teaches it live via video call with a member of the C-suite who is not in charge of HR. (In fact, as far as I can tell, we don’t have a dedicated HR team; HR-related duties are instead spread across a number of directors and execs along with their other duties). This class happens in a video call with the executive (“Kyle”) and about 20 other participants at a time, cameras are required to be on, and he will call on anyone and everyone at some point during the class to answer questions.

I’m sure this format works fine for some people, but I find it deeply uncomfortable. His blunt delivery on some of these topics leaves a really bad taste in my mouth (“Pop quiz, if nobody else is in the office and two coworkers at an equal level decide to have sex on their desk, is it technically harassment? Jane, you’ve been quiet, I bet you have an opinion on this”). There are also scenarios in this training that are sadly relevant to my personal history in a way that other people in the office are definitely aware of (and to a certain extent Kyle is also aware of), so I feel really exposed having my face on camera for that — or worse, being called on to answer pop quizzes that hit too close to home. I’m sure other people aren’t thinking about me as much as I am in those moments, but after the last session I wound up in the bathroom crying and I really don’t want to repeat that experience.

I reached out to Kyle and my manager and asked if this year I could fulfill the requirement with a pre-recorded version of the training instead (the city provides one on their website free of charge). I used the word “accommodation” and directly referenced why this training is difficult for me without getting into sordid details. I immediately received a phone call from Kyle stating that he does not believe the training provided by the city government and authorized by the state are legally compliant with city and state regulations (both city and state websites say it is), but further that he doesn’t want to accommodate requests for alternate training because “holding these trainings in-house is a huge source of revenue for the business.” (Your guess is as good as mine about what that means. If I had to guess, I bet we pass the cost of training the contractors on to their companies as part of the services they contract us for.)

This is bonkers, right? Is it legal? I did ask him if he was saying that the revenue stream was more important than the risk of creating a hostile work environment during a training about hostile work environments, and he did then say I could take the state-and-city authorized version instead, so my immediate problem is solved. But he emphasized that I shouldn’t tell anyone else because he doesn’t want people thinking they have other options, and I’m wondering if that’s as legally shady as it feels.

It’s weird, but as long as they offer accommodations as required under the Americans with Disabilities Act, they’re not breaking any law. It’s odd that they want to create their own (apparently badly done) training rather than using the ready-made one offered by the city (and even odder that they’re trying to claim the city’s training wouldn’t comply with city regulations), but given Kyle’s remark about it being a source of revenue, I’d bet you’re right that they charge the contractors’ companies for it. (Even that doesn’t fully make sense, but what else could it be? Is unqualified Kyle out there selling this to completely separate companies too?!)

The part about him telling you not to tell your colleagues that you’re getting this accommodation is sketchy — you have a legally protected right to talk with coworkers about working conditions (unless you’re a supervisor, in which case you don’t) — but the rest of it is legal.

3. If I’m graduating this spring, when should I apply for jobs?

I have a question about applying for jobs as a college senior. I can imagine that higher level jobs will have long hiring processes, but for entry-level office jobs is it okay to apply now, even though graduation is four months away? Or is it better to wait until closer to when a person will actually be available to start working?

Yes, start applying now. You might be too early for some jobs, but for a lot of them, the hiring process could easily take four months (if not longer).

4. Are there really so many nonprofit jobs?

You reference not-for-profit vs for-profit sectors a lot. I used to think I understood what nonprofit work was … like the Cancer Society or Doctors Without Borders or something. But you reference it so often, I’m beginning to wonder …. can there really be that many nonprofit jobs the U.S., or am I misunderstanding what it is?

Your international audience thanks you.

Nonprofits accounted for 12.8 million jobs in the U.S. — nearly 10% of private-sector employment — in 2022, the latest year with data available from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and there are 1.9 million registered nonprofits in the U.S.

But nonprofits aren’t just the type of advocacy or service-based charities you’re thinking of; they also include arts organizations, museums, trade associations, religious institutions, private foundations, fraternal organizations, chambers of commerce, civic leagues, and lots more.

5. How to ask for more vacation time instead of a raise

I’ve been with my employer for the better part of a decade. I’m a senior-level employee and have a lot of capital, get great reviews, etc. The work is challenging and rewarding and we help a lot of people. We aren’t expected to put in crazy hours, but I often feel like I’m close to my limit in terms of what I can reasonably do without sacrificing quality, and the work can be very draining. My employer is a small-ish but growing local business.

I’m in the U.S. and employees who have been there a few years get just over four weeks’ PTO annually, only some of which can roll over. We don’t have separate sick leave, so PTO covers illness and vacation.

What I want more than anything is more time off. I’d happily forgo a salary increase for a few years if I could get more PTO. I’m wondering how I can try to negotiate for this, what arguments I could use, and how much to ask for. I’m sure they won’t love the idea but I don’t think there’s any downside to asking, and if I was successful, it would be incredible. I’m even open to periodic unpaid leave. I just want more time to rest.

The next time it would be appropriate to ask for a raise, ask for this instead. You can be pretty straightforward about it: “The thing that I really want right now more than a raise is additional PTO. Would you be open to giving me two additional weeks of PTO per year in lieu of a raise?”

I picked two weeks because it’s a good solid chunk while still being reasonable, and also gives them room to come back with one week if they balk at two. You could also run the math on how many weeks of pay a typical raise there would be equivalent to, and factor that into your thinking too.

should I tell my bosses their efforts to support me aren’t enough and they might lose me?

A reader writes:

I work for a large, quickly growing international business headquartered in the United States. I’m in HR and often collaborate with finance. My work is challenging, exciting, and I feel valued as an employee. But that’s actually part of the problem. Not to accidentally quote Liam Neeson, but I have a particular set of skills that makes me very difficult to replace. I have strong job security, I’m paid well enough to support my family, I have decent benefits, and I love my coworkers.

But I have also been burnt out for over a year. Being neurodivergent and learning how autistic burnout differs from standard burnout has been a wild ride.

My managers (yes, plural) are actually very supportive and caring. I was able to sit down with them four months ago and express that I need extra support. The projects I’m working on are too much for me to handle on my own, and because no one else can do the work I do, I’m the owner, point of contact, and bottleneck for a series of projects that are simply never-ending. There is a plan for me to take FMLA to recover, I’ve found and invested in more supports to limit my sensory stimulation in the office, and I’ve been able to instill some boundaries around my work time, but it’s just not enough. They’ve been trying to hire either a junior or a manager to join our team specifically to assist with my job duties, and I trust that they’re doing their best, but this is a difficult job to fill. And the result is I still feel overworked and unprotected from executives, and my mental and physical health are still declining.

I have been working with my therapist about feeling guilty for considering quitting. I don’t intend to leave (a) before my current project concludes at the end of Q1 and b) until after my FMLA is concluded, but I also want to have a discussion with them about how they’re at risk of losing me.

I’ve been burned out for so long that I’m struggling to even put into words what would need to change in order for me to stay! I know I can’t demand executive behaviors or company culture change, and they are actively trying to hire support.

If I leave, so many of the company’s initiatives will come to a halt. I love the work that I do! There are projects and processes that I’ve built from the ground up that I have real pride in and result in really nice feedback from executives, but I haven’t had time to properly document how to replicate them.

I don’t feel like I can confide in anyone because we all report to the head of HR. And while I have every reason and past experience to trust that my bosses care about me and wouldn’t retaliate, I can’t afford to do anything to put my job in jeopardy. And I don’t trust that it’s any better anywhere else!

How do I have this conversation? Or do I just stay silent and commit to leaving?

The way your managers should be looking at this is that they can choose between you doing less work now or you doing no work not too long from now. As painful as they might find the first option, won’t the second option be worse, given how much trouble they’re having even hiring someone just to help you?

In other words, either they stomach pulling back on some of your projects now or they lose you altogether and then all those projects grind to a halt.

That’s the main contradiction I see in your letter that I don’t think you’re focusing on clearly: if you can’t pull back on your workload now because you’re indispensable, that makes it all the more urgent that they find a way to let you pull back on it … because otherwise you won’t be doing any of it.

Now, frankly, it’s okay if they lose you altogether! That’s not your problem to solve for them, and you shouldn’t feel pressured to sacrifice your health and well-being because you’ll be difficult to replace. That’s something they should have been planning for long before now — because you could leave for another job tomorrow, or fall down a well, or all sorts of things that make it terrible planning to have one person as a single point of failure for important work. The fact that they haven’t done that and instead have been content for you to feel it’s all on your shoulders to keep afloat —even when you explicitly told them it was too much — is not good. I understand that you like them and feel they’ve generally been supportive and caring, but that just means that you owe them good work while you’re there and reasonable notice when you leave; it does not mean you owe them your health or quality of life. That’s true in every job, and it is extra true in jobs where you’ve already given an unreasonable amount of yourself. (Ironically, though, giving an unreasonable amount of yourself tends to intensify people’s feelings of obligation rather than lessening them, because it makes you more personally invested in the work.)

So if you would rather not try to convince them they need to take things off your plate right now, that is okay! You can just quietly plan to leave at a time that makes sense for you, and you don’t need to put more energy into convincing them to change things.

But if you want to have that conversation, the framing to use is: “I’m at the point where I need things off my plate now and can’t keep waiting. I know that there’s no one else to take on some of this, but the choice is that we either remove some of it now — even if it means putting some projects on hold — or we end up in a situation where none of it gets done because the job won’t be sustainable for me to stay in.”

Of course, that assumes that a lower workload would solve for this for you. If your burnout is really about executive behavior or company culture, then you’re right that those things are highly unlikely to change. If that’s the case, this conversation may not be worth it, and you should just go ahead and quietly plan your departure. It’s hard to tell how much is that versus workload because you’re not even allowing yourself to consider that a lower workload is possible. (But again, your employer can have some of it done or none of it done, so a good manager will figure out a way to scale things back for you.)

I manage the CEO’s horrible nephew

A reader writes:

I’m managing a difficult employee, “Felix.” Felix has been at my company for five years now. He also happens to be the CEO’s nephew.

His performance was never good, but it’s gotten steadily worse. His work frequently has mistakes, he is unreachable for large stretches of the day, and he pushes back on any feedback I give him. At one point, he yelled in my face when I pointed out a repeated problem with his work, saying that he “didn’t respect” my feedback.

I’ve documented these issues extensively. I’ve talked to HR repeatedly about putting him on a PIP or even terminating him outright. They say that Felix is unhappy and actively job-searching and that they will work with him to set an end date. Things came to a head at the end of last year, during Felix’s performance review. I gave him poor marks on attitude, work quality, and communication, and he once again yelled at me and told me that my review was unfair and said that the whole team thought I was a jerk. With my HR rep on the call. Who again told me that he was probably going to leave soon on his own.

What should I do now? Should I keep pushing to fire him? I’ve been trying to make it work, but I’m at the end of my rope.

I answer this question — and two others — 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.

Other questions I’m answering there today include:

  • How can I make sure my team doesn’t organize a gift for me?
  • Hiring a friend’s employee

employee openly cheated on her partner at our company party

A reader writes:

I manage a team of 8-12 people at any one time in an entry-level role. Every year, we have a Christmas party at a local hotel and bar. It’s always an open bar — recipe for disaster, but the staff love it.

This year, a member of my team who has a long-term partner, who she talks about regularly, spent the evening kissing a member of another team, out in the open. They were then seen going up to this person’s hotel room at the end of the night, and did not try to hide this.

As her manager, I know my responsibilities and am not letting this impact the way I treat this staff member on a day-to-day basis. I have recent experience of being cheated on myself, so I have found this challenging, but I know how important it is to treat everyone fairly based on their professional contributions.

What’s bothering me is how I feel about her professional judgment following this. Surely someone who would act like this, out in the open, at a work event has questionable judgment at best? Would you let this influence, for example, advancement opportunities where more judgment could be required, or where reputation of the organization becomes more of a factor? We have opportunities to move out of this entry-level role quite regularly, but I now have reservations about passing her on to another department or asking her to represent our department at a more senior level.

Eh, she’s entry-level, so more likely to be young and have less mature judgment.

But let’s back up. First, while the vast majority of the time what people’s sex lives are their own business and should stay out of work considerations, that changes if they bring it into the office. And as a general rule, if someone openly cheats on their partner at a work event, I’m not sure you’re obligated to refuse to let it ever enter your thinking.

However, I’d be more concerned about your employee’s judgment if this were on an ongoing affair being brought into work, versus a one-time error in judgment at a party.

It’s also true that you don’t necessarily know what you saw. For all we know, maybe she wasn’t breaking any rules in her relationship (although it’s still bad judgment to appear to be in front of colleagues). There’s also the impact of alcohol; while no one at a work event should be drinking to the point of sleeping with colleagues they wouldn’t otherwise sleep with, it’s also true that people early in their careers are sometimes still figuring out their limits in that regard. 

Also, what about the other person? Are they anywhere in her chain of command? If so, you’ve got a different and far more pressing issue.

Assuming none of those things are issues, though, then the biggest factor to me is that she’s in an entry-level role. I’d put much more weight on this if she were higher up and in a leadership position. At entry level, the obligations and expectations just aren’t the same, and I would not factor this in when thinking about her advancement unless it’s part of a pattern of bad judgment (in which case it would be the pattern that was the issue, not the party incident on its own).

Last — it’s probably time to reconsider the “recipe for disaster, but the staff love it” open bar.

is stubble unprofessional, should I try to keep an employee who’s leaving, and more

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. Is stubble unprofessional?

Is having a few days of facial stubble unprofessional? What about showering every other day? How do I know when I’m well-enough groomed?

I’m a cis man who is reasonably adept at social interactions generally but struggles to pick up on unwritten norms/rules (like how often to shave). I got rid of a goatee in college and have generally shaved all my facial hair for every in-person workday since then. I also currently shower every day I go into the office, though I sometimes skip it for WFH days.

I’m considering a change for three reasons: (1) I was reminded of how much of a literally bloody hassle it is when I got to stop shaving for a couple months during parental leave. (2) I’m no longer at a job that has on-site showers for production reasons and safety reasons to shave. (3) I just learned that a lot of men shave every other day rather than daily, and it wasn’t that long ago I heard the argument that daily showers are bad for skin and hair, so I’m beginning to question my previous understanding of grooming rules.

I’d be happy to shave like once or twice a week, as waiting longer between shaves seems to reduce my rate of nicks and irritation. Is it a bad idea to go into the office having showered 2 nights before and shaved 2-4 nights before? My wife knows little about male grooming expectations, so I don’t know who to ask.

Showering: it varies by person. Some people need to shower daily to meet our culture’s expectations around looking and smelling clean enough for work. Some people don’t. Is there a noticeable difference to a bystander between how you look and smell when you showered in the last 24 hours versus when you didn’t? If not, you are someone who can go longer in between showers. If there is, you are not.

Stubble: as long as it looks like an intentional style choice (and not patchy or unkempt), stubble is fine in many, and probably now most, offices. There are still some conservative fields where it’s frowned upon, but they’ve quickly become the exception to the rule. (That said, avoid stubble for an interview, where you’re generally expected to turn up looking more polished.)

2. Should I try to keep an employee who’s leaving because of my predecessor?

I have just joined a small startup as head of engineering. Upon joining, I found out that one of the more experienced engineers has handed in his notice after accepting an offer elsewhere. As this is a team of four, his leaving would be quite impactful.

The reason he gave for leaving is that he wants to be promoted to senior engineer but his old boss wouldn’t do that. In private, he has told me that the previous head was not respecting him and would say things like, “I don’t need to listen to your opinions, you’re not a backend engineer.”

Less than two weeks after I’ve arrived, said employee has come to me and said that he feels my management style is so vastly different from the previous manager’s that he wants to stay; I have given him autonomy and trust which I believe he was previously lacking.

So far, I have said to him that if he proved to me over the next month or two (during his notice period) that he could show the maturity and drive expected of a senior engineer, and show a significant improvement in his soft skills, we could have a conversation about him staying. My concern is that I am encouraging him to leave it quite late to possibly renege on his accepted offer, and that he may end up leaving the company anyway if I don’t immediately promote him.

Should I keep him on this path, giving him the option that we revisit his notice? Or am I lining myself up for trouble down the line? Is there anything else I can or should do?

This is tough because you just joined the team and are still getting the lay of the land.

Normally I’d say that if someone was leaving for a reason that is now moot, and they’re someone who you were sad to see go, you should absolutely be open to letting them stay (assuming you haven’t already hired their replacement). There’s no reason to just oppose that on principle.

But this is messier, since you don’t necessarily have enough info to know how much you should want to keep him — and it sounds like there are some soft skill issues, at a minimum. I would not be leaping to keep someone with soft skill issues.

I’m also not sure it made sense to tell him that if he was able to do XYZ during his notice period, then you could talk about him staying. That’s leaving it very up in the air when you both need to be able to make solid plans (you so you know whether you need to hire a replacement and transition his projects, and him so he knows whether he’s actually taking that other job or not). Plus, is he really going to be able to demonstrate those things in a month or two? Particularly when you’re still new and learning the team?

In your shoes, I’d be seeking insight from others who work with him to try to make a decision now, rather than a month or two from now.

3. Was I wrong to settle with my company rather than continuing on to court?

In my previous role, I was subject to harassment, discrimination, and retaliation for over half a year prior to being terminated. I knew that I had a strong case, had been collecting evidence throughout, and connected with an attorney right away. In the end, I took a settlement. I decided that it would be better for my mental health to stop reliving those experiences. I also worried that a jury trial might be risky in my libertarian state, not to mention the expensive court fees.

I am proud that I stood up for myself while I worked there and after. But since I opted for the settlement, I have also entered into a confidentiality agreement. So while my former coworkers can probably make educated guesses about what happened, the wider world doesn’t know. New hires and new external partners won’t know what kind of company this is. And the bad actors can continue to skirt the laws.

I wonder what can be done, if anything, to help future victims of this company and their discriminatory practices. Was my choice of a settlement too selfish and short-sighted?

No, settling wasn’t selfish or short-sighted. It’s not your responsibility to make this company change, no matter what the personal cost to you might be; it’s the responsibility of the people running the company.

Moreover, even if you hadn’t signed a confidentiality agreement, your ability to hold them accountable would be limited. Yes, you could tell people in your network about how they operate and leave online reviews. But the impact of those things generally won’t outweigh the impact of making them pay financially — which has at least some potential to motivate them to clean up their act so they don’t get hit with future legal bills too. (That doesn’t mean they will! It just has a shot at it.)

4. How to make a conference travel request at a brand new job

I’m in the final stages interviewing for a role that uses a niche tool, and which I’ve been an active member of this tool’s user community for a few years. In recognition of my contributions to this community (knowledge sharing, answering questions on forums, etc.), the company that owns the tool recently sent me a voucher for free admission to their annual conference. The conference is scheduled for three months after the estimated start date of the role I’m interviewing for, and flight/hotel costs are not covered by the voucher.

I would love to attend the conference if possible, but am unsure how and when to approach the subject with my new employer if I end up with the job. The hiring manager had mentioned that some team members have attended in the previous years and I think it could be a great way to get to know the team if others attend as well this year, but I don’t want to press the issue so new in the role. What do you think?

Once you start the job, say this to your new manager fairly early on: “ToolCompany actually sent me a voucher for free admission to the conference since I’ve been an active member of its user community, but it doesn’t include travel. If NewCompany wants to send me, I’d be happy to go if so and could do ___ there.” (Fill in with things beneficial to NewCompany.)

5. Resigning right before or after a stock vest

I have a stock vest scheduled for February 15. I’ve accepted a new job that starts March 2, and I was originally planning to give notice on February 2, with my last day being February 17. That would allow me to give two weeks’ notice and still have a short break before the new role.

However, I’ve seen multiple colleagues in the past give notice and then be walked out or have their resignation accepted immediately, which would have caused them to forfeit unvested equity. I’ve also seen other teams allow their staff to work through the notice period. My specific team hasn’t had any good data either way, though I think I’m on good terms with my manager and team.

Because of that, I’m now considering resigning only after the vest occurs, possibly even the same day or shortly after.

My concern is that this could make my employer upset or feel blindsided, but I also don’t want to put myself at financial risk by giving notice too early. I’m not trying to be deceptive, just careful.

From a professionalism and workplace norms standpoint, is it reasonable to wait until after the vest to resign, even if that means giving little or no notice?

Yes, it is reasonable to wait until after the stock vest; people do that all the time, for this exact reason, and it’s additionally a good idea because you’ve seen that you might not be allowed to work out your notice period. However, ideally you’d find out if the new employer has any flexibility on your start date so that you can still offer two weeks notice; if you explain that leaving earlier will affect you financially, they might be very willing to give you an extra week or two. (People request this all the time, too. They may or may not be able to agree, but it’s not unreasonable to ask.)

I get stuck with all the event planning due to my male coworkers’ weaponized incompetence

A reader writes:

I’m a woman working in a male-dominated profession. I do most of the planning and organizing for company events—not by choice or job description, but because I’m told I’m such a good planner.

While I’m planning something, I’m rarely offered help. However, right before the event, I’m often asked by male coworkers if they can do anything or if I need anything. “Are we all good for Thursday? Can I do anything?”

Of course, it’s way too late for them to do anything, and they know that. Is this weaponized incompetence? Or what is it? Whatever it is, it’s incredibly annoying, and I’d love to come up with a comeback that shows I’m onto them.

You’re focusing on the wrong problem. You don’t need a comeback for last-minute offers of help — you need to stop agreeing to do all the event planning when it’s not part of your job.

For what it’s worth, it’s possible those offers of help aren’t deliberately insincere, but rather people haven’t thought about the event at all until right before it (because they don’t have to, because they know you are handling it). Then they see it on the calendar for the next day and figure it would be polite to ask if you need help. And if they never plan events themselves, they genuinely may not realize how ridiculous it is to wait until the last minute to make that offer.

If there is weaponized incompetence here, it’s probably happening much earlier — when you’re somehow the only person capable of planning events because you’re so good at them. You will remain better at it than everyone else if no one else is ever expected to do it, and your colleagues are probably happy for that to remain the case.

Regardless, you don’t need a comeback. You need to talk to your own boss and say that you don’t want all the event planning to continue falling to you and you want to focus on the parts of your job that you were hired to do (and which you’re presumably evaluated on when it your performance is assessed and raises are considered), just like your male coworkers get to do. And you should feel free to name the gender disparity — as in, “I’m concerned that this is falling to the one woman on the team, while male team members are free to stay focused on work that’s more advantageous to their careers.”

You can also try just saying no the next time you’re asked to organize an event: “I don’t have room on my plate for that right now, but I’ve done quite a few this year. Could you check with Brian or Roger about this one?”

If that doesn’t work, your back-up strategy should be to stop waiting for offers of help and instead announce what help you need and either assign pieces of the work to people or ask your boss to. But that still leaves you as the person ultimately responsible for making it all come together, so it’s far from ideal.

when is it OK to go over an unresponsive contact’s head?

A reader writes:

For nearly five months now, I have been trying to get in touch with a contact at a partner organization about some grant money they’ve promised us, by contract. Phone calls, emails — nothing. It’s getting completely absurd. I’ve repeatedly inquired as to if there’s something we need to do to hurry this along — no reply. (But he does return contacts from other organizations so I know he is alive and at work.)

This staff member is the primary liaison between his organization and ours, so we want to keep it civil. I’ve been advised to go over his head, to his boss … but she’s the executive director of his organization, and I’m very aware this could get this guy fired, maybe.

When someone’s flaking out on their essential responsibilities, when is it appropriate to go over their head to their boss? How important does the issue have to be, and/or how long should you wait?

Also, what are the best practices for going over someone’s head and getting things done, while also making sure we don’t ruin our relationship with a worker and/or organization who — for all I know — is just going through a difficult time right now?

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.