employees don’t want to participate in our community outreach, parking issues, and more by Alison Green on May 1, 2026 It’s four answers to four questions. Here we go… 1. Employees don’t participate in our community outreach activities I’m a part of the “good will” committee for my office location, as well as the large committee for the whole company. Lately I’ve been feeling a struggle of getting other employees actively involved in our initiatives. Good will is a named tenet of our company, and we have a pretty healthy annual budget to go along with it. We try and have one or two initiatives per month that have varying degrees of involvement. Sometimes it involved volunteering onsite (during work hours or directly after). Sometimes it’s asking for donations (gently used books or unexpired canned goods/shelf stable foods). We’re not asking people to go and spend their own money on things. The most successful ones are in-office, during office hours, but there’s only so many opportunities for those. We also try and cover a variety of different areas — unhoused people, kids/schools, food scarcity, women, LGBTQIA+, community gardens and book depositories, animals, BIPOCs groups. We also ask employees about groups they would like to see us support. I just feel like it’s been a struggle lately to get people involved. People never seem to have issues finding time for sporting events or happy hours, but no one seems to want to do a shift at the food bank. Shocking, I know. Any ideas on how to get people motivated? They may not want to. Some people want to spend their limited downtime relaxing, and that’s okay. I’’m not sure it’s appropriate for an employer to try to change that. People are exhausted right now, and they’re at work to earn money, not to volunteer. A lot of people who are charity-minded do their charity work on their own time, and don’t feel their employer needs to claim the credit for those efforts. If your company wants to do good in the community, that should mean it’s coming from your company’s resources — its money and its time (meaning that this should all happen on work time, not after hours, and other work needs to be moved aside to create space for it; the expectation shouldn’t be that people’s regular workloads don’t change at all to make room for it). If the company isn’t willing to do that, then this is just a value they’ve stuck on a list, not a genuine value they hold. All that said, I think you have the answer when you say, “The most successful ones are in-office, during office hours, but there’s only so many opportunities for those.” If people aren’t interested in ones outside of that category, that’s feedback worth listening to! And if there are only so many opportunities for those, then maybe you stick to those because that’s what employees are up for. Beyond that, talk to people! Survey employees on what they are and aren’t interested in participating in — both in terms of specific activities and general categories of activities (during work hours, 5-7 pm, drives where you bring items from home, etc.), and also ask how they’d like to see the company live out this value. That’s what ultimately should shape it. 2. Should I tell my manager about a recurring issue with a coworker? I’m a receptionist at a small healthcare-adjacent company and would appreciate your advice on a recurring issue with a remote customer service representative, “Donna.” Callers frequently report being hung up on a few minutes after I forward them to the customer service line. Almost every caller who tells me this has mentioned they were speaking with Donna when it happened, which is a problem I don’t encounter with any other representatives. Because our work involves urgent health-related matters and long wait times, these disconnections can be pretty significant for our clients. Sometimes they’re sitting in the queue listening to hold music for 20 or 30 minutes before having to start over again because upon being transferred to Donna, they get disconnected. Thing is, I’m hesitant to report this to our supervisor because the guy is a severe micromanager, and I want to avoid subjecting anybody to having to deal with him. I’ve been the subject of his ire before, and it’s not fun when his laser beams get trained on you. However, I’m growing concerned that Donna may be intentionally disconnecting calls, or has an unstable remote connection. How would you suggest I handle this situation? You need to tell your manager about it. It’s a significant issue, and it’s got to be incredibly frustrating for your callers — and your position means you’re probably the only person (other than Donna) who’s aware of it. Your position does give you standing to raise it, because you’re partly responsible for the experience that callers have when they contact your company. (That doesn’t mean you’re responsible for whatever is happening once you transfer them, of course — just that when you have info about their experience that no one else has, you do need to make someone higher up aware.) If that mean Donna gets micromanaged … well, some closer management might be needed here, because either Donna is intentionally disconnecting callers or is aware she’s frequently losing her connection and not bothering to ask for help to get that fixed. Or maybe she has, in which case she’ll presumably explain that to her boss — but either way, this is something you should escalate. The subject line of your email to me was, “Is it appropriate to snitch on my coworker for this?” and this is not snitching. This is letting your manager know about a work issue that’s highly relevant to how well your organization is serving clients. 3. Disabled and losing access to parking I work at a university that recently announced a major campus construction project that will eliminate a significant amount of central parking, including areas closest to my building. The announcement framed this as an exciting improvement to campus life, but for some of us, it creates a serious accessibility problem. I have a disability that affects my mobility. Even now, I arrive over an hour early just to secure one of the limited nearby parking spots, and I still face a several-minute walk to my building, which can be difficult depending on the day. I am not the only one who does this in my building. There’s several of us who do this daily. With these lots closing, we are all extremely concerned that we simply won’t be able to access my workplace in a reliable or sustainable way. This is the second time in a few years that staff parking has been reduced. In this case, the project will also remove several accessible parking spaces across campus, and they are not being replaced. The university’s suggestion is to contact parking services for alternatives, but based on past experience, those alternatives are not workable for me. They typically recommend using a shuttle system, which is difficult for me to physically navigate, or parking farther away. Factoring in wait times and travel, that could add close to an hour to my commute each day. I also have religious commitments after work on Fridays, and this added time would make it difficult or impossible to attend. The shuttle isn’t always the most reliable. It’s also small and with more people probably needing to use this, it could add in well over an hour to my commute daily. Another option is purchasing access to parking at a nearby institution, but that requires an upfront cost of over $700 annually, which is not financially feasible for most people. My job could be performed remotely, but remote work is not currently offered as an option, and I worry that pushing too hard on that could negatively affect my job security. I have not reached out to parking services, as I am not optimistic about the response they will give. Historically, the university has been resistant to feedback on parking and accessibility concerns or they ignore emails totally. Another colleague reached out to them with these exact concerns, but she’s certain she’ll not receive a response or they will not care as they have when there were issues with parking spots blocked off earlier last year. At what point does this become an ADA issue? What are my options for advocating for reasonable accommodations in a situation like this? Would requesting remote work on days when I cannot access parking be reasonable, or am I better off pursuing a formal accommodation through HR or another route such as an anonymous ADA complaint? It’s an ADA issue now. Under the ADA, employers with 15 or more employees are required to provide accessible parking as a reasonable accommodation for workers with disabilities, and they must engage in an interactive process to find solutions if spots are unavailable. You should submit a request in writing to HR with the subject line, “official request for accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act.” Don’t go through parking services since they’ve been unresponsive; approach it as a legally required medical accommodation with HR. 4. Independent contractor vs. employee I have a question regarding W2 vs 1099 contractor definitions. I understand one key legal difference is a contractor sets their own hours. Does that mean that no employment where I commit to showing up at a certain time can be a 1099? Like, let’s say I am a tutor. I choose my students and can let them go. But let’s say I sign on to tutor someone intensively for you hours once a week for a semester at a specific time slot, and I sign a contract to that effect, do they now have to give me a W2? The IRS doesn’t use a black and white test for contractors where if you don’t set your own hours, you can’t be a contractor. Rather, they look at the totality of the circumstances. They look at three factors: (1) behavioral — does the company control or have the right to control what the worker does and how the worker does their job? (2) financial — are the business aspects of the job (like how the worker is paid, whether expenses are reimbursed, and who provides tools/supplies) controlled by the company? (3) type of relationship — are there written contracts or employee-type benefits (insurance, vacation pay, etc.) and is the work a key aspect of the business? The law says, “Businesses must weigh all these factors when determining whether a worker is an employee or independent contractor. Some factors may indicate that the worker is an employee, while other factors indicate that the worker is an independent contractor. There is no ‘magic’ or set number of factors that makes the worker an employee or an independent contractor and no one factor stands alone in making this determination. Also, factors which are relevant in one situation may not be relevant in another. The keys are to look at the entire relationship and consider the extent of the right to direct and control the worker.” There are independent contractors who commit to working set hours. Doing that doesn’t on its own make you an employee. 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I was laid off, but my old coworkers are still texting me with work questions by Alison Green on April 30, 2026 A reader writes: My position was recently eliminated. Now former colleagues are texting me to ask questions. I don’t feel obligated to answer. What are some response options when I want to politely say no? You’re not obligated to answer questions when you’re no longer working there. That said, it’s also true that if you want to keep good relationships with these colleagues and might need them for job leads or references (informal or otherwise) in the future, you might not want to take a completely black-and-white line on this. You definitely shouldn’t do work of any real substance when you’re no longer getting paid — like a detailed update on the history of a project or a rundown of the best way to approach a client — but if it’s a very simple question like “where is the key for the X filing cabinet?” that you could answer in a single sentence, it can be to your benefit to answer, because you want to maintain those relationships. Even then, there are limits; if you’re getting multiple questions like that, it’s reasonable to stop helping. But one or two very simple questions? Those are usually in your best interests to answer. If you’re being asked for more then that, though, then any of these are reasonable to say: * “I don’t think I can help since I’m no longer working there — I’m sorry about that!” * “I don’t have access to that anymore now that I’ve left.” * “I’m not sure off the top of my head — sorry!” * “I’m not sure off the top of my head, but check the files I left behind.” * “I can’t keep answering questions now that I’m gone, but try checking the manual.” If it’s a colleague you particularly like or have good rapport with, you could say, “I know you’re in a tough spot since you’re trying to get this done, but since I’m not being paid anymore, I’m not comfortable continuing to help with the work.” And if it’s a really large number of questions on substantive things and you’d be willing to help if they paid you, you could say, “I’m getting a lot of requests for help with things like this. I’d be willing to set up a consulting arrangement for a set number of hours of time over the next month or two if you want to do that.” (I’ve noticed people like to suggest quoting an outrageously fee for that, but that’s not in your interests either. A fair rate, yes, but not an obscene one just because you want to stick it to them; that’ll just make your judgment look really off. If you want stick it to them, you’re better off skipping this altogether.) But if you’re not particularly interested in maintaining these relationships and don’t think you’ll want to call on them for any sort of help in the future, you can also just ignore the messages. You’re not obligated to respond. You may also like:my coworkers follow me into the bathroom with work questionshow do I handle endless rounds of nitpicky questions from coworkers?my job offer was rescinded -- after I already quit my old job { 81 comments }
updates: employee claiming overtime when not working, pushing back as a group when you’re all remote, and more by Alison Green on April 30, 2026 Here are three updates from past letter-writers. 1. Should I tell my boss about an employee who’s claiming overtime when she’s not working? (#4 at the link) Your response and the comments gave me the courage to bring this up again with the manager. I used the morale and budget angles (my director is currently keeping an eye on the budget due to the current instability) and it seems to have worked. Manager actually agreed they could no longer sanction (turn a blind eye to) 5+ hours of overtime a week. It is fine if the employee wants to come in early and hang out, but they need to clock in when the work begins. Thank you for giving me the confidence and courage to push the issue. This is a great example of how sometimes we need to think about how we present and push before going up the chain. In this case, the manager is doing their job — managing! — with a couple prompts. It is good for them, and the employee. Of course, proof is in the pudding. If it continues, I will have to go to my director. Thanks again! 2. How do we push back as a group when we’re all remote? A pretty mundane update to this one. To clarify, I found the camera-on requirement to be a mild annoyance, but the mic-on requirement was my main concern. The email announcing the change said that microphones-on for all attendees would be “REQUIRED” (all caps) (twice), and there was a reminder before the first updated meeting to keep mics on, so it seemed like they were serious about enforcing it. Anyway, the first time this meeting happened, almost everyone followed the rule and left their mics on. It was annoying, but the sound interference wasn’t as bad as I might have feared (a few coughs and pets making noises, but nothing too terrible). Over the next few weeks, however, fewer and fewer people went mic on — so that now, a few months in, we’re back to the standard of everyone being on mute unless you have something specific to say. In a way, it’s like we all pushed back a group without needing to coordinate, since everyone just … stopped following the rule. It’s still camera-on for everyone, but that’s tolerable. I still appreciate your advice, and while I hope I never need to use it, I feel I have a better sense of what steps to take if I do! 3. How to handle thank-you notes for A LOT of interviewers (#5 at the link) I ended up speaking to seven people, and I decided to play it safe and send follow-up notes to all of them, including the repeat folks from the first-round interview. Long story short, I got the job! Using your advice, I successfully negotiated for a higher salary than the initial offer, and then I picked up my life and moved to a new city. I’ve been at the job for six months now and I like it a lot overall, but the environment has grown more challenging recently for the same reason most office environments have. So we’ll see what the next few years look like. Thank you again for the advice! You may also like:how do we push back as a group when we're all remote?a man claiming to have an Oscar (he doesn't) wants to give me advice on my field (that he's not in)I apply for remote jobs ... and then it turns out they're not remote { 51 comments }
what dysfunctional behavior has a toxic office driven you to? by Alison Green on April 30, 2026 It’s the Thursday “ask the readers” question. A reader writes: Luckily no one in my office is biting anyone, but my formerly pretty-good job has devolved into a toxic mess. I found myself pressing my ear against my wall to try and glean basic (not sensitive or confidential) information I needed to do my job by eavesdropping on a conversation next door. My officemate wasn’t ruffled; instead he grabbed a glass to better hear it, because that was a reasonable reaction to the situation we are in. Obviously we need to get the hell out, and we’re working on it. But in the meantime, I’d love to hear readers share their own behavior that made perfect sense in the context of their office dysfunction … and would be horrifying anywhere else. (And advice on keeping your “normal meter” calibrated among that level of chaos is extremely welcome.) Readers, this is your moment! What dysfunctional behavior did a toxic office drive you to after warping your normal meter? And some related advice: does sharing strategies for dealing with toxic workplaces normalize bad jobs? are you haunted by your last bad job? how can I brace myself for my toxic new job? You may also like:I bit my coworkermy dysfunctional office only hires young people because we're "blank slates"why do highly qualified people stay at dysfunctional companies? { 497 comments }
company said I could move and then changed their mind, how do I lean out of our DEI work, and more by Alison Green on April 30, 2026 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. Company said I could move after my husband took a new job and now they won’t let me I work for a large corporation with a Remote First policy, and compensation is location-based with three tiers. While their policy says permanent relocations must be approved, there is no employee-facing material that says relocation is not allowed up a tier. For example, there is nothing saying someone in a lower cost of living city (Tier 3) who needs to move to a high cost of living city (Tier 1) will not be approved. My husband applied for and got a job in a Tier 1 location. He flew out to start the job (his start date was four days after the offer). I immediately told my managers, and they said they didn’t anticipate an issue so we prepared to move to the new location. I’ve been with the company for five years, am a top performer, and have won several awards for performance. My direct managers and the org manager approved the move, but last week I learned that the upper leadership have not, due to a policy of not approving moves up location-based pay tiers. My managers had never even heard of this policy. My husband had already accepted the job, started work, came back to help me pack, and the day before all our items were to be shipped across the country we got this news. I have appealed the decision and my managers have outlined the business cases for me staying to leadership. But as it stands right now, I have 90 days where I can work from a non-home location but after that I’ll have to quit or be terminated. I asked HR if I could remain at my Tier 3 salary through the next review cycle (as I realize that budgets have been allocated, etc.) but that was denied since remaining at a different salary tier in a new location is not “company policy.” I’m at my wits’ end. My husband has been out of work since Covid, this is an amazing opportunity, and he has already accepted the job. We can’t live in the new area without both of our salaries. I was definitely not expecting to lose my job because I moved, and I’m terrified of looking for a job in this market. I’m currently going back home alone to try to buy as much time before my 90 days starts. My husband wants me to get a lawyer, but I don’t know if I have a case or if a lawyer could do anything since I’ve not been fired yet. My job is extremely specialized and I’m very happy in my current position and I just don’t know what to do. I’m sorry, this is a mess. If your company promotes itself as “remote first” organization, they need to be much clearer with employees about what restrictions they have on that. If you can’t move to a location with a higher pay tier than your current one, it’s ridiculous that they haven’t proactively told people; their lack of transparency is what led to this, and it would have been so easy for them to avoid it. Are you able to tell your company that you’re going to stay where you are? Whether or not you really do plan to stay there long-term, telling them that would presumably stop the 90-day clock from ticking and buy you and your husband some time to decide what you want to do, which could include living in separate locations until one of you can move to the other, you looking for a job out there, or him coming back (basically returning to the situation from before he got the job, which would be brutal but is an option). But your company sucks for putting you in this position and not being willing to make an exception considering the circumstances, and particularly when you’d been told by multiple managers that it would be fine. 2. How do I lean out of my company’s DEI work? I’m a boomerang at my current company (meaning I left but have now returned). When I was previously employed here, I ended up leading our women’s ERG, as well as leading or being a critical stakeholder in a variety of DEI-related groups and activities. Ultimately, despite doing this work for several years, and passing the baton to capable passionate folks when I left, many of the key metrics related to increasing diversity at all levels but particularly in management have not changed or have changed for the worse. Ultimately, I have come to believe that the many extra hours of unpaid labor my colleagues and I contributed did little more than create good press for the firm. I think that if the firm is committed to the goals it ostensibly signed on to, then such efforts need to come from the top and include real numeric goals in hiring and promoting, along with resources for professional development, none of which were ever really forthcoming. Now that I’m returning, I’m more interested in pursuing social justice goals outside the firm with organizations that demonstrate real commitment and effectiveness in their efforts. I know as part of our upcoming goal-setting conversation, I’m going to be encouraged to take up some of my old work and I absolutely won’t. We have volunteer PTO hours available, which I am happy to use for outside-the-office work. How do I thread this needle in conversations with my grandboss, who also happened to be the exec sponsor of the ERG I used to lead? (Honestly, I think my company has no business or claim on this stuff but I need to check a box, so…) If you’re asked to pick up that work again: “Oh, thanks for offering, but I’m not interested in stepping back into it again.” If you want, you can add, “I’d like to leave it with whoever has been handling it or give someone new a chance to take it on.” If you’re pressed about why, feel free to say, “I’ve realized that work needs to come from the top of a firm and people at lower levels aren’t well positioned to do it.” If pressed anyway: “I feel strongly about it, so I’m going to pass.” If you want you can add, “It’s something I work on a lot outside of work and I don’t want it to become part of my job here as well.” 3. Can I suggest my difficult boss get more emotional support? I have a question about a boss who I don’t really like, but I also think he’s not a bad person so I don’t want anything bad to happen to him. I work in a law firm, and this guy is one of the salaried partners. He has bullied a couple of people out of the team, but always been very respectful to me. Even so, because of his behavior to others, I’m not a fan. He has always been a bit unreliable — there is not a single time he has gone on a business trip or holiday when I have been told in advance and had a plan. Every time, he just disappears, and then there are timezone issues that neither I nor the client were prepared for. But, by and large he has kept up with work and I’ve had a decent time learning from him. Recently, he has dropped the ball SO BADLY. Clients are complaining and he is continuing to disappear without warning, but he’s managing it even worse than he previously did. He is failing to turn up to calls that he’s said he’ll attend. I know he is going through a divorce, although that’s been going on for eight months now, and it’s only recently that he’s gotten really bad. I hate the way that he is affecting junior staff, and I have been communicating with management accordingly. However, I am also worried about him. I might not like him, but I don’t think he’s a bad person, and I think this really AWOL behavior is pretty worrisome, even taking into account his usual behavior. I think he is a typically manly man who has not considered the resources available for mental health issues. Is there any way I can check in with him, and offer him some judgment free support, without being inappropriate? You’re not the person best positioned to do that. His partners or other senior members of the firm are. You are positioned to do the piece that you’re already doing (communicating with management about what’s happening). You could certainly suggest to one of them (perhaps that most empathetic-seeming among them) that he might benefit from a nudge toward some support, but beyond that you’re just not well placed to do it. (It’s not that it would always be impossible to suggest that to someone with more power than you, but typically if you had that kind of rapport that would make it natural, you’d already know it.) 4. When employers say “we’ll keep your resume on file,” will they actually look at it again? Do employers look at past resume submissions when a new job opens, or do they just look through the new submissions? Does “having a resume on file” actually mean anything? It varies. Some companies say it as part of their boilerplate rejection letters when the chances of them ever contacting you again are low. But other companies do look through past applicants when they have new openings, particularly for hard-to-fill roles and particularly when they need to hire again soon after a similar role just closed. People do get contacted by companies for openings they might be well matched with after previously being rejected. You just can’t really tell from the outside how likely it is. Either way, there’s no point in reading much into it, and if you see an opening there in the future that you’re interested in, proactively apply — don’t assume they’ll contact you. Related: does “we’ll keep your resume on file” really mean anything? 5. Can I ask for more pay in lieu of benefits? When I was looking for my first job out of college, a mentor suggested I negotiate for higher pay since I was under 26 and could still be on my parents’ health insurance. I actually did need health insurance, and in fact it was the primary reason I was looking for a job, so I did not take this advice, but I’ve always had it in the back of my head. I got married in the past year and am now on my spouse’s (far superior) benefits. I’m wondering if it would be wildly out of touch to try to negotiate a raise in lieu of benefits now, or if that’s something that can only be done when starting a job. (Or is it even something one can reasonably do when starting a job?) Factors to consider: This is a relatively small company (fewer than 50 people). Our industry is having a tough time, largely due to current administration issues. Raises last year were paltry, though honestly I was surprised to be getting one at all. I’ve never negotiated salary before. Our raises are calculated at one (fairly arbitrary) point in the year, and they’ve always been presented as, “This is what you’re getting this year.” Maybe some people negotiate within that, but I never have felt like that was an option. I’m a high performer and fairly senior, and have been here for more than five years. You can ask! Some companies will do this and some won’t. Typically if they do, it’s done as a separate line item in your benefits, not just added to your salary (because if your situation changes in the future and you do need to start using their insurance, they don’t want you to feel like you’re getting a pay cut), so you wouldn’t frame it as a raise — just something like, “Would the company consider offering a stipend or credit for not using the company health insurance, since that saves us money?” You may also like:my boss won't let me move to another state -- but I'm remotemy boss hardly reads emails and says it's my job to follow up with her when something's importantour cleaner pressures me to stay late with her because she fears our workplace is haunted { 213 comments }
the lack of turtles, the would-be librarian, and other people who didn’t realize they don’t want THIS job by Alison Green on April 29, 2026 We recently talked about people applying for — in working in — jobs that were clearly at odds with what they wanted to do, and here are 12 of my favorite stories you shared. 1. The lack of turtles I worked with a lot of field biologists who were unsuited, mostly because they went into the field since they loved being outdoors and then were shocked to find that the job consisted of very boring and monotonous walking off trail and meticulous record keeping. But my favorite not-suited coworker was fine with all that! Except what she really wanted to be doing was surveying for turtles. Sadly, not a lot of our projects involved turtles. She still did a great job, but all her field reports would include lines like, “There were no turtles,” “One turtle seen on my lunch break when I hiked a mile to a waterway,” “Absolutely no habitat for turtles in this area, but I found some likely areas along the drive to this site,” and my favorite, “Thought I saw a turtle, but it was rock.” Loved her, stopped by her house once to meet her 20something turtles and had a blast. She eventually found a better paying job, sadly not turtle centered though. 2. The honesty HR and I were interviewing my replacement. It was an admin position supporting a sales team and a few managers. It was going well until the interviewee said, “I hate being constantly interrupted by people needing things.” 3. The wrong choice There was the internal applicant from a different department who stated in the cover letter that they were trying to move away from a supervisor they weren’t meshing with well. The supervisor who was central to my department’s work. Who was on the search committee. And who would be working more closely with my new hire than most of their own direct reports. Also, the cover letter was emailed to me separately instead of included with the rest of the application materials. I immediately touched base with HR to make sure we got that cover letter on file in case there was any pushback from the candidate (who we’d already scheduled for a panel interview). 4. The computers I once was in an interview where an applicant spent a lot of time talking about how much he hated computers and working on computers. We literally work entirely on computers and were part of a public paperless initiative so… 5. The veterinary assistant Applicant to a veterinarian’s office who was a) afraid of cats and b) squeamish about both blood and poop. This was for a kennel-to-veterinary assistant position, not receptionist. I’m not sure what she thought she’d be doing, exactly. 6. The junior reporter One of the reasons I was a hit as a junior reporter at a rural newspaper was because of the contrast between me and my predecessor. Instead of having an interest in court stories, local events, and making contacts, she was working at the paper because she thought it would be a springboard towards becoming an actress in a local soap. The newspaper didn’t even have a showbiz or entertainment section, we had no connections with the soap opera, and we weren’t even based in the same town as them. I asked my new colleagues how she had planned to pull this transition off and the response was, “Well, obviously it was just pretty misguided and maybe she gave up after realiing that; most of the time she was either making very noisy smoothies while we were busy talking on the phone, or she was napping in her car.” 7. The would-be librarian A couple of years ago, a retiring teacher called the library reference desk to ask about jobs in the youth section. She went on and on about how, after so many years of teaching, she really needed a job with peace and quiet. I don’t know if any of you have been in a library in recent years, but the youth department is NOT quiet – it is a hub of activity and lovely children and teens making lots of joyful noise! It is not for the faint of heart! Or for anyone looking for peace and quiet! I did not tell the retiring teacher any of that; I figured it was better she say that if she made it to an interview. No retired teacher showed up in the job. 8. The honey bees I research honey bees. Every year my group hires one or two field assistants, usually undergraduate students who don’t typically have a lot of research experience. The number of people who make it clear in the interviews that they do not want to work around honey bees is always surprising, given that we are very clear on the job ad that responsibilities largely involve working with honey bees. Special props to the guy who very earnestly tried to convince us to hire him to do his own research on stingrays (???) — my best guess is that he somehow thought it was a grant and not a job. 9. The teacher My brother’s Leaving Cert Irish teacher had 16-18-year-olds making badges and learning songs, which she then had them sing for the principal when he came in. This was a higher level class and the higher level Leaving Cert Irish exam includes things like writing a short essay in Irish on topics like climate change or unemployment or drug addiction and questions on Irish novels and drama and poetry and back then had a section on the history of the Irish language, which included questions like explaining, in Irish, how the placenames of the country came to be. But yeah, making badges and singing for the principal! She would have made a brilliant primary school teacher. 10. The anime fan I work for a large financial institution and a couple of years ago interviewed a candidate for a compliance internship who had apparently confused my company with a cable TV channel and spent the entire interview talking about how much he loved anime. Very sweet kid, but apparently he was like that in all five of his super day interviews. I still don’t fully understand how you get to the interview stage of a highly competitive finance internship without realizing you’ve applied to the wrong company for the wrong job entirely, but it sure made things easy when we rejected him for a lack of attention to detail. 11. The surprising choice I was hiring positions for the student package center at a small college. One of the people I interviewed told me she didn’t like “packages, answering the phone, or dealing with people.” Which was literally the core functions of the job, and stated very clearly in the job description. She was so matter of fact about it, I almost thought she had to be pranking me because why on earth would you apply to a job where the job duties were entirely the things you claimed to dislike. She was not. I often wonder if she was surprised when she didn’t get hired. 12. The whales I had to drop an undergrad class I’d been really excited about because of this. Week one of Intro to Creative Memoir, every single minute was spent by my professor talking about whales, showing us videos of whales, telling us what products we needed to boycott to save the whales. Every supposed memoir on our reading list was actually a book about … you guessed it. On day two I started a tally. She used the word “whale” nearly 100 times in an 80-minute class, “write” or “writing” less than a dozen, and “memoir” not at all. I am firmly pro-whale but geez. 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our employee takes too many free snacks and sodas by Alison Green on April 29, 2026 A reader writes: I own a small takeout restaurant. We have four employees, plus me and my business partner. It’s hard to hire and when we find employees who show up every day and meet our expectations, we try to keep them happy. We’ve had one employee for about 2.5 years now. Slowly over time, she has started taking more and more liberties in regards to food and ignoring our requests for her to do a task. I’ve had conversations with her three times, and things always get better for a period and then she starts to slip again. Recently, she’s started taking more than the $10 meal we provide per day (covers a sandwich, side, and drink). She’ll take an extra drink once or twice a month, or today she’d taken her free meal on her break and then I returned from an errand to find her eating a bag of chips while she was supposed to be working. This all feels so petty. How do I have a conversation about $1.50? But, it makes me batty that I’ve had to talk to her about it more than once, and that it just keeps happening. When she’s taking more, it’s a couple dollars here or there. But over time it adds up. Our margins are tight, and our costs have skyrocketed this past year. A part of me thinks if we’re too strict on these things, we’ll lose employees and hiring is one of the biggest challenges we face. But I also feel like she’s stealing from us and my ego just wants to scream. Should I address it again, or just find a way to let it go and accept that it is what it is? 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 client changed my email before forwarding it, to make himself look better Should I tell my team I’m trying to get them raises? You may also like:my employee wants us to stop ordering "unhealthy snacks"I'm spending too much money on cupcakes and snacks for my teamshould I stop bringing in treats for my team? { 140 comments }
how can I signal that my coworker doesn’t speak for me? by Alison Green on April 29, 2026 A reader writes: My coworker, Chuckie, has concerns. A lot of concerns. They aren’t necessarily unfounded — I would say about 50% are completely justified, 40% have some foundation but are overblown, either mildly or significantly, and 10% are ridiculous — but he tends to bring them up with the attitude of a beleaguered martyr airing grievances rather than a professional colleague addressing work issues. He often talks at length about his own stress and frustration and implies (or even outright states) that no one outside of our department cares about the work we do or the people we serve. My main problem is that sometimes Chuckie raises issues in a way that implies he is speaking on behalf of me and our other five coworkers as well. Often, I agree with some of what he says — like, say Chuckie asks if I think that the bells on the new llama harnesses jangle too loudly (made-up example for anonymity’s sake), and I agree that they’re pretty annoying. But he thinks they’re loud enough that no one in the audience of the afternoon llama show will be able to hear the handler speaking. He also thinks the fact that the handling team didn’t consult our team indicates a serious communication breakdown between the two departments and has written up a 1,000-word email detailing “our” concerns and sent it to everyone in my department and both managers. I try to be more solutions-oriented at work, and when I can, I’ll steer Chuckie’s complaints in that direction, which seems to be taken positively by our manager. But sometimes I don’t think there’s anything we can/should do. Sure, I would have liked the handling team to have consulted us before they made the purchase and would have brought up the bell issue, but I don’t think it’s my place to argue a fait accompli unless I have evidence of a serious problem in my area of expertise — like that the llamas are experiencing acute distress. He’ll use “our concerns” and “we feel” pretty consistently both in writing and in person, but when it’s in person the problems are usually smaller, and he’ll turn to us at some point for confirmation, at which point I can pivot to solutions and use softer language. It is still very awkward and I would love to not have to do it, but it’s a low-level tension. (I often feel particular pressure to respond because Chuckie and I have more experience and are generally more proactive than our other colleagues, who tend to be quiet in meetings. I am probably the person who brings the second-highest number of concerns to the table, and I couldn’t swear that my tone or word choice has been 100% perfect, either. I think my lapses are milder and rarer than Chuckie’s but I’m wary of being lumped in as The Two Who Complain.) His snippy emails only happen a few times a year but I typically find them harder to respond to, both due to the medium and due to the fact that the problems either have no easy solutions or aren’t ours to solve. (I think he saves the tough problems for email so he can plan out the language he wants to use.) Sometimes he will raise an issue with me first, sort of taking my temperature, and I’ll express mild agreement, only to be taken by surprise when an email goes out soon after. I usually just don’t reply, if I think I can get away with it, and mostly a manager will respond to the substance of the email without commenting on the tone. Chuckie might grumble a bit to me and our coworkers in person, but not for very long, until the next problem arises. I should also mention that, due to some internal reorganization, our day-to-day supervision has changed hands a couple of times in the five years we’ve been working together, so this pattern is probably more obvious to me than some of our supervisors. What do I do? If I keep silent, that feels like I’m endorsing Chuckie’s overreaction, which reflects poorly on me. If I say “I don’t agree with his concerns at all,” that feels dishonest — and I don’t want to endorse the handing team’s decision either, because I do think it was a bad call, just not a disastrous one. What I really want is a professional way to say, “I basically agree with Chuckie but without all the histrionics.” Does that even exist? It does exist! When it happens in person and Chuckie is using “our concerns” and “we feel,” you can correct that! For example: * “I agree the new harness bells are annoying, but I don’t feel that strongly about it. I’m okay with deferring to the llama handling team on this.” * “I hear the concern, but I don’t think Chuckie is speaking for the whole group on this. I don’t disagree in principle, but I also don’t feel that strongly about it.” * “I hear the concern, but I also don’t think Chuckie is speaking for the group on this. I don’t disagree in principle — and I told him I agreed the bells were annoying when we talked about it — but I should have made it clearer that I don’t feel that strongly about it.” * “Eh, I agree the bells are annoying and I wish they would have consulted us, but I don’t think there’s anything we need to do about it now.” You can also talk to him after the next meeting where he does this and say something like, “You’ve been presenting things as ‘our concerns’ and ‘we feel’ but I would rather you not speak on behalf of the group without our explicit agreement beforehand. Sometimes it ends up not accurately representing my stance — often because I don’t feel as strongly as you do — and I don’t want to end up distracting from what you’re saying if I have to interject to clarify that.” Or even just, “Hey, you made it sound like I fully agreed with you on this, but I don’t actually share your take in the way you explained it. I would rather you just speak for yourself when you’re raising this stuff, and I will speak for myself as well.” With the emails, you might be able to use a similar format — “I understand where Chuckie is coming from, but now that they’ve ordered the bells, it’s probably easiest to just live with it. We could talk to them about checking with us before they place their next order though.” In other words, a mild correction about where you stand, and a pivot to a solution. You can also try warding all of this off more preemptively, when Chuckie first raises issues with you. You know from experience that if you express mild agreement, there’s a good chance he’ll relay that as strong agreement later. So instead, you could try changing the responses you’re giving him — leaning more on things like, “Eh, I don’t feel that strongly about it” or “I think it’s probably fine/not worth the capital/something we shouldn’t bother pursuing.” Also, though, if you have a decent relationship with your current manager, you might just address it directly with her: “I’ve noticed Chuckie will sometimes word things as if he’s speaking for the group when he raises concerns, but I don’t always agree with him or at least don’t feel as strongly, so I wanted to clarify that. I’ll always speak up myself if I do feel strongly about something.” You may also like:my coworker keeps demanding I say "please"my coworker tries to guilt-trip peoplemy office is walking on eggshells around our overly-friendly coworker { 78 comments }
boss told me my dresses need to be longer, I wish my job would just fire me already, and more by Alison Green on April 29, 2026 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. My boss told me my dresses need to be longer My line manager told me yesterday that there had been “comments made” about how short / inappropriate my dresses are in the office, as a member of the team who is front-facing for clients. I was asked to not wear these outfits in the office any longer. These comments have utterly humiliated me, and I spent about an hour crying on my way home. I have always dressed fairly modestly at work and am deeply uncomfortable with my body being perceived as being “on display.” My dresses are long-sleeved, with skirts that stop just above my knee. They are conventional office wear. I prefer dresses and skirts over trousers, as the medications I take have made my stomach quite bloated, and I find tight waistbands uncomfortable. But I was told they need to be longer as I’m greeting clients (as my work wear was just above the knee already, my presumption is that longer means to the knee or below). It’s a very male heavy office, so what other women wear is split between trousers and skirts that are above the knee or to the knee. My line manager was wearing an above-the-knee dress the day after telling me my outfits were too short. After looking at my work wardrobe, I estimate I’m going to have to get replace nearly 80% to get to these new standards — of dresses and skirts to the knee or lower — while also managing the other restrictions that are placed on women’s wear at our office. For instance, I’m not allowed to wear a sleeveless blouse because our male directors decided they are not professional for women. This is while the men in our office can meet with clients in hoodies or polo shirts. I simply don’t understand why my clothing is an issue 16 months into working here. Am I being unreasonable or is this unfair? Is this something I should speak to my union about? Yes, you should absolutely speak to your union. Something here doesn’t make sense — skirts and dresses to just above the knee aren’t unprofessional or inappropriate work wear, and that goes triple in an office where a bunch of other people are wearing them, including the manager who told you that you couldn’t. “You’re client-facing” doesn’t make sense as an explanation. Is there anything else that could explain why you’re getting this feedback and others aren’t? Sometimes this happens when you’re the only one in your office with a particular body shape (which doesn’t make it okay), and I wonder if that’s in play here. Ideally you’d go back to your manager and ask for clarification — including explicitly asking if she is telling you that your skirts must be below the knee, and pointing out that all your skirts are currently the same length as the ones you see other women in your office wearing. But since you have a union, pull them in for advice too. 2. CEO sends a delusional AI-generated image of himself with every email As a mere lower-level staffer, I am certain there is nothing I can do about this issue, but perhaps you have some ideas. The CEO has begun to attach an AI-generated image of himself to every email he sends out. The images are universally more handsome than the real thing. No more receding hairline, or stomach fat. Plenty of bicep muscles. Not a wrinkle in sight. This is cringe behaviour, and staff mock him for it behind his back. While I am not personally invested in helping him save face, I do want to stop being forced to look at these unprofessional, inaccurate portraits. Especially since the workplace is a public library, where one would hope to avoid misinformation. No, this is amazing and you must not try to stop it! And that’s fortunate, because there’s almost certainly nothing you can do about it anyway. If you were, say, a senior communications staffer or his right-hand person or otherwise a trusted confidant, you could attempt to diplomatically address it, but assuming you are none of those things and therefore have no real standing or obligation to take this on, the only correct response is to sit back and bask in the utter absurdity of it. Is it a problem for his credibility? Yes! Is it your problem? No. You can just enjoy the spectacle. 3. I wish my board would just fire me already I am the chief executive of a small nonprofit and I report to a board, and I have been on a performance improvement plan (PIP) for the past four months. The PIP is full of things that are untrue and half true, along with some things that could legitimately be improved. The PIP was my first notice of any of those gripes that the board (or rather, a few members of the executive committee) had about me, my work, and, more pointedly, my personality. The first PIP was supposed to be 60 days. They had no objective success measure in it and missed over half the weekly check-ins we had scheduled. They are having a lawyer handle everything for them, so I didn’t receive a determination about the PIP until a couple weeks ago when they gave me another PIP with a 60-day extension. This document, even more than the first one, has things in it explaining where I am failing to meet expectations that I was unaware of and were not part of the job previously. At this point, it is clear that at least two of the board members just don’t like me and want to fire me, which is completely within their power to do. I have sincerely done what I can to meet their expectations, but I can’t and won’t change my personality or pretend to be someone I am not. And this job has turned into something different than what I was hired for. I have been looking for a new job since the process started, but it is not easy at this level and I can’t afford to be without an income or I would have quit already. How do I have the conversation with them expressing my desire to leave along with my need to be eligible for unemployment benefits? Frame it this way: “It’s clear to me that you’re unhappy with my work and I want to be realistic about my chances for success here and not drag out the process, so I’d like to propose a managed separation with a transition that will be as smooth as possible for both of us. I’d ask that you not contest my unemployment benefits since it sounds like I was likely to be let go at the end of this process anyway, but beyond that I’m flexible about what this could look like in terms of timing and messaging.” They are likely to hear this with relief. You might also consider whether you have an argument to request severance, if they’re now defining success in the role differently than what you were brought on to do. 4. Requiring 15+ hours of outside reading per week I am curious to your take on a job listing I recently came across. There is an indie bookshop in my city that is looking for booksellers — basically part-time retail work, $12/hour starting wage, nothing atypical for the area. Amongst the qualifications and job duties listed, alongside needing 3+ years experience as a bookseller and “associates or better” degree, I noticed something that seemed super wild. “Booksellers are required to spend an additional 15+ hours a week reading recent releases and bestsellers to stay up to date on merchandise and better assist customers.” (I am assuming the 15+ hours of reading homework is unpaid, but I could be wrong; this is a very hipster bookshop that I like to visit now and then but would never work at personally, so I haven’t inquired further or anything.) Is this as bonkers as it sounds to me? Or does this sound more like “continuing education” and is pretty reasonable to expect? As a general rule, if outside reading is required for non-exempt employees, they need to be paid for that time. There are exceptions for things like continuing education required to maintain a license, but booksellers aren’t licensed. They’d be better off saying that they’re looking for employees who already maintain a deep knowledge of recent releases and bestsellers and who will maintain that knowledge going forward — and then screening for dedicated readers of recent releases (which is different from just being a voracious reader in general) in their interview process — instead of presenting it like a job duty with a specific number of hours attached. 5. I was fired from my last job, then didn’t work for several years — how do I explain it in interviews? I was fired from my job several years ago. Due to a combination of burnout and undiagnosed depression, I effectively went AWOL and didn’t do anything about anything until it was too late, and I’m trying to re-enter the job market now. I have a resume gap of several years, my previous job loss was entirely my fault, and it’s been a very long time since I had to do any kind of job searching. How do I write a resume to cover this particular ground? And, in the event of an interview, any advice on how to answer the inevitable question of what I was doing while unemployed? (The honest answer is “nothing, while trying to claw my way out of a mental health hole.”) You don’t address it on a resume at all; that’s the place to highlight your work history and accomplishments. In an interview, the language you want is: “I’ve been dealing with a health issue that is now resolved and I’m excited to return to work.” You don’t need to say more than that; they’re not supposed to ask for details, and it explains why you left the last job as well as what you’ve been doing since then. You may also like:my boss excessively Photoshops herself on our company's social mediamy coworker has started faking a British accentmy coworkers complain I'm violating the dress code, but I'm not { 541 comments }
our jobs have wide salary ranges — how can we be up-front about that without every candidate expecting the top of the range? by Alison Green on April 28, 2026 Two questions, similar answers. The first one: I am hiring my first ever direct report, and I live in a salary transparency state. My HR department notified me that, legally, you have to post the entire salary range possible for the role and you cannot limit it to your preferred hiring range. This puts me, as the hiring manager, in a tough spot because candidates see a range of $75,000-110,000 and immediately believe one of two things: 1) They can start at $110,000 if they meet the basic requirements or 2) The role automatically starts at $75,000 and I’m a horrible hiring manager for pricing it so low (yes, I got that comment on the job posting) The reality is, the $75,000 is for someone who would barely meet the requirements and would need a lot of training/hand-holding, and $105,000 means you have many, many years of experience and are at the complete top of your game with no room for growth. I don’t even make the top of my salary range. Are there better ways to explain this on a job posting, or is it just what it is? The second one: I am 100% in favor of salary range transparency. I’m in Connecticut, which requires employers to share a salary range at some point during the hiring process, but we have made it our policy to do it from the start like many other states now require. In general, this has been good at making sure that we are spending our time on strong candidates who are comfortable with the stated range and has significantly reduced having a mismatch of expectations at the very end. But, I’m running into an unintended consequence that I’m not sure how to deal with. In education, salaries are generally dictated by years of relevant experience and the degrees a teacher holds. Our school has some autonomy on salaries, so there are merit increases and teachers in hard-to-fill positions that make more, which means we do not have a set salary schedule to publish. So when we post a position, the actual range could be, for example, $50,000, for a brand new teacher with a bachelor’s degree and no previous experience, all the way to $120,000, for a veteran teacher with a master’s degree. If that is the range we publish, candidates assume they’ll be able to negotiate to the higher end. We’ve thought about publishing a tigher range like $70,000-100,000, but then that would be too high for new teachers and too low for veteran teachers who might opt not to apply at all. How can we be authentic and still set clear expectations when we often have to just enter a numeric range and cannot offer more context or a public salary schedule? In both cases, and in all cases like this, the way to handle this is to lean into the transparency that you’ve already started with and take it a step further by spelling out what you explained here. For example: “The salary range for this position is $75,000-110,000, with the low end of that range for candidates who match the low end of the listed experience range and where we would expect to invest significantly in your training and the high end for extremely experienced candidates (X years or more doing Y) who would be function at a senior level with significant autonomy. Most hires fall in the middle of that range.” Or: “We’re open to several different versions of this role — junior, mid-level, or senior. For the junior role, we’re seeking (list qualifications) with a salary range of $A-B. For the mid-level role, we’re seeking (list qualifications) with a salary range of $C-D. For the more senior version of the role, we’re seeking (list qualifications) with a salary range of $E-F. We encourage you to apply if you meet any of these profiles.” Or: “The salary range for this position varies heavily based on experience and education. A candidate with no previous teaching experience typically starts around $50,000; a veteran teacher with a master’s degree may earn $120,000.” You can also address it openly when you have your first conversation with candidates, like in a phone screen: “For candidates with your level of experience in X, you’d be in the $X-Y part of our salary range.” Then they know and can decide if they want to continue or not. In fact, you could even include a line like this in your job posting after the suggested language above: “If you are unsure where you might fall in that range, please apply and we will discuss it early on in our hiring process.” Regardless of how clear you are, you will always get people who are convinced they should come in at the top of your range without much basis for it, but by spelling it out like this — and especially by giving them tailored info about where they would fall in your range early on in a phone screen — you’ll mitigate a lot of it. 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