a senior leader threatened to kill someone in a meeting by Alison Green on May 18, 2026 A reader writes: I work for a large nonprofit organization; I started here a few months ago. I am a mid-career professional, and in general, I feel like I usually have pretty good instincts for how to handle interpersonal conflict at work. But I feel stumped by this one. In a recent call (on Zoom/video) with approximately 10 staff members, we were discussing a stressful work project where a lot of things are going wrong. One of the senior leaders on my team said (I am paraphrasing), “If XYZ happens, I will kill someone.” They did not name a specific person; they seemed to be expressing their extreme frustration at how the project was going. I tried to intervene with empathy, saying something like, “I know, this is a very stressful situation and it’s frustrating that we are facing these issues.” The leader then said, “I am not joking. I will literally kill someone.” From this person’s tone and body language, I feel like they actually were (probably) joking … even though they said, “I am not joking!” But no matter what the person intended, it does not sit well with me. The more I think about it, the more I feel (a) uncomfortable at people threatening homicide in the workplace and (b) resentful that I feel like I need to spend time wondering if my senior leader will or will not actually commit a harmful act. My feeling is: any time someone says that they intend to kill someone — either themself or someone else — we as a society should err on the side of caution and not ignore it. So I am wondering if I should say something and, if so, to whom? We do not have an anonymous reporting tip line in my office, so the options I am considering include HR and my own boss, with whom I have a good relationship (though this person is their boss, so I feel discomfort in that). P.S. For what it’s worth, I am keeping my eyes and ears out as I learn more about working at this place, because not long after this, another person on the call said something like, “You are not the first person today to express homicidal tendencies in a meeting.” I am beginning to wonder if this just a toxic work culture. It’s much, much more likely that these are people using hyperbole to express frustration than that they are actually considering murder. To be clear, that’s not good! People shouldn’t do that. But a lot of people do talk this way, just like a lot of people say “if this printer jams one more time, I’m going to throw myself out the window” without meaning they are truly considering self-harm. You are entitled not to want to hear that kind of thing at work. And people need to be more thoughtful about how their language might land with someone who, for example, had a loved one murdered or who did in fact throw themselves out a window. People tend to use this kind of expression without thinking about the fact that those things happen in real life, and that their audience may include people have been affected by the exact thing they’re joking about. But it’s also true that this kind of expression pops up at work sometimes, and you are generally expected to differentiate between clear hyperbole and a potential threat. I want to be clear — I’m not saying that’s right, just that it’s usually the reality of it. As for what to do, you could certainly talk to HR and/or your boss about it. They will probably tell you that it sounds like hyperbole to them, and your boss in particular might have more insight about her boss that would put it in context. But you could point out that it’s jarring and upsetting to hear that kind of thing at work, especially as someone fairly new who doesn’t have long relationships with the parties involved to put it in context, and suggest reminding people — and especially this manager — to be more thoughtful about their language. You may also like:can I use dark humor at work?my boss mimes shooting herself, asking our boss to stop "helping" so much, and morehow should I handle joking around during mental health discussions with my team? { 279 comments }
“other duties as assigned” – the 4 words that can make your job anything by Alison Green on May 18, 2026 Tucked at the bottom of countless job descriptions is a line so familiar it may barely register: “other duties as assigned.” That language generally feels like a formality—an obvious catch-all to cover the reality that job descriptions can’t list every small thing a job might task you with. In practice, though, that line can end up doing a lot of work in ways new hires never anticipated. At Slate today, I wrote about some of the weirdest ways “other duties as assigned” has been used — and what you can do if you’re being assigned work wildly outside of your job description. You can read it here. You may also like:how far does “other duties as assigned" in a job description go?my boss refuses to give me a job description and told me to stop asking for onemy employee makes up words and is impossible to understand { 125 comments }
my employee wants to work from home for a job that requires being on-site by Alison Green on May 18, 2026 A reader writes: I have a tough situation. Our new business manager of one year for an office that requires in-office management (due to daily printing requirements) has come to higher management to state their childcare is no longer available. And due to childcare being so expensive, this manager has requested to work fully remote until their young child is at least three years old, which will be in 2028. Their direct manager offered the solution of working remotely a few days a week and asked if their partner could help on the other days, but that isn’t an option. We also offered another big office rent-free for the manager to hire a certified babysitter, but that wasn’t viable either. The employee says that the only solution is viable will be working remote from home full-time. The position requires the manager to be in office to manage the team and to be a fill-in when other manager is out of the office. There are other team members with young children who have found childcare, and this office has always been flexible with time off or hybrid work schedules due to family issues. What other solutions am I overlooking? Saying no, and that’s what you should do. This employee isn’t just asking to work full-time remote for a job that requires an in-office presence, which is a no-go on its own. They’re also openly telling you that they plan to be taking care of a toddler during that time, which is a full-time job itself. There’s a reason that employers generally require people who work from home to have separate child care if they have young children, and it’s because if you try to do both at once, you won’t do either of them well. (It’s part of why parents of young kids struggled so much in 2020 when so many people had to work from home with no child care; it’s impossible to do both at the same time with any hope of remaining sufficiently attentive to your job.) It’s also a recipe for trashing the morale of other employees who do pay for childcare (for whom it’s also expensive!) — and doubly so if this employee becomes less responsive when they’re at home, which they almost certainly will. Explain to the employee that you’re sympathetic to their position but the job does require being on-site and, due to the nature of the work, you can’t be flexible with that. The only real path forward here is for them to figure out if the position still works for them or not. And if they decide they’d rather find new childcare than leave, you could certainly be flexible in the short-term while they’re actively working to get that in place. You may also like:when I work from home, do I have to be AT home?my boss wants me to start coming into the office, but I've always been remotemy employee wants to work from home without child care for his baby forever { 252 comments }
coworker is poisoning a new hire with his bad attitude, am I getting an unfair advantage by working on-site, and more by Alison Green on May 18, 2026 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. Coworker is poisoning a new hire with his bad attitude A guy who works in our IT department, Steve, is just genuinely a negative human being, and pretty overt about it. He complains constantly about anything and everything, and really appears to hate his job despite remaining at the company for over 20 years. All managers are stupid, all decisions about his job/responsibility area are bad … you get the idea. Examples: * Telling a visibly pregnant coworker that he “didn’t think bringing a child in the world right now was a great idea considering the state of things.” * Wearing a truly enormous sombrero after complaining it was too bright in the open seating and informing everyone why he was wearing said sombrero. * If anyone asks how he’s doing as a polite greeting, he informs them that this place is awful and he’s counting down the days until he can leave. * He not regarded highly by management, but talks a big game about how he’s smarter than everyone, etc. He is no longer allowed to ask questions in department meetings due to his asking of very specific questions about his responsibility areas and perceived injustices. He now has a college new hire working along side him to learn the area and is turning this new hire into a tiny version of himself. I am not Steve’s manager but have noticed the attitude shift in the college hire. Would it be terrible to mention to management the attitude shift? Would a polite word to the newbie be out of line? I just feel like the new hire is learning “professional norms” from someone without any awareness of what those actually are and is a recipe for disaster for their career. Yes, if you have decent managers, this is something you can discreetly mention to them — although really, whoever assigned Steve to train the new hire should have foreseen this! It also would be a kindness to have a quiet word with the new hire — something along the lines of, “Steve is pretty unhappy here, as he’s probably told you, but the rest of us often don’t see things the way he does. I know you’re still getting acclimated and it can be really helpful to build relationships with multiple people so you get more than one perspective. Please feel free to come to me if you have questions or I can help with anything.” But better yet, are you up for taking the new hire to coffee or lunch and just building a relationship with them? That itself, without even needing to say anything about Steve, might help them see the work through a non-Steve lens. Related: my new employee is getting bad advice from my older employee 2. If my friend announces I’m working with him, I’m worried my company will let me go I recently reached out to a friend who’s building a new company, asking if I could invest small potatoes money in him. It’s only to a tune of a few hundred dollars a month, just to cover some basic services to keep the product running smoothly. He asked me instead to be his co-founder and CTO. The company is bootstrapped so I can’t afford to leave my day job (yet). I believe in this project and I’ll get to do good in the world. Meanwhile my day job is capital T toxic, but I need the insurance (solo wage earner for my family) and a paycheck. I can’t leave and my industry is a trashcan fire for hiring right now due to AI. My company already knows I’m doing something similar, and its okay for me to have a second job as long as its doesn’t impact my first job. The issue is this: the position with the new company is significantly more senior to my regular job. I’m a senior level individual contributor and I don’t see progressing here, nor would I want to given the toxicity. The new company wants to announce me and use it as a marketing tool to get more users. I worry such a visible marketing campaign might give my day job an excuse to just get rid of me (my boss regularly threatens everyone on her team with job loss, among other things). Even though I’ve successfully been doing the same amount of work as I will be doing for a year with their permission and it’s not impacting my work, I fear the increased title will give them an excuse to just oust me preemptively. Can I block my work from my LinkedIn profile so I can (1) update it, and (2) contain the reach of the marketing campaign? It’s minimally likely that they would see it otherwise, as this will be the primary direction of the marketing campaign. Or will the blocking cause some kind of backlash on its own? The HR and head of my division are looking at my LinkedIn regularly. There’s no way to reliably block your company from seeing the announcement. You could block specific people from your profile, but if an announcement is going out that mentions you by name, there’s no way to block them from seeing that (or from hearing about it from someone else who sees it). You’ve got to decide if the potential benefit of allowing the announcement outweighs the danger you think it would put you in — but absent some information to the contrary, I would assume it doesn’t warrant the risk (in any situation, but especially one where your friend needs a few hundred dollars a month to cover basic services — which says the company isn’t in a strong place currently). 3. Am I gaining an unfair advantage over my coworkers by occasionally working at the office in-person? I work remotely for a company in a town about three hours away. Everyone has the option to work remotely, but only about a quarter of people with my position also have the need to work remotely because of distance. I have family in the same city as the company office. I miss being in an office sometime and about 2-3 times a year I combine a trip to see my family with spending a day in the office. I think my bosses really like this effort and I like to think them seeing me in person and not just on a Zoom screen is helpful for my career generally speaking, although I don’t think there is any favoritism being shown by my bosses. I always feel guilty though because the other distant remote workers don’t have this family connection to the city so it feels like I am taking an unfair advantage over them. Am I? No. They are presumably happy with the benefits they get by working remotely. If they felt seeing their bosses in person a few times a year was important to them, they have the option to do that (hell, some companies would even foot the travel bill if they made a business case for it). Your circumstances are different and your preferences are different; that’s not an unfair advantage (although it may be an advantage). 4. Negotiating for paid parental leave when accepting a job I recently interviewed for a great job at a great organization (in my neighborhood!). Sadly, they’ve gone with another candidate, but I asked them to keep me in mind for future opportunities. They responded very quickly to say that the role immediately below it may soon be available and asked if I’d be interested in it, giving the salary range. The job I’d interviewed for would’ve been a $20-$30k pay increase for me, but this lower job would be a bit of a cut. However, I’d still be interested due to the proximity to my home, as long as the health care benefits are better than my current org. My only hesitation is that I want to have a child within the next year and it would be hard to take a pay cut if I don’t have paid parental leave. I saw your advice about negotiating parental leave by saying you want to plan for the long-term, but my state will implement paid family leave within 6-12 months of when I’m hoping to give birth (and I have reasons for not wanting to delay pregnancy further). Is there a way to negotiate paid parental leave 6-12 months in advance of when the organization will be required to provide it? The good news here is that it sounds like your willingness to take this job would hinge on their willingness to agree to give you paid parental leave … which makes this pretty simple since you can just ask about it straightforwardly if you get an offer. Plus, you’re asking for something they’re about to be offering everyone as soon as the law goes into effect, so they don’t need to worry as much about setting a precedent as they would otherwise. If they offer you the job, you could say, “I’d love to accept but there’s a chance I may need paid parental leave in the next year. I know (state) is implementing that in (month) but would you be willing to offer it to me before then? If we could agree to the same X months the law will offer when it goes into effect, just starting sooner, I would be thrilled to accept.” You could also add, “I should say that I’m not pregnant so don’t have clear timing on when or even whether I’d need to use it; I just want to make sure it’s there if I do need it before the law takes effect.” 5. What is a dotted-line report? What is the purpose of a dotted-line report? What does it typically entail and what are good use-cases for it to exist? I see them sometimes in my org, but I don’t know what they mean. If you have a dotted-line relationship to someone above you, it means they oversee parts of your work but not your job as a whole. For example, maybe you’re a fundraising assistant who reports to the fundraising manager but you also have a dotted line reporting relationship with the grants manager because you analyze data for her and report to her on grant-related deliverables. The fundraising manager is your manager for all the general manager stuff (overseeing your daily work, monitoring your progress against goals, doing your performance reviews, giving you most feedback, thinking about your professional development, approving time off, etc.), but the grants manager has the ability to assign you work and give you feedback on the work you do for her (and may contribute input to the performance review that your manager writes). You may also like:my “on-site” coworker is never on-sitemy employee has a bad attitudemy boss asked if I felt "threatened" by a new hire when I complained about her { 231 comments }
weekend open thread – May 16-17, 2026 by Alison Green on May 15, 2026 Teddy, Grendel, Griffin Stella, Wallace This comment section is open for any non-work-related discussion you’d like to have with other readers, by popular demand. Here are the rules for the weekend posts. Book recommendation of the week: Leonard and Hungry Paul, by Ronan Hession. Two men living with their parents meander through their lives being kind, fundamentally decent people. Not a lot happens! But it is very quiet and charming. (Amazon, Bookshop) * I earn a commission if you use those links. You may also like:the cats of AAM (updated!)all of my book recommendations from 2015-2023all of my 2024 and 2025 book recommendations { 732 comments }
open thread – May 15, 2026 by Alison Green on May 15, 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 coworker wants us to call her boyfriend her “master”my boss is making threats about the Mafia to meneed help finding a job? start here { 845 comments }
colorful pimple patches at work, mentioning kids when networking, and more by Alison Green on May 15, 2026 It’s four answers to four questions. Here we go… 1. Should I say something about our intern’s bright blue pimple patch? We have a paid intern on a four-month term with government. He has some social anxiety things and general workplace norms we have been working with him on. Last week, he showed up at a virtual internal team meeting with a blue star sticker on his forehead. It took a while to figure out it was a pimple patch. Do we say something? I know there is a move among young people to wear bright and patterned pimple patches in public, but at work I expect them to be hidden. Pimple patches at work are increasingly getting normalized and seen as no different than a band-aid — but at work you’d generally want to choose a neutral one, not a bright blue star, just like in many/most offices it would feel out of sync to wear a bright novelty bandage with a Pixar character on it on your face. But this is what internships are for: to learn professional norms. So I’d approach it from that angle: “Bandages are obviously fine at work, but if it’s on your face, it’ll look more professional if you choose a neutral one rather than a bright color. This is one of those things that people generally don’t come in knowing, and exactly why internships can be so useful.” There are some offices where a bright blue pimple patch would be fine too, but I’m guessing yours isn’t one of them and it’s to his advantage to know that. 2. Have the rules around mentioning kids when networking changed since the pandemic? I ran into a former boss at a professional meeting recently, and when we were catching up she mentioned a job that she thought would be a good fit for me. We talked briefly, but I told her it wasn’t right for me right now because I have young children and need more flexibility. Was this unprofessional? My friends and I were discussing this later and we’re pretty split: half of them thought I shouldn’t have mentioned my kids at all because it risks “mommy-categorizing” me and will curtail future recruitment, and half thought mentioning kids/families/life at work has become more socially acceptable in the last five years and employers respect people who know their worth and have boundaries around work and family life. (Interestingly my mom-friends were mostly in the first group while the dads in the group thought employers respect work/life balance.) We’re in a conservative industry (think finance, but it’s not that) but it’s 2026, and the realities of being a working parent are much more openly discussed now. What do you think? I don’t think it’s any surprise that the men had a more optimistic view than the women, since the women are the ones who actually need to deal with how this still works. But I think there’s a difference between talking about your kids in an interview (where I’d still avoid it, because you don’t want to give them a reason not to hire you) and saying it when you’re catching up with a former boss and are explaining why you don’t want to pursue a particular job. In either situation, mentioning your kids wouldn’t be unprofessional — just possibly unwise in the interview scenario. Even in 2026, there’s absolutely still bias against female candidates who interviewers think might less available or less dedicated due to their kids. (The men you talked to have probably had different experiences themselves, but it’s well-documented that there’s a mom penalty far more there’s a dad penalty.) 3. Do I have to give four weeks notice when I quit? Our employee manual requests two-week notice periods for non-management and then increases in increments for roles in management and higher. In my position (department lead), the “suggestion” is four weeks for a notice period. We’re in an at-will state in the U.S. Last year, the company went through a RIF where many staff were furloughed without severance or a notice period. I became the only leader in my department overnight. No one has been asked back, and the folks who were able to find other work were considered resignations (again, no severance or payout for PTO accrued). As the months have passed and the chaos from this RIF has worsened, I’ve begun interviewing for other roles. Recruiters are asking how long I’d need for a notice period, and I’m worried that four weeks is hurting my chances. Ideally, I would love to give two weeks of notice, take a week off to just breath and reset, and then start fresh(ish) in a new role. My burnout is real and I know hopping into the next role immediately will not be good for my mental or physical health. But this approach seems like it will burn bridges with a company that I’ve built almost 10 years of good will with. Alternatively, a four-week window with no break at all seems abysmal for a number of reasons, and that’s assuming a new company can hire on that timeline. My most recent datapoint for comparison was a manager (in name only, as their entire team was furloughed or quit) who gave two weeks notice. I heard from them that their boss (a company owner) reacted terribly to the resignation and made their anger clear. I also heard from colleagues that other executives were complaining about the short notice period. During the notice period, I discovered there was absolutely zero redundancy or support for this person in their role and leadership had no idea how to cover the work. Of course, this isn’t the resignee’s fault and they worked their butt off to support a transition. But their reputation with company leadership has been unfairly tarnished. Do I have options here? Frankly, I struggle to move past the fact that this company released employees with no notice or support last year and yet has the gall to be upset with resigning employees this year. But I also need to factor in my professional reputation and the realities of a competitive job market. They can “request” four weeks notice all they want; it doesn’t obligate you to give it. Two weeks notice is what’s standard, and it’s reasonable for you to give that. That would be true regardless, but it’s exponentially true with an employer that doesn’t offer severance in lieu of notice. If their finances made doing that impossible, then so be it — but they’ve forfeited any standing to take issue with you giving two weeks notice (which is still two weeks better than what they did on their side!). If they want a certain amount of notice from people, they need to have policies and practices on their side that offer the equivalent in return (and even then, they won’t always get it, because that’s not how this works). But they don’t. They have the opposite. That doesn’t mean they won’t be upset when you resign; you can’t control that. But you can act reasonably on your side — meaning that you give two weeks notice — and say, “Unfortunately I’m not able to give more than a standard two-week notice period; I tried to make longer work but couldn’t.” And including the word “standard” in there is intentional. Related: can my employer make me give four weeks notice when I quit? can I give 2 weeks notice when my employer says they “expect” 4 weeks? 4. Could I ever have a manager and an employee swap positions? I manage a department in a public sector organization. The work is very technical/specialized, and good people are hard to find. Everyone involved is on a pretty generous payscale, in my opinion. I have two specialists who are relatively young, ambitious, flexible, and eager to learn. I also manage two managers who have long experience and a lot of knowledge, but who are pretty taciturn and set in their ways and keep a lot of knowledge in their heads without documenting. The department was without any leader for some time before I joined, and while the managers filled the gap to some extent, neither of them was interested in vying for a further promotion. In practice I supervise all four. I have high hopes for both specialists but they are both somewhat frustrated at being stuck where they are until one of the manager positions opens up. Previously I had explored adding more grades to the specialist position so they had more promotions ahead of them, and I had successfully raised their salary scales, but our organization is currently having economic headwinds and more adjustments like that will be very difficult for a while. One of the specialists, Alexa, is very good at advocating for herself and inquires from time to time what options are available for her advancement. She definitely has options if she doesn’t advance here. She does great work, possibly the best in the department, and is always working on improving her already high skills. It gets to the point that it feels like she is more suitable as a manager than her actual manager. Often I direct a question at her manager, Jody, that I see as a higher-level question she should answer, but then often (and to my declining surprise) she defers to Alexa. Alexa is far more proactive and big-picture-mindful than Jody, who sort of plods along and seems to take the easy/reactive route whenever possible. Is there a framework in which I could make Jody and Alexa swap positions? Or is this broadly out of the question in most cases? What might be the groundwork to make it feasible, if ever? I honestly think Jody has a perspective and habits more suitable to the specialist position, and Alexa to the managerial position. But that doesn’t mean Jody wouldn’t react negatively to the idea, which would be a salary downgrade. (I could move around reporting lines so that Jody doesn’t literally report to Alexa, though — Alexa could manage the other specialist.) Have you given Jody feedback on the weaknesses in her work or would this come as a total surprise to her? Before you think about having them swap positions, this is the first piece to tackle; if Jody isn’t meeting your expectations for her work, she deserves to know that. Totally aside from the Alexa complication, you should be coaching Jody and giving her feedback about how to improve. As for a swap: possible but unlikely. If your sense was that Jody dislikes managing and wishes she could take a step down to a specialist role, then you could feel her out on whether she’d ever like to seriously explore doing that (although the fact that it would involve a pay cut makes it fairly unlikely). Otherwise, though, you’re better off managing Jody more forthrightly (including considering letting her go if she’s not performing at the level you need after coaching, although I can’t tell whether or not that’s the case). You could also consider just promoting Alexa to manage the other specialist, although if this is a team of four with no employees beneath the other two managers, that’s a lot of management below you for what doesn’t sound like good reason. Really, I think you have a Jody problem that’s impacting everything else. 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how much should I monitor a struggling employee’s work hours? by Alison Green on May 14, 2026 A reader writes: I’ve been working with a report who has had some troubles with organization — he would have dropped a few balls if I hadn’t spotted that he was missing things. I’ve given him some very direct feedback which he agreed with. He’s been working on some better organizational systems, but now I’m wondering if there’s more to the issues. We’re all remote and have an online chat system that shows if you’re away from your desk for more than five minutes. And he is away … a lot. I hate that I’ve noticed this, because I don’t want to be micromanaging my team’s hours, but frequently I go to message him and find he’s been away for 20-30 minutes. We work 9-5 and it’s reasonably flexible. If you have a doctor’s appointment or want to take a longer lunch, the expectation is that you mark it in your calendar and make the time up later. I also have no problem with people stepping away from their desk occasionally to deal with life or to get some thinking time. But there is a limit and I think he’s exceeding it. As an example, he logged on 20 minutes late yesterday, took a 90+ minute lunch break and at least another half hour break that I noticed — and I’m obviously not monitoring him all the time. As far as I can tell, he’s not making the time up later, and he hasn’t mentioned any of this or put it in his calendar. If he was a strong performer, I wouldn’t care! And I don’t want people to think they can’t flex their hours sensibly because they absolutely can. But this could be playing into the organizational issues if he’s missing things because he’s not spending enough time on them. Should it be part of the conversation? How do I raise it without sounding like I’m micromanaging his hours? Yeah, I’d raise it — because while ultimately his work quality (meeting deadlines, not letting balls drop, etc.) is the issue, this sounds likely enough to be playing a role in what’s happening that it’s silly not to name it when it might speed up the whole process of figuring out if he’s going to work out in this job or not. Plus, he sounds pretty far over the line in terms of what kind of flexibility is appropriate for him to be taking. It’s not like you’re calling him out for his lunch running over by 10 minutes; you’re seeing significant and regular chunks of time missing from his work hours. I would say it this way: “I’ve noticed that you’re away from your desk a lot more frequently than I’d expect. We do have some flexibility with hours, but the expectation is that if you have an appointment or take an extra long lunch, you’ll mark it in your calendar and make the time up later (or take PTO if you can’t or don’t want to make up the time). Generally, though, I’d expect you to be working 9-5 with a half hour for lunch. I don’t want to micromanage your time — but when you’ve been dropping balls and working to get better organized, it makes me concerned that this is playing a role. So I want to ask you to look at that as well.” Or you could skip those last two sentences and just end with, “Can you be sure you’re doing that going forward?” There are times when it makes sense to just keep the focus on the ultimate outcomes you need from an employee (in this case, that he gets better organized and stops dropping balls) and figure that it’s up to him how he gets there, and that the pressure from you to do that should naturally push him to change those habits — and that if he doesn’t get there, he’s not well suited for the job. But in this case I think you’ll save some time by just naming what you’re seeing and telling him he needs to rein it in. And you’re not required to look the other way when he’s abusing the job’s flexibility … in any case, but especially when where you’re actively coaching him to fix problems. You may also like:my employee isn't working full-time hours, leaves mid-day, and is lying on their timesheetsmy employee refuses to reveal her online statushow can I show empathy for my struggling employee while making it clear her work needs to improve? { 145 comments }
work is weirder now by Alison Green on May 14, 2026 It’s hard to think of another time in modern history where workplace trends have changed as quickly and as dramatically as they have in the last five years. From the enormous increase in remote work, to employees grappling with careers that look quite different than what they might have been told to expect, to rapidly growing discontent with income inequality and stagnant wages and disillusioned employees reassessing their trust in their employers, to young workers launching pandemic-era careers without the same set of work and academic experiences that previous generations benefitted from, work is just a very different place than it used to be. I wrote a short piece for Inc. about how managing needs to be different these days, and it’s accompanied by a round-up of 10 of Inc.’s favorite Ask a Manager Q&A’s. You can read it here. You may also like:our Gen Z employees want to be coddled and are struggling with the realities of workhow should I manage someone who uses the Gen Z stare?my awful coworker put us through something traumatic and now she's coming back to work { 158 comments }
let’s discuss small things that nearly took down an entire company by Alison Green on May 14, 2026 Let’s discuss small things that almost took down an entire team or company. To kick us off, here’s a story that was shared here recently: About 10 years ago, I was at a job where a huge drama erupted over email signatures that ultimately resulted in a lawsuit. One day the subcontractor we all worked for sent an email that we had to standardize our email signatures because some people were having too much fun with them and using non-standard colors and fonts. Okay, fine, we thought, we guess we took it too far. The job was very very tedious and messing around with signature blocks (strictly in emails to each other) was one of our few outlets and expressions of individuality. Which was fine for about two hours, until a follow-up came down from the subcontractor telling us we all had to use the same provided signature block that contained a job title other than what we were … and that’s when everything blew up. Think: we were senior advanced llama groomers, first class, and were being ordered to identify ourselves as llama grooming junior assistants, third class, in all our correspondence. A couple people began to ask questions and do some googling, and it was gradually revealed that the subcontractor was billing us to the contractor at the higher senior groomer rate but paying us at the much lower junior assistant one (and telling us that was the senior groomer rate!) … and the new email signature was meant to prove to various important people and clients we corresponded with that we were actually junior llama grooming assistants, third class, and to thus justify our low pay scale in the eyes of some people beginning to ask questions during a contracting cycle. Several people sued; more abnormalities came to light, including that we were entitled by law to PTO in the state we were in, but it had been hidden from us, removed from the handbook, and even hidden inside the timecard software (!). The chorus of complaints grew very loud, but then everyone in the office was then laid off in several waves across a month or two (no justification provided, just “you’re at will, and it’s our will that you leave now”). Many years later, the lawsuit was dropped, but not until the subcontractor’s name was dragged through the mud and they fell out of favor among contractor llama groomers. It was a huge mess, caused by a few people using pink Comic Sans fonts that caught the attention of the finance department who then panicked that we might blow the whole billing scheme with our shenanigans. Well then. Let’s talk about other small things that took down or nearly took down someone or something. You may also like:my boss drops his sick kid off in our small officeour boss cross-examines us over minor mistakesI flashed my entire team during a video call { 596 comments }