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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To do almost nothing at work

242 replies

TooInvested · 08/06/2021 12:47

I finished uni a couple of years ago and am going back in September to do a further course relevant to the industry I want to work in. I have done an admin temp job for a year and a bit and just started a new one. In both, but especially the one I’ve just started, there seems to be almost nothing for me to do-the first role was office based so I helped other colleagues and managed to find just about enough stuff to do to fill the time, but I did spend quite a lot of time pretending to look busy. I told my boss regularly I could do with more work and he would give me a task that would take maybe 30 mins. I didn’t want to mention I wasn’t busy too much though so I didn’t lose the job. When I started wfh due to covid I did less and less and spent a lot of time watching tv with my laptop.
The job I’ve just started is a mix of office and home work and I honestly don’t know why they’ve hired me. I was in the office for the last 2 weeks and was fairly busy but I’m fairly sure I completed the task they hired me to do which was supposed to take at least 3 months. It seems my job now is just to email 3 people occasionally to remind them to do part of their job/fill in some forms that I can’t fill in. I’ve been working from home this week and have done embarrassingly little-but there seems to be almost nothing for me to do. I’ve messaged my manager and another colleague saying “I’m doing this at the moment and nearly done is there anything else you’d like me to do” and they either haven’t replied or have told me to do something that they must know takes about 10 mins. I have to go into the office for the rest of the week and I have no clue what I’ll do-I’m saving a small task I could do today so I can do it there slowly and look busy. I’m sat in my garden in the lovely sun now and feel quite guilty-but also isn’t it my manager’s responsibility to give me work to do (especially if I specifically ask for more work) and to check I’m being productive? I’m not interested in this industry and I doubt I’ll need a reference from them and am leaving in August-I wouldn’t mind that much if the contract was cut short as I’m just here for some extra money. So is it unreasonable to avoid mentioning to them how little I have to do and coast along till August? I would actually prefer to be busier but I’m worried if I keep pointing out that there’s not much to do they’ll just get rid of me.
Since I’ve found both temp office jobs I’ve done to have a very light workload-I was wondering-is it normal for office juniors/admin people to have very little to do and is there actually tons of people in offices everywhere all pretending to be busy? (Genuine question and no offence meant to any people who do work in admin and have busy roles). At my last company, there seemed to be far too many admin people all not doing a great deal.

OP posts:
Hoolihan · 08/06/2021 16:36

My current job is like this. I work three days a week but could do the same amount in half a day probably. I just keep my head down and look busy as I need the money! My colleagues are forever making a huge song and dance about how busy they are but I suspect it's a case of protesting too much.

couchparsnip · 08/06/2021 16:39

I'm in the public sector and we have strict targets and words are had if we don't reach them. People have been sacked for not being up to scratch. Jobs where you do very little just don't exist any more.
They did when I joined 20 odd years ago though. Some people definitely had the art of looking busy down to a tee!

NotThereNow · 08/06/2021 16:40

You have my sympathies. Been there. Clock watching, pretending to be busy. Pre-internet or monitored internet, had to have Word or Excel open. Used to deliberately think of the most long-winded ways of doing things. E.g. filing (paper) didn't sort into any kind of order before going to filing cabinet. Endless rounds of tea and coffee.

ChubbyLittleManInACampervan · 08/06/2021 16:41

In my first job we spent months building a Golden Gate Bridge out of paper clips from my desk to a colleague’s

I could not go around asking for more work, as I was doing maternity cover for a blagger. Her job (my job) could be done in 3hrs a week but she was amazing at looking busy.

It was actually no fun and the days were loooong. No sense of achievement either

purpleleotard · 08/06/2021 16:45

One of my local employers used to let in be known that they never sacked anyone.
Their preferred technique for getting rid of someone was to give them a desk and chair and an office. But no work.
Within the month the employee was so bored they left.
Pre internet, and probably now classed as constructive dismissal.

PowerhouseOfTheCell · 08/06/2021 16:46

Oh god my first job was like this. 10 months of basically just me and my manager having a chat for 7 hours, she admitted my role was created by her because she was lonely in the office on her own!

Phyllis321 · 08/06/2021 16:46

I had several jobs like this before I settled into my career. Don't feel guilty, it's not as though you are deliberately dodging tasks, in fact you've asked for more work!

dayslikethese1 · 08/06/2021 16:47

I reckon loads of jobs are like this. But society would probably collapse if everything was made efficient cos half the population would be out of work and there would be no money in the economy!

PleasantBirthday · 08/06/2021 16:52

My job is like this too. The thing is, I'm actually very quick to get anything I have to do done, it's just the way I am. I've very experienced too, so I know exactly what I need to do and how to do it.

So I sound like a candidate for promotion, right? Not really. My whole department will be made redundant soon so there really is literally nothing to do and nowhere to go - but I won't leave unless they pay me to go at this stage, I'm not an idiot.

HarrietOh · 08/06/2021 16:54

I had a few jobs like this in my 20s and god it's awful, nothing worse than clock watching and pretending to look busy. Especially if you've asked for work and there is none, so they're aware you have nothing to do!

thinkingaboutLangCleg · 08/06/2021 16:54

I'd use the time to do some sort of online course or training or something for some of the time - language or computer skills or something.

Excellent idea. As long as you do all that’s expected of you, you’re not ripping your employer off. And boredom can get very demoralising, whereas learning a new skill is revitalising. Can you use some time to get ahead on the course you’re starting in September? Any background reading recommended?

PuppyMonkey · 08/06/2021 16:59

Most of the jobs I’ve worked, I have been crazy busy but I did once have a job where the only thing I really had to do was take the minutes of certain meetings. Trouble was, these meetings took place maybe once a month. So I’d attend a meeting for two hours, then write up the minutes - trying to make that task last all day - then the rest of the month I had NOTHING to do. I used to hate it.

I remember asking for other stuff to do constantly, but like OP, the things I was given took a matter of seconds.

I made all the tea for the office though as it gave me something to to, so I’m pretty sure that’s why they liked me being there.Grin

Mythreeknights · 08/06/2021 17:08

OP I totally sympathise! I was in the same boat and wrote about it in my blog (now defunct but the link still works: ratracetojungle.blogspot.com/2010/06/ read the second piece down the page: Planet Isolation)

I felt utterly demoralised, frustrated, angry and so very fed up at being left to fester and to work under such a completely shit manager (who I think is still there - 10 years on!!).

There's also a very good podcast about people who work in shit jobs like this, and the power/control that others gain from making you do this. It's good that you are leaving in August, but if you can find something else to do, I'd leave beforehand. You are wasting your time there.

BrieAndChilli · 08/06/2021 17:14

Please can o have some of your email addresses 😂 I’ve just had a promotion and a large part of my old job is still needed (but won’t be in a few months time) and someone else has left but not been replaced yet so taken on some of that too. There’s not a enough hours in the day at the moment!!

itsjustlowhangingfruit · 08/06/2021 17:17

I'm in a job too where I'm bored and its a temporary job. I'm WFH so I'm mostly just skiving. It would be a lot harder to find something to do if I was in the office.

Bargebill19 · 08/06/2021 17:17

@brie no- I’ve worked hard to find such an easy job. !

Odoreida · 08/06/2021 17:18

As everyone else says, just enjoy it. I am in my 40s now and very busy at work - I look back with fondness on my temp / admin jobs in my 20s, spending hours on message boards / reading novels online / taking 2 hours for lunch in the pub when my boss was away ...

You are probably a very quick worker and once further qualified, will get hopefully get a really good job that uses your talents properly. For some people, work takes them longer and they will find it harder to progress up the ladder, but become very experienced in their roles and should be valued for this.

Gwenhwyfar · 08/06/2021 17:19

@BrieAndChilli

Please can o have some of your email addresses 😂 I’ve just had a promotion and a large part of my old job is still needed (but won’t be in a few months time) and someone else has left but not been replaced yet so taken on some of that too. There’s not a enough hours in the day at the moment!!
If you want something done, ask a busy person, not somebody who's so demotivated from boredom that they struggle to be lively at al Wink
Gwenhwyfar · 08/06/2021 17:20

"You are probably a very quick worker "

No, I think she's in a genuinely quiet job. It doesn't seem to be a case of being "too efficient".

IHTC · 08/06/2021 17:22

I'm 26 and pretty much all of the 6 jobs I've held to date have been exactly like this. I keep bouncing around trying to find a 'proper job' but I always end up twiddling my thumbs and thinking I can't believe I'm paid £x to do... Well nothing really! I'm on maternity leave now but dreading going back. I can't remember how I used to look busy Confused. There is only so many times you can keep asking people for work.

Stick with it if you know its for the short term. Keep in mind that over a long period of time, this could very well affect your mental health.

KisstheTeapot14 · 08/06/2021 17:23

Yes - online course, MOOC, something to put on your CV - does the company offer any courses you could do?

IAmDaveTheSerialShagger · 08/06/2021 17:35

I'm in the wrong job Grin

00100001 · 08/06/2021 17:37

Ha! Part of my job is to make things more efficient.

So like, a woman was spending 3 days creating certain lists of staff around 3 times a year. I automated it, so it took 3 minutes. She refused to use the system, because she didn't trust it to be accurate... Despite after her 3 day slog there were still errors.

No-one cared enough to make her change to the new system...so wasted my time,and wasted 9days of company time every year 🤷‍♀️

Mouseorchestra7 · 08/06/2021 17:39

I would just enjoy it. Some jobs are like that. I've had a few 'career' jobs like that and loathed it. Felt so useless and like I was going nowhere. But if this is only a stop gap before you go on to other things, I would just enjoy it. May be catch up on your reading, do personal admin if you can? I actually think there are quite a lot of jobs like this to be honest!

IAmDaveTheSerialShagger · 08/06/2021 17:41

@Tagaagajavdv

This thread is so interesting. I’m an nhs nurse and have transitioned from a manic busy to normal busy unit but still have 12 hours of work a day to do, but I remember having a placement in a discharge lounge as a student where we drank tea and had banter with the very few patients all day. I was unpaid but there were band 2 and band 5 nursing staff paid to be there. Enjoy it i reckon x
Yep same another nurse here and I'm amazed there are jobs out there where this is even allowed!

I once worked on an acute medical ward where you had to clean the ward with toothbrushes on the rare occasions the ward was quiet!!