←back to thread

198 points rustoo | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.035s | source
Show context
madrox ◴[] No.43577768[source]
As a supervisor I didn’t resonate with this until I remembered in some jobs I have communicated the company attendance policy but didn’t enforce it unless someone was a poor performer. I trust adults to manage their own time until they give me a reason to believe otherwise.

For my part, I’d rather trust people’s judgment and intrinsic motivation than enforce the rules. Enforcement is annoying, tedious, and distracting to my mission. However once I decide their judgement can’t be trusted I use rules to extrinsically motivate them.

replies(2): >>43579007 #>>43581976 #
1. heymijo ◴[] No.43581976[source]
And while this works for you, labor and employment attorneys use your non-standard application of the rules as a way to win lawsuits when brought against the company. Another way we end up with annoying, tedious, and distracting compliance (U.S. based take here).
replies(1): >>43586357 #
2. madrox ◴[] No.43586357[source]
A very fair and reasonable point