Boss demands IT tech take their lunch at only 12-1 PM when they skip it to handle a critical error, predictably, they clock out when the next emergency occurs at that time: 'He insisted I must take my 30-minute lunch from 12-1 as per company policy'

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  • Boss chastised me for a late lunch during a "mission critical outage", so I clocked out when the whole network went down! TL:DR: Boss tells me to take my lunch ONLY at X-Y hours when I was dealing with a "mission- critical" outage until the job was done. Later, I clock out during a VERY obvious "all hands on-deck" situation because boss complained the last time I answered the call. The short version: Small business, this is my first IT job, but I have decades of blue collar experience. I was the
  • A worker works on a critical error in a server room, actor depiction.
  • Three days prior, I was trying to get a "mission critical" computer up and running again; the only computer with the shipping software (and hundreds of packages waiting to ship). I advised an immediate re-image (delete everything and reset to a "known good save") I had it on deck for just such an occasion. But I was overridden by the owner, who wanted me to keep Windows in situ and delete/reinstall programs piecemeal and deal with phone support for those programs, because he paid extra for tech
  • That meant I took my lunch half an hour later. No big deal for me, but when I clocked back in and got back to my desk, my boss was standing there, FUMING, because I took a lunch outside of normal hours. He INSISTED I MUST take my 30 minute lunch from 12-1 as per company policy. So, today, the whole network goes out at 12:25 and I had not yet taken my lunch. Nothing can ping anything. My own personal hunches tell me this is because it's a factory building, there are a lot of high-voltage woodwork
  • ...But I really can't do a d n thing, because my company rents out office space as a subletter; so we are NOT allowed access to the switches and routers. I have no admin access to the infrastructure. So I set up wireshark to record and a continuous command line ping, and go to lunch. Boss is standing at my desk when I get back today, and gives me a passive-aggressive "the network is up, by the way!", but refuses to call me out further. I had the "I told you so" on deck, though!
  • A technician works in a server room on a critical error with yellow cables around him
  • daschande - Original Poster Side note: Phone support made things so bad, even THEY told me to hire a contractor at my own expense to fix the mistake THEY created! I solved the problem myself, after being ordered not to. I learned a VERY important lesson that day. What you actually DO is inconsequential. How you make the higher-ups FEEL; well, that's where careers are made.
  • michaelHIJINX My dad was a field service tech. The best advice he gave me for going into the work force was "Repairing the customers' feelings is more important than repairing their equipment.' jodrellbank_pants Every single one of my customers has my work number I get regular calls, they by pass tech support mupets who can't get anything right. It annoys my bosses but we have to use the correct SIG on all our emails with our number on it. Keeping them happy gets my kpi score up if I get a 8 I b
  • Ninja HidingintheOpen The secret instruction is that if things are going wrong you don't get lunch, he just can't say that because it's illegal. daschande - Original Poster I was more than willing to "keep up appearances", but if I'm going to get dressed down for doing what I thought was expected.... Sounds like a ab ive , relationship that I don't want to get tied down to.

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