Lithium381
Lifer
- May 12, 2001
- 12,452
- 2
- 0
i get paid salary, they assume i work 40 hours a week.... it's typically 50 or more :-(
My work ethic doesn't really change depending on how I'm paid. I'll work just as hard for a minimum wage job as I would for a job paying 6 figures.
What drives me to work is my work ethic, not my paycheck.
But its not the wage that drives work ethic. I contend that it is the presence or absence of incentive. The incentive could be in the form of pay or promotion or even respect. Without some reward (even intangible ones) people will do the minimum.
i would never work more than 40 hours a week on a regular basis if i went into the job being paid at a rate of 40 hours a week. all that does is make you worth less. would definitely leave a job where that happened regularly, but i do understand that sometimes during crunch time it may have to happen, especially in the industry i'm in (software dev).
Nice.You can take that mindset and just get by or you can go a bit farther and get ahead. I do my best to go above and beyond what's expected of me and my income's gone up 21% over 3 years because of it. During one of those years everyone was told that there weren't going to be any raises but I still got one.![]()
some jobs are more about what you know than what you 'do'
a ditch digger gets paid for digging
his supervisor gets paid to make sure the job gets done
the engineer that plans the ditch gets paid partly for his knowledge of how to plan to dig the ditch, and prepare the work order or whatever
the architect gets paid for his knowledge of where the ditch needs to be dug
the owner of the ditch digging company gets paid for, you know, putting all his capital into running a company etc etc
it just isn't as simple as it was 500 years ago when everbody was a dirt farmer
You can take that mindset and just get by or you can go a bit farther and get ahead. I do my best to go above and beyond what's expected of me and my income's gone up 21% over 3 years because of it. During one of those years everyone was told that there weren't going to be any raises but I still got one.![]()
When I was younger, I thought people would attempt to do their job to the best of their ability. But as I gain more experience, I think people will tend to do the minimum necessary to get paid. I have become a strong proponent of incentive programs.
I am paid a base hourly wage with an incentive package that rewards me for the volume and the quality of work I do. I think this should be a consideration when ever evaluating the pay of any position. I recently suggested that a new program be incentivized and the administration chose not to, thus those in this program routinely avoid and delay work.
I was interested to see what people here think. Do you think people want to do the best they can or are people inherently going to attempt to do the least amount of work unless paid to perform.
Having not been there long, I don't know all of the details of my "small" employer's bonus structure but I've been told that EVERYONE gets the same amount based on the yearly profit figures. I don't quite think that's fair at all since some of us bust our asses to make it happen and others don't give a shit. It's not my company to decide but it does make me think about not working so hard though.....
People who call in sick often and don't earn their pay (IMO - even though it is much lower than mine) get a bigger and bigger bonus the more that I (and others) work and perform.
The ole "how do you reward your best workers?....with more work!" phrase comes to mind.
I can't stand lazy workers that try to do the bare minimum. If you want to do the bare minimum, prepare to get paid the bare minimum. When raise time comes, don't even open your mouth about, "where is my raise?" You did the bare minimum, so don't expect anything extra.
heh sticking to my work ethic, my salary has gone up 44% in less than 2 years. and that wasn't just job hopping, it's switching from one in january 2010 to my current position.
again, it's not about how many hours you work, it's about what you produce and how you produce it. being good at what you do, you can get work done that could take someone else 50 hours, finished in about 20. i see it a lot in the development world. (maybe not that significant, but that is just an example).
Agreed. I have a strong work ethic but experience the good worker, more work thing. I liked the people I worked with and liked my bosses. Eventually took a big chunk of work from my supervisor which left me wondering what exactly she had left to do.
I had to ask for/demand a raise after that and I did get it. They thought it would be cool to just give me her work and that was that. NOPE!
