I'd honestly be happy to sell my days for $.8 on the dollar. Most of the time, I just take random days off here and there b/c we can only bank so much and I'd lose them otherwise. I'd much rather be paid a few hundred bucks.I don't understand this at all other than it must be bad for the employee. Also, people selling their vacation time back for less than 100% of value...wtf, why would anyone give away days off with pay for less money? Ok, I get it maybe you have an emergency? But, outside of needing to take off for ball cancer selling your guaranteed time off for less than 100% seems like a sucker play!
I have heard this a couple of times about people only being able to "bank" so many vacation or sick days and after you hit that mark you just lose them. That seems like a weird policy. I guess a company is thinking that the employee who was making 5 bucks an hour 20 years ago and is making 30 bucks an hour now is going to break us when they retire? I dunnoI'd honestly be happy to sell my days for $.8 on the dollar. Most of the time, I just take random days off here and there b/c we can only bank so much and I'd lose them otherwise. I'd much rather be paid a few hundred bucks.
I think the idea is that they want you to use your days so that you don't get burnt out.I have heard this a couple of times about people only being able to "bank" so many vacation or sick days and after you hit that mark you just lose them. That seems like a weird policy. I guess a company is thinking that the employee who was making 5 bucks an hour 20 years ago and is making 30 bucks an hour now is going to break us when they retire? I dunno
As my HR will kindly tell me: You don't lose hours, you just fail to accrue any more hours.I have heard this a couple of times about people only being able to "bank" so many vacation or sick days and after you hit that mark you just lose them.
Man, they're crushing it. How can a normal guy hope to keep up?"lets see who can work the longest" contest with the 50 year old women that decide they're gonna show up at 7:45 and stay until 6.
I did it a while back. At my old job (and also new job) we have max number of PTO hours we can carry. Once we hit the max, we can't accrue any more. I think it is something like 300 hours.I don't understand this at all other than it must be bad for the employee. Also, people selling their vacation time back for less than 100% of value...wtf, why would anyone give away days off with pay for less money? Ok, I get it maybe you have an emergency? But, outside of needing to take off for ball cancer selling your guaranteed time off for less than 100% seems like a sucker play!
Struck a cord? I am generilizing what see. this statement is not a personal attack only an observation.Of course you and your age group are the perfect embodiment of the hard working employee!
In that context it makes perfect sense.I have heard about this to appease the millennial population. I cannot think of anything worse for development of a young worker. My old company had this policy but we were eat what we killed meaning that if I didn't work I didn't get paid. That made sense to me.
Anything you've heard about "appeasing" millennials is BS you've been fed. This is done for two reasons: companies not needing to carry unused vacation time as liabilities, and because research shows people take less time off when they aren't allocated a specific amount.
although in the last job we were given 30 days/year and could only carry 60 (went to 90 for a bit). You'd find a lot of people "taking weekends off" in which they wouldn't have been working anyway or going to the office in casual clothing and working anyway. But they could avoid a meeting or two and actually get their priority for the day done. I don't understand this at all other than it must be bad for the employee. Also, people selling their vacation time back for less than 100% of value...wtf, why would anyone give away days off with pay for less money? Ok, I get it maybe you have an emergency? But, outside of needing to take off for ball cancer selling your guaranteed time off for less than 100% seems like a sucker play!
you just assess which has more value to you - a paid day off in which you'll have to make up the work missed anyway, or the money. If you work in a field where work doesn't accumulate waiting for your return that's different. I don't disagree but if that was the policy when they started then it's kind of ####ty for the company to not follow through on it. Maybe somebody banked days intentionally to take a long trip in a couple years or maybe they just wanted to cash it in per the policy.The problem is people feeling entitled to the money aspect of vacation days. #### this "banked" days crap. Take days off or don't. Don't expect to get paid for not taking time off. Take the damn time off.
It isn't, at least in my mind, a sense of "entitlement"...The problem is people feeling entitled to the money aspect of vacation days. #### this "banked" days crap. Take days off or don't. Don't expect to get paid for not taking time off. Take the damn time off.
This is funny to read. The company just moved to unlimited vacation time. This doesnt screw "the employees". It helps most of them. The only employees that get "screwed" are the guys that have been around forever and have 6 weeks of vacation each year.Terrible way to screw the employees
1. You do understand that everyone who is 55 was 25 at some point, right? Conversely, any 25 yr old will (hopefully) one day be 55.This is funny to read. The company just moved to unlimited vacation time. This doesnt screw "the employees". It helps most of them. The only employees that get "screwed" are the guys that have been around forever and have 6 weeks of vacation each year.
Millenials want vacation time and they want it quick.
In most companies vacation time keeps going up,up,up with years if service. Preference to days is often given by seniority. So while you are taking your 6 weeks vacation Mr. 55 year old and taking it around every holiday that exists. Mr. 25 year old is doing your job while you are gone seething mad that you are always gone and they have to work the day before and after every holiday. Eventually they start pointing this out.
You know who starts using less vacation time when the field is leveled? The insecure 55 year old that realizes they arent producing as much as the 25 year old that is paid half as much as them. Guess who takes more vacation? The 25 year old that started with only 5 days and couldnt ever get anything but fridays in february.
Guess who becomes more productive and doesnt get let go in two years? Guess who becomes happier and doesnt jump ship in two years to go work at a more progressive company?
Of course i am oversimplifying, but this is not uncommon. Companies are figuring out that in this ever changing climate 20 years of service isnt as valuable anymore. Especially when salaries and benefits have been known to swell at faster rates than experience enhanced production does.
When you factor in that vacation policies are generally universal, that difference gets exposed in greater detail. So at your lower level positions like admin, warehouse, etc these gaps in production become staggering.
Who do you want in the warehouse? The 25 year old that has no lifting restrictions and can adapt to change of product line much easier, or the 55 year old overweight with bad knees with 6 weeks vacation smoker at 3 bucks an hour more?
It also forces employees to use their vacation time and not get burnt out as quickly. It's a win win imo.SHIZNITTTT said:I have heard this a couple of times about people only being able to "bank" so many vacation or sick days and after you hit that mark you just lose them. That seems like a weird policy. I guess a company is thinking that the employee who was making 5 bucks an hour 20 years ago and is making 30 bucks an hour now is going to break us when they retire? I dunno
D'oh! Beat me to itNutterButter said:I think the idea is that they want you to use your days so that you don't get burnt out.
Where are you working where a 25 year old can even be close to as effective as a 55 year old? In my place it takes at least 5 years before new hires are halfway effective.parasaurolophus said:You know who starts using less vacation time when the field is leveled? The insecure 55 year old that realizes they arent producing as much as the 25 year old that is paid half as much as them. Guess who takes more vacation? The 25 year old that started with only 5 days and couldnt ever get anything but fridays in february.
People need to start coming into work sick, going into this manager's office and sneezing/coughing all over everything including him. Then you'll see if he still wants people there when sick.I generally like my boss a lot, but he is weird about people taking sick days. Another account manager (who sits next to me) got dinged on his annual review recently under the reliability part because he took a sick day recently (the only PDO he has taken so far in his year plus with the company). According to someone in the know, the boss man doesn't mind us taking a PDO if it is scheduled in advance, as if everyone knows ahead of time when they are going to be sick. People are just weird sometimes.
I don't often reply to serious posts with this but...NutterButter said:I think the idea is that they want you to use your days so that you don't get burnt out.
Except, as stated numerous times already, this absolutely is not what happens. People end up taking LESS vacation time.It also forces employees to use their vacation time and not get burnt out as quickly. It's a win win imo.
I certainly wouldn't but I'm the work to live type. Never really understood the live to work type unless they're passionate about what they do.Except, as stated numerous times already, this absolutely is not what happens. People end up taking LESS vacation time.
This isn't a brand new thing. It has been done long enough for the data to be out there and it's pretty clear: people take less vacation with "unlimited vacation" than an accrued or specified given amount.
I agree if you take less vacation that is on you. Put on your big boy pants and do what's right for you.I certainly wouldn't but I'm the work to live type. Never really understood the live to work type unless they're passionate about what they do.
My company doesn't pay out for banked days if you leave. Is that still considered a liability? If not, what other reason would there be for them not allowing me to bank as many days as I wantI don't often reply to serious posts with this but...
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Until they don't exist they are a liabilityMy company doesn't pay out for banked days if you leave. Is that still considered a liability? If not, what other reason would there be for them not allowing me to bank as many days as I want
Why is this funny? My company tells us this all the time, and is THE reason why we have a maximum amount of PTO we can carry.I don't often reply to serious posts with this but...
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seems like a different type of liability. at any time, they can fire me and be off the hook. and its not like i can just use a bunch of them at will. i still need approval.Until they don't exist they are a liability
Yes, as it's a line item in the company budget. Sadly you must live in a state that doesn't mandate payouts for accrued vacation. Many states do.seems like a different type of liability. at any time, they can fire me and be off the hook. and its not like i can just use a bunch of them at will. i still need approval.
Most companies want you there all the time. You company has a different atmosphere than many.Why is this funny? My company tells us this all the time, and is THE reason why we have a maximum amount of PTO we can carry.
The work is never done.That sounds utterly awful. What you only get vacation if your work is done?
It's possible that your company is different but 95% or more don't give two ####s about you and you being burned out. They don't want to pay to train someone else, they don't want to get sued if you #### up after working too much and they care about their bottom line - it's laughable that people think otherwise. You being burned out is complete corporate spin for ####### people in the ###.Why is this funny? My company tells us this all the time, and is THE reason why we have a maximum amount of PTO we can carry.
I suppose they dont want patients dying because of burnt out careless worker slipups. Go figure.
Oof. That would generate a complaint for sure with us.I generally like my boss a lot, but he is weird about people taking sick days. Another account manager (who sits next to me) got dinged on his annual review recently under the reliability part because he took a sick day recently (the only PDO he has taken so far in his year plus with the company). According to someone in the know, the boss man doesn't mind us taking a PDO if it is scheduled in advance, as if everyone knows ahead of time when they are going to be sick. People are just weird sometimes.
Yea, I have yet to work for a company who would say "Hey listen, we see you haven't taken vacation lately and we are concerned about your well being. Please take the next week off to relax".
we did exactly this a few months back as one of our employees was noticeably burned out. Burnout leads to mistakes. In the medical field that leads to bad outcomes which leads to lawsuits.It's possible that your company is different but 95% or more don't give two ####s about you and you being burned out. They don't want to pay to train someone else, they don't want to get sued if you #### up after working too much and they care about their bottom line - it's laughable that people think otherwise. You being burned out is complete corporate spin for ####### people in the ###.
I imagine many of us have jobs where this doesnt apply.The work is never done.
You say it like i is a bad thing. It is nothing more than a financial arrangement.It's possible that your company is different but 95% or more don't give two ####s about you and you being burned out. They don't want to pay to train someone else, they don't want to get sued if you #### up after working too much and they care about their bottom line - it's laughable that people think otherwise. You being burned out is complete corporate spin for ####### people in the ###.
I know these are the talking points, but those days are over. You think a millennial is looking at the vacation benefits at a place and says to himself "wow! I cant wait until year 20 when I get that 6th week of vacation." They dont think that far ahead career wise. It isn't even just millennials. Tons of people dont think that they will be working where they are now in 5 years. That is going to change even more as technology keeps moving forward.moleculo said:1. You do understand that everyone who is 55 was 25 at some point, right? Conversely, any 25 yr old will (hopefully) one day be 55.
2. Escalating vacation based on term of service is a tool to encourage loyalty. I guarantee you, that extra week of vacation I'm promised is a couple of years is something I pay attention to and makes me not want to jump ship. Likewise, when I had extra time available, I really didn't want to go back to the standard 2 weeks at another company. This unlimited vacation model removes that tool.
3. I would also point out that experience has value. You ask who is more valuable - the young guy or the old guy. I'd pose I want the guy who knows where everything is and why it is that way, the guy who knows who to see to get #### done, the guy who knows which fork-lift has issues, and the guy who isn't gonna give me any attitude when crap needs done.