←back to thread

996

(lucumr.pocoo.org)
1001 points genericlemon24 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
Aurornis ◴[] No.45149578[source]
When founders put 996 in their job descriptions or Tweet about their 996 culture it’s a helpful signal to avoid that company.

The only time I’d actually consider crazy schedules was if I was the founder with a huge equity stake and a once in a lifetime opportunity that would benefit from a short period of 996.

For average employees? Absolutely not. If someone wants extraordinary hours they need to be providing extraordinary compensation. Pay me a couple million per year and I’ll do it for a while (though not appropriate for everyone). Pay me the same as the other job opportunities? Absolutely no way I’m going to 996.

In my experience, the 996 teams aren’t actually cranking out more work. They’re just working odd hours, doing a little work on the weekends to say they worked the weekend, and they spend a lot of time relaxing at the office because they’re always there.

replies(17): >>45149967 #>>45149995 #>>45150219 #>>45150354 #>>45150392 #>>45150411 #>>45150444 #>>45150629 #>>45150782 #>>45150842 #>>45150892 #>>45150984 #>>45151100 #>>45151102 #>>45151288 #>>45155515 #>>45155570 #
1. MontyCarloHall ◴[] No.45151288[source]
A company touting its 996 culture is unfurling a huge red flag that it doesn't have the best talent. The very best companies/workers accomplish extraordinary things in ordinary working hours, because they are extremely good at what they do and thus extremely efficient at it. Work smarter, not harder, as they say. If a company needs to work 996, it simply means it isn't all that smart.