I have to get certifications as part of my job and because all of my coworkers and I keep failing these really hard tests, we aren’t allow to study during downtime on the clock. We were told to study on our own time.

Getting certs is part of what is required for me to get bigger raises and get promoted and all that jazz. I don’t want to use my personal time for this. None of the people who are in this predicament do.

I have a meeting in a few days to discuss goals and I need to figure out how to tell my boss that using my own time for work shit is unacceptable.

I really like this job other than this one aspect of it and I don’t want to make anyone mad, but I need to express my boundaries and all that

  • @[email protected]
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    912 months ago

    Based on what you said, these are not required for you to do your job, only for you to improve your position. It is not unreasonable for you to use personal time for self-improvement. It’s also not unreasonable for you to use company downtime for self-improvement.

    • @[email protected]
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      762 months ago

      Not just downtime. There should be room for training.

      Employers aren’t obligated to invest in you, but then you know how much you should invest in them.

      • @[email protected]
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        362 months ago

        1000% this. Spending even an entire work-day to go attend training is part of being in the work force. I’d be spending my personal time dusting off my resume.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    “Using my own time for work stuff is unacceptable to me, and I am prepared to quit this job and get a different one that doesn’t ask me to work off the clock if you press this matter.”

    Don’t try to reason them into accepting your way of thinking, just state your position and what you’re willing to do to pursue it

    Incidentally, if “I am prepared to quit this job” does not currently apply to you, you should not be having this conversation.

    e; partial_acumen had a way better answer

    “Using my own time for work stuff is unacceptable to me. It was not enumerated in the job listing when I was hired that off-clock unpaid work was required to keep this job and I am prepared to quit this job and get a different one that doesn’t ask me to work off the clock if you press this matter if the company terminates me for refusing to work unpaid off the clock I’d be happy to raise that with the Department of Labor for a case of wage theft.”

    e2; this is all assuming you’re ok with losing this job and waiting through a lawsuit and several years to get what you’re owed by this employer

    • partial_accumen
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      2 months ago

      “Using my own time for work stuff is unacceptable to me. It was not enumerated in the job listing when I was hired that off-clock unpaid work was required to keep this job and I am prepared to quit this job and get a different one that doesn’t ask me to work off the clock if you press this matter if the company terminates me for refusing to work unpaid off the clock I’d be happy to raise that with the Department of Labor for a case of wage theft.”

      FTFY

      Now, understand in many jobs maintaining a level of knowledge is necessary, and skills age-out meaning they are no longer applicable to industry. If you don’t have these new certs, you may not be able to get hired somewhere else because they require the current industry knowledge. You’ll have to decide which battles you want to fight, and what you will do if the worst outcome affects you and you’re out of work. Would you be forced to study and pass those certs anyway just to be eligible in your industry? If so, you can work toward compromise with your current employer as a shorter and less painful path.

      To this end, you can challenge them on not letting you study on the clock during downtime. If these certs are as critical as they claim, then why are downtime hours not usable for cert study?

      • Badabinski
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        82 months ago

        There’s the magical term! God I fucking hate wage theft. OP, the company is trying to steal from you. Your time is money and if they’re not paying you for work then they’re, by definition, stealing from you.

        I’ve had conversations like this before, and usually you only have to hint that it’s wage theft for dumbfuck managers to realize and back down, especially if you’re assertive but polite with them. If you’re not getting anywhere with the manager, then you should go to HR. HR’s job is to protect the company and the obviously correct move for an HR person is to keep the DoL out of the situation. If you go to HR and then get fired, then that may be even better evidence against the shitheads.

        If you do go to HR, try to get your manager to admit to wage theft in a way that gives you evidence. If you can’t get the manager to admit to wage theft on paper or electronically (which you should immediately back up), you’re going to the DoL, and you live somewhere with one-party consent, then surreptitiously record your manager saying it. It may be against company policy to make this recording (and should be your last resort, don’t go to HR with audio recordings!), but it’s legal as long as your jurisdiction has one-party consent laws on the books.

        Don’t let them steal from you, OP. The other magic words that have already been mentioned in this thread are “fuck you, pay me.”

      • @[email protected]
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        62 months ago

        I get that you guys are spelling things out for OP so they have an understanding of what their argument’s foundation is, but going into the conversation with language like “it was not enumerated” and vague threats of reporting them to the authorities is probably not the best approach if OP actually wants to keep the job (which it sounds like they do).

        • partial_accumen
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          22 months ago

          My answer wasn’t so much directed at OP but @[email protected] that had text threatening to quit. If OPs company wants them gone, threatening to quit plays right into their hands. Further, if you ever threaten and not follow through, you’ve lost any leverage in negotiating further changes.

          with language like “it was not enumerated” and vague threats of reporting them to the authorities

          To reiterate, I wasn’t suggesting using that exact language I put in quotes but was attempting to show OP what was effectively being asked of them by their employer, and how it wasn’t fair to what they agreed, and that there was legal recourse they had if it evolved to that. If you read the rest of my post it was laying out that taking extreme action like threatening to quit, failing to get the certs, or some such would likely result in them losing their job anyway and a better approach is to work with their employer to get some time on the clock for cert study, but also recognize that an absolutist approach can result in the worst situation for OP and likely require they get the certs anyway on their own time because the certs would be required by a new employer.

          Nothing with OPs situation will be resolved in a single conversation with any one party at their employer. It will be a series of conversations with each laying out their requirements and hopefully arriving at a compromise where OP still works there, and OP’s employer is satisfied with the effort toward certs.

  • Bunnylux
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    112 months ago

    You have the right to be compensated for time spent studying for work. And he has the right to fire you for using it so ineffectively that you continuously fail.

    • thermal_shock
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      2 months ago

      Sounds like they were already being paid and failing.

      We get X hours per week work time and tests reimbursed after we pass. If we fail, it’s on us. None are required, but free education and testing is great. Read a chapter or two each day, get more involved, won’t kill you. Hell, might even help land you a better job.

      Its your education and your career youre cheating. OP needs to eradicate from him/herself their childish folley.

      Note that my certifications are globally recognized (Microsoft 365, cloud management, etc) not internal bullshit.

  • @[email protected]
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    162 months ago

    After repeated failures to pass a test, I do not think it is unreasonable for the business to stop paying for your attempts at a certification. Either directly via training sessions and testing fees, or indirectly via your working hours.

    • mosiacmango
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      2 months ago

      If the certs were not required, you have a point. If they are required to the point where OP has to have a discussion about not doing them with his boss, then the buisness needs to keep paying, drop the requirement or find new employees.

      • The Octonaut
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        12 months ago

        Required for promotion. OP has been demonstrating quite clearly that he isn’t ready for that.

        • mosiacmango
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          2 months ago

          If you only have to have a cert to be promoted, then OP can simply not do it and not be promoted. No conversation with his boss would be necessary.

          It sounds more like the org need X amount of people qualified to have “gold” status with a vendor, so they pressure you to get it and make any promotion contingent on you having/gaining this cert.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 months ago

      I’d use the word “shit,” but I’ve already established a certain level of communication with my manager and colleagues.

      • @[email protected]
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        122 months ago

        Then you probably wouldn’t have to ask on Lemmy how to express your objections. But OP did; so no “shit”.

  • @[email protected]
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    152 months ago

    Tell your boss that the time when you aren’t at work is the time when you do “the rest of my life.” Tell them that your schedule is already very full and that what free time you do have is for downtime for resting and recuperating from the things that keep you busy. Politely but firmly let them know that you need to pursue work during work time.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      That’s a long way to say “I don’t know that I have availability on that schedule.”

      That’s the line I used when it was suggested. My year clock started then, and I was out on time. They were surprised, but I included the email as part of my resignation.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    Continuous Professional Development (CPD) is a trait of professional careers. Do you think doctors, nurses, etc only study on work time?

    If you’re not in such a professional field, discuss remuneration for doing it in your free time as the company will benefit. You need to figure out how much you want for a raise, and if things fall through remind them you’ll be more employable and you can go elsewhere after passing. Maybe even push for an early raise now to keep you as it seems they like you.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 months ago

      If the company doesn’t pay me for a certification they want me to have, I will choose whatever certification/training to meet my requirements. If the cert is something I am interested, cool beans, otherwise the company can pound sand.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        This is an intervention. All your posts are full of vitriol. You need to take some time out.

    • @[email protected]
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      92 months ago

      I don’t know about medical professionals, but Professional Engineers do, in fact, often get reimbursed by their company for the cost of earning their PDH credits.

  • @[email protected]
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    192 months ago

    If your company, for which your boss is an agent and therefore part of, is ASKING YOU to get this cert, then the study is labor done as a part of you position. You need to be paid for this work.

    If the company is only making it a prerequisite for advancement, and not asking you to get it per se, then reimbursement is reasonable.

    If you happen to have a Union then check with them.

  • @[email protected]
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    642 months ago

    Had the same conversation with my boss, and I specifically asked him “Is this certificaton job related or is it just so someone can check a box on a spreadsheet somewhere? If it’s job related, I’m absolutely down for it, what does the new role entitle and what’s the increase in pay for it?”

    Response? Silence.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 months ago

        That was the weird part, it wasn’t any one specific certification, it was any 2nd certification in addition to the job related cert I already had.

        • thermal_shock
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          22 months ago

          Well idk, my certs have multiple levels/advancements that you can specialize in, so…

  • @[email protected]
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    82 months ago

    If getting the cert is part of your goals or part of your work, then you need to tell your boss you are willing to put in the work during business hours. Anything work related outside of business hours requires overtime pay.

    If these certs are not part of your goals/work, then I would suggest talking with your boss about incorporating them in.

  • @[email protected]
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    32 months ago

    If you need the cert to do your job they should compensate you (i.e. allow you to use company time). If it’s not required then I would say I’m going to accept the risks of not becoming certified as the time investment is not feasible for me. Many people provide value staying in the same role for years and advancement, if it’s a net negative to someone’s overall well-being, should be optional at the employees discretion.

  • @[email protected]
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    122 months ago

    If you need a cert to keep your current position and it wasn’t required when you started, that’s one thing.

    If you need a cert to promote and climb within the company that’s totally different. That’s education and qualifications that you need if you choose to climb the ladder and make more. There isn’t really any reason the company should have to pay you for this time for you to study and obtain those certifications. If you decide you want more money, then you will decide to study outside of work. If you wanted a position that required a bachelor’s degree at your company, would you expect the company to pay for your degree and pay for your time at college?

    • @[email protected]
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      62 months ago

      I definitely expect companies to provide continued education opportunities to employees that they value. There’s a difference between taking a couple of online classes and asking the company to pay for a bachelor’s degree, so of course each company is going to have to figure out what works best for them, but only foolish bosses would throw away perfectly good employees who want to improve.