How I Skive Off Work
Admit it. No one does any work these days. It's all looking at crappy websites with your thumb hanging over alt tab incase the boss walks over. Tell us your best methods of skiving, and any resultant incidents. (Maybe your slacking off has got someone sacked, or resulted in a large scale industrial accident.)
( , Wed 27 Apr 2005, 15:53)
Admit it. No one does any work these days. It's all looking at crappy websites with your thumb hanging over alt tab incase the boss walks over. Tell us your best methods of skiving, and any resultant incidents. (Maybe your slacking off has got someone sacked, or resulted in a large scale industrial accident.)
( , Wed 27 Apr 2005, 15:53)
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Working for a boss who isn't there
has it's perks, for about a year I had a boss who was based in another part of the country and was always in meetings, it was a new role when I started so I could off load all the work I did have onto others.
It got even better when one of the team left and I was asked if I wanted their job, essentially it meant visiting three places somewhere in the midlands each day, see if they wanted a cash machine and then feck off home, the company car and lunch allowance were great perks so I'd do the week's quota in a couple of days and the visit mates the rest of the time.
( , Thu 28 Apr 2005, 18:09, Reply)
has it's perks, for about a year I had a boss who was based in another part of the country and was always in meetings, it was a new role when I started so I could off load all the work I did have onto others.
It got even better when one of the team left and I was asked if I wanted their job, essentially it meant visiting three places somewhere in the midlands each day, see if they wanted a cash machine and then feck off home, the company car and lunch allowance were great perks so I'd do the week's quota in a couple of days and the visit mates the rest of the time.
( , Thu 28 Apr 2005, 18:09, Reply)
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