H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Does your boss have the right to time your bathroom breaks when you work from home? | Gene Marks

about 6 hours ago
A picture


How long does it take you to go to the bathroom? And does your boss have any right to ask?According to a recent story in the New York Post, one manager warned workers of the company’s “five-minute rule” which required work-from-home employees to “notify the team” if they stepped away from their desk for any reason, including to use the bathroom.“This helps us stay aligned and ensures nothing is missed.Thank you for your co-operation,” the manager said in an email shared online by an irate worker.Not surprisingly, this policy did not go over very well with some.“5 min?” one commenter wrote.

“Are you saving lives through that keyboard?”Other comments on the post ranged from “This is crazy” to “Oh I’d be so gone.”Of course, this manager’s demand is outrageous.No one can do anything – let alone relieve themselves – in under five minutes.Asking work-from-home employees to “notify the team” whenever they need to step away from their desks is completely unreasonable.However, the incident highlights what I’m observing among many of my clients who are trying to determine the best way to implement work-from-home policies.

For employers – particularly small business owners, most of whom are over the age of 50 – working from home is often a tough concept to swallow.I’ve seen a number of these owners resist these policies because they don’t believe that their employees are as productive at home as they are in the office.And it’s not just a small business thing.Many corporate CEOs – from JPMorgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon to Amazon’s Andy Jassy – have been outspoken in their position that workers get more work done when they’re in the office.They may be wrong, they may be right.

Over the past few years we’ve seen some studies that say workers do get more done when working remotely,Just as many reports conclude the opposite,Clearly, we’re still too close to the pandemic and to this kind of working arrangement to truly know what’s best for businesses,More time and data are needed,In the meantime, employers – like the manager above – oftentimes go overboard when supervising employees that they can’t see in the office.

We still haven’t figured this out,Most, however, are trying,That’s because they understand that working from home can be liberating for many of those employees,It gives them balance, more freedom and more flexibility, especially if they’re caring for others,But for this type of arrangement to be successful, both employers and employees need to meet somewhere in the middle.

For employees, it must be understood that being allowed to work from home is a benefit not unlike health insurance and retirement.It needs to be earned and rules need to be followed.Five-minute bathroom breaks are, of course, ridiculous.But it’s not unreasonable for a manager to expect that their remote team member is as accessible as they are when they’re in the office and that they’re getting their jobs done, whatever and whenever that requires.Employees need to understand that their employers are rightly suspicious if their remote working days fall on a Monday or Friday.

They need to understand that their company’s IT team will need access to their devices in order to ensure security.They need to dress professionally, make sure the dog is fed and that their kids are being watched.Employers also have to meet their workers halfway.Stop the micromanagement and don’t get monitoring software.Understand that even if they were in the office, you can’t keep tabs on someone all the time.

After all, they may be taking a bathroom break!
businessSee all
A picture

The world dropped the ball on critical minerals and China pounced. Is it too late for Australia and the US to close the gap?

In the wake of Covid, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and China’s assertion in global markets, western countries have realised they can’t afford such concentrated supply chainsFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastAlmost eight years to the day after the last Holden rolled off an Adelaide factory assembly line, Anthony Albanese announced a $13bn deal with Donald Trump to help champion a domestic rare-earth industry.Announcing the deal this week in Washington, the prime minister called it “a really significant day” that would take the relationship between the two countries “to the next level”.“We’re just getting started,” Albanese said.The US president claimed “in about a year from now, we’ll have so much critical mineral and rare earths, that you won’t know what to do with them”.Most Australians, it’s fair to say, would already struggle to know what to do with a kilo of gallium, for example, let alone a bucket of neodymium-praseodymium oxide

1 day ago
A picture

‘If you use chocolate, you’re in crisis’: the surprise ingredients being used to beat costs

Rice is not the first ingredient most people associate with confectionery and desserts, but a UK company is using it to create cocoa-free chocolate.It is part of an emerging trend in which chocolate makers are exploring alternative ingredients and new technologies to make their products more sustainable and reduce reliance on conventional cacao beans.Rising costs have also had an impact with some brands turning to “chocolate flavouring” and altering their recipes, seeking cheaper ways to keep products on store shelves. McVitie’s Penguin and Club bars, along with KitKat White and McVitie’s White Digestives, can no longer be marketed as chocolate because they do not contain enough cocoa.The climate crisis and deforestation have made cacao production increasingly unstable and environmentally costly

1 day ago
A picture

Buy now, pay later holiday purchases leaving travellers exposed to losses

People are missing out on vital protections by using buy now, pay later instead of credit cards to pay for holidays, experts warn.Buy now, pay later (BNPL) has grown hugely in recent years, and holiday firms and hotel chains have been adding it to the options for payment when booking online, saying it can make trips more attainable.“Stay now, pay later” is the new slogan from budget hotel chain Travelodge, which recently announced that guests can now pay via Klarna, Clearpay or PayPal – the three companies that dominate the UK BNPL market.Similarly, a number of travel agents and flight booking sites offer BNPL under the banner of “Fly now pay later”. Customers do not have to pay the full cost of their flights upfront – they can spread the cost over instalments

1 day ago
A picture

Co-op staff told to boost promotion of vapes after costly cyber-attack, document shows

The Co-op has quietly told staff to boost promotion of vapes in an effort to win back customers and sales after a devastating cyber-attack.The ethical retailer is making vapes more prominent in stores via new​ displays and additional advertising, according to an internal document seen by the Guardian. It is also stocking a bigger range of vapes and nicotine pouches.The action plan is to tackle a big sales drop after the April hack that resulted in gaps on its shelves.Called Powering Up: Focus Sprint: Cigs, Tobacco and Vape, the document says: “Sales haven’t recovered compared to pre-cyber

1 day ago
A picture

Wall Street and FTSE 100 hit record highs after US inflation report fuels interest rate cut hopes – as it happened

Newsflash: US inflation has risen, but not as much as expected, new delayed economic data shows.The annual US consumer prices index rose to 3% in September, up from 2.9% in August, but lower than the 3.1% which economists had forecast.That means the cost of living is continuing to rise faster than the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, as the US central bank comes under pressure from the White House to cut interest rates faster

2 days ago
A picture

Nigel Farage seeks influence over Bank of England in same vein as Trump and US Federal Reserve

Nigel Farage has suggested he would replace the governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey, if he were to become prime minister.“He’s had a good run, we might find someone new,” Farage said in an interview with Bloomberg’s The Mishal Husain show.“He’s a nice enough bloke,” the Reform leader added.However, Farage is unlikely to have a say in Bailey’s leadership, given the governor’s single eight-year term is due to end in March 2028 and the prime minister, Keir Starmer, is only required to hold a general election sometime before 15 August 2029.Farage has been calling for politicians to have greater influence on the central bank, which was made independent in 1997 by the then chancellor, Gordon Brown

2 days ago
sportSee all
A picture

Shaun Wane requires herculean Ashes effort after England’s Wembley mauling

about 5 hours ago
A picture

England crush New Zealand in final group match but Ecclestone injured

about 8 hours ago
A picture

England beat New Zealand by eight wickets: Women’s Cricket World Cup – as it hapened

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Mitchell steers New Zealand home with Brook’s 135 not enough to save England

about 11 hours ago
A picture

New Zealand beat England by four wickets in first men’s ODI – as it happened

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Lando Norris claims F1 Mexico City GP pole as teammate Oscar Piastri falters

about 22 hours ago