How many hours of real tangible Nike work did you do on a daily basis?
17 replies (most recent on top)
I'm in supply chain and a solid 40 hrs a week easy and that's just deliverables/bare minimum.
Transparently. Before I quit last year not much. Everything I took inititive on credit was taken by my Sr director. And or the work was given to one of her favs. So I quite quit before I actually quit
50-60 hours a week
honestly, 5-7 hours a day, and occasionally 10-12. Nobody is forcing me to work more or less, but I'm doing a disservice to myself as well as those paying me to slack off all day. While coasting can work for a while, when you inevitably get cut, not having any marketable skills is going to burn your a-s. Now for those that do boring shift work that isn't benefiting them personally in any way, I can understand a little slacking.
50+wk easy
Honestly? 2-3 on a hard day
I did 60-70+ a week and still laid off
I wouldn’t say I’ve been missing it, Bob.
Bout 3.50
15 to 30 minutes a day max.
GT. 7 hours work 1 hour on lunch/breaks/etc.. I work hard but I also don't work past 5 because there's no passion, work is boring af and endlessly micromanaged.
2-3 hours a day mostly.
The problem in GT in that there are lots of people but you just know there are people not pulling their weight. I've lived in the area a long time and in talking to people who worked here (even 10-15 years ago) this is not a new thing. The company is overweight and particularly top heavy.
I start around 6am Pacific to catch India/Europe in their evening and stay after 5pm Pacific to catch Asia in the morning. I think that's called a split shift... except I have meetings all day, in between.
Depends on circumstances beyond my control.
When I’m lucky, 30 hours. When a deadline approaches or it’s the holidays, 50 or more hours. Across the year it averages above 40.
Clock in at 9:30, play volleyball and take a class at the gym from 10am-2pm. Grab a late lunch, then clock out around 3:30 before traffic hits.
Well, I generally come in at least fifteen minutes late, ah, I use the side door - that way Lumbergh can't see me, and, uh, after that I just sorta space out for about an hour. I just stare at my desk; but it looks like I'm working. I do that for probably another hour after lunch, too. I'd say in a given week I probably only do about fifteen minutes of real, actual, work.
I’m in tech… I actually do work nearly 10hrs a day which includes meetings but from the team perspective, we’re working on 7 different epics/projects at the same time which also have the outcomes of millions in savings. It’s a daily nonstop grind. We don’t have catering nearly ever, we have very high output and expectations