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What was the norm when you started work

432 replies

harknesswitch · 11/05/2021 19:23

Inspired by another thread, what things were the norm when you started work that would now be unbelievable.

When my Mum told her employer she was pregnant, in 1972, they sacked her

When I started work you could smoke at your desk and we were even given branded ashtrays

No email, everything was printed out by a work processor and filled in by hand. We had one of those personalised ink stamps to use which we signed so they knew who had filled in the form

OP posts:
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PaperMonster · 11/05/2021 19:29

Smoking in the office.
Electric typewriter for typing letters (although I did most of my work on a DOS based laptop)
Rampant sexism
You could do your job, do it well and there be no stress or pressure (despite working to deadlines)
Retired men made cups of tea and coffee for you during the day and did a breakfast order
No bloody appraisals

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MadelaineMaxwell · 11/05/2021 19:31

I used to write out all letters and bills by hand and photocopy them.

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36degrees · 11/05/2021 19:31

People chatted and actually made friends at work. The last role I had in an office 3ish years ago no-one spoke at all unless they were answering the phone. Open plan and around 30 people.

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awesomekillick · 11/05/2021 19:31

Perfectly usual to have a couple of pints or wines at lunchtime.

Secretaries. All women. All unmarried.

Faxes.

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NewlyGranny · 11/05/2021 19:31

Couldn't come to work with bare legs, it had to be pantyhose (tights).
Had to wear a dress, or if in trousers, the top had to be jacket or tunic style, long enough to cover the crotch area. Married women with city/urban postings due to husbands' work or study were not eligible for promotion. When husband qualified in the same field, we were "rationed" to one job and had to decide whether it was his or mine, effectively expecting me to resign so he could have a job. Newsflash: I didn't!

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TranquilityofSolitude · 11/05/2021 19:33

I started work in the City in the early 90s. We had to wear a suit for work but we weren't allowed to wear trousers, which was very annoying because trouser suits were in fashion and half of the jackets in the shops only had trousers to go with them, not skirts.

The woman who sat next to me chain-smoked, lighting one cigarette from the end of the previous one all day. It was horrendous!

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Twickerhun · 11/05/2021 19:34

We had to use a modem to connect to the server for emails. Did it once a day and the beep, beep, BEEEEP was a daily sound track.

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Jeffjefftyjeff · 11/05/2021 19:35

In the early days of email we had to print important emails and stamp them/ sign them to prove authenticity, then add to hard copy files Grin.

We had our own, large, permanent desks with random paraphernalia like photos etc on. Now all hot desking on small empty desks.

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FrozenCucumberPresse · 11/05/2021 19:35

In 2004, you could happily sit and have a cig at the counter! Music shop.

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Y0YO · 11/05/2021 19:36

Sexual harassment

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PaperMonster · 11/05/2021 19:36

Oh yes, Friday lunchtimes at the pub!

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SmednotaSmoo · 11/05/2021 19:37

We had our own printers on our desks, and two bins each (one generic, one recycling). Now my entire floor of ?70 people has access to one printer and two bins.

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EggysMom · 11/05/2021 19:38

Friday lunch was at the nearest pub, alcohol was normal, and then you went back to work for the afternoon.

Ashtrays / smoking at the desk.

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RedRec · 11/05/2021 19:40

Records kept on microfiche.
Drinking at lunchtime.
Smoking in the office.
Free lunches in the staff restaurant.
Laughter.

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MeridasMum · 11/05/2021 19:41

I started work in a bank in 1987.

Women were called girls, no matter their age; women couldn't wear trousers; we had to call the manager Mr _ (there were no women managers); we'd often go for 2 or 3 alcoholic drinks at lunchtime; smoked at our desks; we had no computers, we'd get account transactions and balances on microfiche every morning, and there were 2 'terminals' to input debits and credits at the end of each day.

Mr_ would pat us on the bottoms as we walked away after a conversation (most of the managers would do this; not all). Us 'girls' were careful not to close a managers door behind us when we walked into their offices!

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user143677433 · 11/05/2021 19:41

Mid 90s - typing pool, secretaries, paper files, modems, “terminals” rather than PCs, people smoking in the break room, an HR department of 20 people for an organisation that only employed 500, in comparison to the 1 “database administrator” (IT guy).

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wingsofsteel · 11/05/2021 19:42

Mid 90s- professional office based job. Women were not permitted to wear trouser suits. A few years after I joined the rule was relaxed but if a female member of staff was visiting a client and wanted to wear trousers we were expected to call first and check it was acceptable for their dress code. Office was mainly open-plan but all managers (of all levels) had an office (more junior managers shared occasionally). Managers were allowed to smoke in their offices. I visited lots of clients' offices and it was common for larger office buildings to have a 'smoking room'.

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Fixitup2 · 11/05/2021 19:42

Cheque guarantee cards. I worked in a shop.

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mscynical · 11/05/2021 19:42

Yes, smoking was done by most and those that didn't never moaned - unbelievable to think of today.
Carbon copies.
Gestetner machines for when you had to do loads of copies of something.
Agree with @PaperMonster with no appraisals or regular 1-2-1's.
But the best thing was there were hardly any (if any) meetings. People knew what to do, the higher ups decided stuff (on their own dependent on their title) and there was no timewasting and waffling which seems to take up most of the day today.
You could go out to the pub at lunchtime and I even used to visit a lunchtime disco in KIngley Street, Soho where a mate was paid to dance on a rock in a lit up small pond for the hour she had for lunch!
Lots and lots of laughs although I worked in creative companies so maybe I was lucky.

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user143677433 · 11/05/2021 19:44

Interdepartmental memos delivered every morning on printed paper into an actual physical in-tray

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Fudgeytastic · 11/05/2021 19:44

Dot matrix printer paper.

Handwriting cheque upon cheque to suppliers.

Experiencing blatant sexual harassment from a senior with his two deputies laughing along. Every single day.

Strict dress code of skirt or dress for women in the office, definitely no trousers permitted.

This was late 90's!!!

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btchymcbtchfce · 11/05/2021 19:44

We'd go to the pub for lunch (NHS)

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Northernsoullover · 11/05/2021 19:45

I'd handwrite a letter then take it to the typing pool where the typists would work their magic. Smoking in the office was obligatory. We also had a canteen which you could get a full fry up in. Works canteens are dying out. I miss them Sad

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Cookerhood · 11/05/2021 19:45

Smoking at desks, writing out letters longhand to be typed up. Tea trolley coming round morning & afternoon. Friday lunchtimes at the pub. Raucous Christmas parties in the office on Christmas Eve. Happy days.

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JustGotToKeepOnKeepingOn · 11/05/2021 19:45

Smoking in the office
Strip a gram for male birthdays!
Liquid lunches
Sales team sharing the mobile phone which came in a briefcase
Fax machines
The tea trolley coming around at 3pm

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