The Phnom Penh Post

Work excuses surveyed by US website

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ETTER late than never?” I’m not so sure. But, of course, we all have those situations when we just can’t get to work on time, right?

In fact, a new survey by human resources services CareerBuil­der of more than a thousand human resource managers and another 800 employees at private-sector companies in the US found that there were many familiar reasons for employees coming in to work late. Among the most typical excuses were traffic (51 percent), oversleepi­ng (31 percent), the weather (28 percent) and just being too tired to get out of bed (23 percent).

None of the explanatio­ns is unfamiliar. However, there were a few other reasons for lateness submitted that would certainly raise eyebrows. For example, one employee said “I had morning sickness” which would be understand­able, except the employee was a man. My favourite came from one woman who said that she was late because her “fake eyelashes were stuck together”. One thing’s for sure: innovation is not dead in America.

Sure, these excuses are funny ... but not to employers. A majority of them in the CareerBuil­der survey said they expect their employees to be on time every day. So important is this that 42 percent of employers said they’ve fired an employee because of tardiness.

The good news is that most employees get it. A full 65 percent of them said that they stay later to make up for any tardiness. However, most workers do think it’s time to change how we think about the workday. Almost two-thirds in the survey think that today’s 9-to-5 workday is antiquated and 88 percent of them think that the day’s start and end times should be more flexible.

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