One of the few joys of being self employed. Do it and you bill it. Then again you have to wait for months and months to then receive it.
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One of the few joys of being self employed. Do it and you bill it. Then again you have to wait for months and months to then receive it.
I have a built in honesty box,
On rare occasions I will finish 30/45 mins early or take extended lunch break, if I have commitments in my outside work life. and not officially tell anyone or book it off, but then I will equally do something extra in my week which I feel will match/make up for that loss time.
I feel by the end of the week I have done the same if not more work than if I was in the office but have completed loads more jobs and gotten way more done because I have been flexible when I needed to and worked when I usually would be bumming round. the joys of working from home!
a couple of hours a week
About 3 days a month....usual for NHS
None, Council - strictly flexi clocking in and out. As I've been working from home I'm tempted to clock in if I'm even thinking about work
Last edited by Freitag 4.17; 16-12-20 at 21:59. Reason: ****s sake
If that's a week, then you need to have a word, although i do understand compromise, especially if you're working for a small to medium outfit. I was self employed for 26 years, if i worked out all the hours i worked, pricing jobs, traveling, sitting down doing estimates, cleaning out the van, running around for material etc, i'd have been on about £3.50 per hour
I'm contracted to work 37.5 hours a week. I probably work about 40
I now live around 2 metres from my office, I’m still not giving it 15hrs/week for free! That’s crazy man!?
It depends and comes in waves, pre-pandemic I’d say anywhere between 2-5hrs a week perhaps. I have about two working day’s worth of flexi/toil built up atm but since wfh I’ve now tended to be more disciplined with my time, working on less, but also have less reason to take time off, either through overtime or leave. Normally I’d use built up overtime to have an early finish on Friday or another less busy day.
I think when we do move back to incorporating some office based working, having to commute to the office, etc., I will make more of an effort to be stricter on finishing time as it seems silly in retrospect to be spending longer than contracted in an office and delaying a trip on cramped public transport.
15 is an extreme, usually before im due a holiday where I try and get as much done for my colleagues as possible, or end of the month when production is at its busiest. I do more 5 hour overtime weeks than 15 hours. Plus its not technically free because its built into my salary where extra hours are expected. Obviously not 15 hours but 5 hours is neither here nor there to me and mindset. I work to print deadlines you cant just log off at 5pm and leave things for the morning. Its not the public sector.
I do take some hours back but nowhere near what I give.
4 hours a month maybe, that's more than enough thank you, and I make sure I take more than a few leisurely poo's on work time to cover
Hard to know because my contract says something like 35 hours, plus whatever is needed. I certainly do more than 35. I imagine I average about 50, but some weeks can be mental and I’ll do 80+. I actually took a job that was more traditional 9-5 but couldn’t deal with the lack of stress so went back to the one I’m in now. Sometimes I hate it and sometimes it gets a bit too much, but on the whole it’s a rewarding job and on the whole I like it. What does irritate me is when people assume I’m ok to work whenever they want, in particular my colleagues in the US.
None
Far less than I used to deliberately. Rarely take more than 20-30 mins for lunch. Almost never work late. Sometimes work for an hour or so over the weekend depending on what I have coming up on Monday.