None.
If I'm offered overtime I prefer the time back anyway. Work to live not live to work.
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In my sector (NHS) I know of many, many instances of nurses and technical staff working extra hours on a regular basis and not getting paid - its ridiculous but everyone is committed - and this has got worse since covid...I'm not sure what else to say really to be honest.
None.
If I'm offered overtime I prefer the time back anyway. Work to live not live to work.
If there's anything good about working on the clock in a production environment it's that you get paid for every minute you work.
Everybody should get paid for every minute of work they do, no matter what they do.
I'm contracted to 37.5 hours per week, and that's exactly what I work. If they want me to do more, then they have to pay me appropriately.
I’m more like this too. I’m officially paid 38 hours a week but it’s been largely a function of my career that to be successful you have to put more hours in... Work, for many is tasks driven by others ...mine has nearly always been results driven with tasks driven by me...the maxim of ‘the harder I work, the luckier I get’ holds true for me at least...
The problem is the impact on your time... the more senior I’ve got in organizations the longer I work.
I regularly do 60 hour weeks. I’m paid pretty well I guess, but that also is a big contributing factor.... it motivates me to keep going so that I continue to enjoy that level of compensation.
Bonus is also a huge time motivator but that’s also results driven... for many (me included) it can be more than an extra 50% of salary... when it looks like a great bonus year is taking shape I think it is human nature that the amount of effort becomes commensurate with the potential return
I reckon I’m about 3-5 years from jacking it all in and changing to consultancy so that I work when I want to and not because I need to