Boss suddenly stopped giving me work, and I sit idle the whole day. What should I do? [duplicate]

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  • What to do when my boss explicitly says he has nothing for me to do? [duplicate]

    7 answers



I have been working in a public sector company for the last 29 years. I have successfully managed all responsibilities for the department independently. Now my boss has got a co-worker from another department. All of a sudden, all the work is given to this newcomer and I sit idle the whole day.



Should I complain to the higher authority or speak/write to my boss?







share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by The Wandering Dev Manager, thursdaysgeek, keshlam, DJClayworth, Michael Grubey May 10 '15 at 16:47


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 3




    I would suggest that an informal chat with your boss and ask them how they feel you are performing, if there are any issues. Tell them that you feel underutilised and have the capacity for more work. I would NOT go in all guns blazing. Open gently, state the fact that you have no work to do. If it's unintentional then it should resolve. If it isn't, then you can ask about performance and move forward from there.
    – Jane S♦
    Apr 21 '15 at 9:52






  • 2




    How long are we talking about? A day, a week, a month? Has anything been said to you? Have you said or done anything?
    – Nigel Harper
    Apr 21 '15 at 12:26






  • 1




    Is there any work you can do? Things that always should have been done that you didn't have time to do because they were lower priority? Find something that you could do. Then go to your boss and say "I've done everything you told me, so if you have nothing else to do, I will do this (rather unimportant task)".
    – gnasher729
    Apr 22 '15 at 10:03
















up vote
9
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do when my boss explicitly says he has nothing for me to do? [duplicate]

    7 answers



I have been working in a public sector company for the last 29 years. I have successfully managed all responsibilities for the department independently. Now my boss has got a co-worker from another department. All of a sudden, all the work is given to this newcomer and I sit idle the whole day.



Should I complain to the higher authority or speak/write to my boss?







share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by The Wandering Dev Manager, thursdaysgeek, keshlam, DJClayworth, Michael Grubey May 10 '15 at 16:47


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 3




    I would suggest that an informal chat with your boss and ask them how they feel you are performing, if there are any issues. Tell them that you feel underutilised and have the capacity for more work. I would NOT go in all guns blazing. Open gently, state the fact that you have no work to do. If it's unintentional then it should resolve. If it isn't, then you can ask about performance and move forward from there.
    – Jane S♦
    Apr 21 '15 at 9:52






  • 2




    How long are we talking about? A day, a week, a month? Has anything been said to you? Have you said or done anything?
    – Nigel Harper
    Apr 21 '15 at 12:26






  • 1




    Is there any work you can do? Things that always should have been done that you didn't have time to do because they were lower priority? Find something that you could do. Then go to your boss and say "I've done everything you told me, so if you have nothing else to do, I will do this (rather unimportant task)".
    – gnasher729
    Apr 22 '15 at 10:03












up vote
9
down vote

favorite









up vote
9
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do when my boss explicitly says he has nothing for me to do? [duplicate]

    7 answers



I have been working in a public sector company for the last 29 years. I have successfully managed all responsibilities for the department independently. Now my boss has got a co-worker from another department. All of a sudden, all the work is given to this newcomer and I sit idle the whole day.



Should I complain to the higher authority or speak/write to my boss?







share|improve this question















This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do when my boss explicitly says he has nothing for me to do? [duplicate]

    7 answers



I have been working in a public sector company for the last 29 years. I have successfully managed all responsibilities for the department independently. Now my boss has got a co-worker from another department. All of a sudden, all the work is given to this newcomer and I sit idle the whole day.



Should I complain to the higher authority or speak/write to my boss?





This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do when my boss explicitly says he has nothing for me to do? [duplicate]

    7 answers









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 21 '15 at 7:55









Masked Man♦

43.6k25114163




43.6k25114163










asked Apr 21 '15 at 7:37









Pousali Sinha

51112




51112




marked as duplicate by The Wandering Dev Manager, thursdaysgeek, keshlam, DJClayworth, Michael Grubey May 10 '15 at 16:47


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by The Wandering Dev Manager, thursdaysgeek, keshlam, DJClayworth, Michael Grubey May 10 '15 at 16:47


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 3




    I would suggest that an informal chat with your boss and ask them how they feel you are performing, if there are any issues. Tell them that you feel underutilised and have the capacity for more work. I would NOT go in all guns blazing. Open gently, state the fact that you have no work to do. If it's unintentional then it should resolve. If it isn't, then you can ask about performance and move forward from there.
    – Jane S♦
    Apr 21 '15 at 9:52






  • 2




    How long are we talking about? A day, a week, a month? Has anything been said to you? Have you said or done anything?
    – Nigel Harper
    Apr 21 '15 at 12:26






  • 1




    Is there any work you can do? Things that always should have been done that you didn't have time to do because they were lower priority? Find something that you could do. Then go to your boss and say "I've done everything you told me, so if you have nothing else to do, I will do this (rather unimportant task)".
    – gnasher729
    Apr 22 '15 at 10:03












  • 3




    I would suggest that an informal chat with your boss and ask them how they feel you are performing, if there are any issues. Tell them that you feel underutilised and have the capacity for more work. I would NOT go in all guns blazing. Open gently, state the fact that you have no work to do. If it's unintentional then it should resolve. If it isn't, then you can ask about performance and move forward from there.
    – Jane S♦
    Apr 21 '15 at 9:52






  • 2




    How long are we talking about? A day, a week, a month? Has anything been said to you? Have you said or done anything?
    – Nigel Harper
    Apr 21 '15 at 12:26






  • 1




    Is there any work you can do? Things that always should have been done that you didn't have time to do because they were lower priority? Find something that you could do. Then go to your boss and say "I've done everything you told me, so if you have nothing else to do, I will do this (rather unimportant task)".
    – gnasher729
    Apr 22 '15 at 10:03







3




3




I would suggest that an informal chat with your boss and ask them how they feel you are performing, if there are any issues. Tell them that you feel underutilised and have the capacity for more work. I would NOT go in all guns blazing. Open gently, state the fact that you have no work to do. If it's unintentional then it should resolve. If it isn't, then you can ask about performance and move forward from there.
– Jane S♦
Apr 21 '15 at 9:52




I would suggest that an informal chat with your boss and ask them how they feel you are performing, if there are any issues. Tell them that you feel underutilised and have the capacity for more work. I would NOT go in all guns blazing. Open gently, state the fact that you have no work to do. If it's unintentional then it should resolve. If it isn't, then you can ask about performance and move forward from there.
– Jane S♦
Apr 21 '15 at 9:52




2




2




How long are we talking about? A day, a week, a month? Has anything been said to you? Have you said or done anything?
– Nigel Harper
Apr 21 '15 at 12:26




How long are we talking about? A day, a week, a month? Has anything been said to you? Have you said or done anything?
– Nigel Harper
Apr 21 '15 at 12:26




1




1




Is there any work you can do? Things that always should have been done that you didn't have time to do because they were lower priority? Find something that you could do. Then go to your boss and say "I've done everything you told me, so if you have nothing else to do, I will do this (rather unimportant task)".
– gnasher729
Apr 22 '15 at 10:03




Is there any work you can do? Things that always should have been done that you didn't have time to do because they were lower priority? Find something that you could do. Then go to your boss and say "I've done everything you told me, so if you have nothing else to do, I will do this (rather unimportant task)".
– gnasher729
Apr 22 '15 at 10:03










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
15
down vote













This is most likely a simple issue of miscommunication, don't get so worked up over it. Given your level of experience and good track record, your boss and the higher-ups are probably making plans to move you into a different role, where they see you would be valuable.



Of course, they have to bring in someone new to take over the work you are currently doing. The boss should have ideally communicated this to you already, but humans make mistakes. Maybe he simply forgot to tell you, or he thinks you have other work to do and doesn't realize that you are idle, or he doesn't think this is critical enough to tell you now and plans to tell you later, etc.



I would strongly advise against bypassing the boss and complaining to the higher authority. If it turns out to be something like the above, your boss will wonder, "Why didn't you just ask me first, if you were so worried about it?" and both you and your boss will lose face.



Tell your manager that you have been idle for a while, and ask him what are his plans for you. No matter how much this frustrates you, don't drag the newcomer into your discussion or blame the boss, that is, don't say something like, "Hey Boss, why did you bring this new guy, and give all my work to him?" Focus only on your work, complaining about others (or even appearing to be complaining about others) doesn't help you in any way.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    2
    down vote













    First ask to your boss with respect that why he/she is doing like this. Is there any your mistake or other issue?



    After that if you do not get satisfied answer/reply from boss then you can write/speak to higher authority.






    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      You should plan a meeting with your boss and ask them "What are your expectations for me, short term and long term?" and if he doesn't understand, say something like "Well, right now I don't have a lot of work so I wanted to make sure I'm meeting your expectations". Don't ask them "why did the work stop coming my way" and avoid mentioning the new colleague at all cost, you don't want to appear to be accusing anyone of anything.



      This way you should be able to find out what your boss has planned for you in a natural way. It could be that they have dialed down your responsibilities in preparation of moving you to another role, or maybe he will say "we don't have a lot of work for you right now, but we have X in the pipeline that's coming your way". Worst case scenario is that they will be evasive or intentionally vague, which would mean you need to start looking for new employment.



      Throughout this process, maintain a positive attitude. Chances are he had no intention of making you feel useless, he likely simply forgot to communicate his plans to you. By going to him you also show that you are still motivated, which can never hurt.






      share|improve this answer



























        up vote
        -3
        down vote













        I agree with the previous responses, but I would like to suggest something additional: Use your idle time to update your resume and at least tentatively explore the job market. I am not saying you should quit your job. I'm not saying you want to move on. I am just suggesting that there is a use for this idle time. Have a "plan B". But by all means do talk to your boss as others have suggested.






        share|improve this answer
















        • 2




          I'd have immediate misgivings about an employee who spent his work hours updating his resume or searching job boards. I'm not paying you for that.
          – Adam V
          Apr 22 '15 at 17:01






        • 2




          The problem in this case is that if he does what you have made mention in your answer, he's using the company's resources for job hunting, which may show that the employee has plans of resignation, thus strengthening the manager's reason not to give him anymore tasks (that is if the manager wants him laid off). I do understand your point about exploring the job market. In fact, exploration is good for finding out what's new, but you must do this "off the clock".
          – Ju-chan
          Apr 22 '15 at 21:08











        • @AdamV he is being paid regardless of what he does, which right now is nothing. I see nothing wrong with a little polishing, but I would stay away from active job hunting while at the office. I had a boss that liked us to update our resume every year. I do suspect he may have been using it as a self evaluation for review time though.
          – Bill Leeper
          Apr 23 '15 at 14:21


















        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes








        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes








        up vote
        15
        down vote













        This is most likely a simple issue of miscommunication, don't get so worked up over it. Given your level of experience and good track record, your boss and the higher-ups are probably making plans to move you into a different role, where they see you would be valuable.



        Of course, they have to bring in someone new to take over the work you are currently doing. The boss should have ideally communicated this to you already, but humans make mistakes. Maybe he simply forgot to tell you, or he thinks you have other work to do and doesn't realize that you are idle, or he doesn't think this is critical enough to tell you now and plans to tell you later, etc.



        I would strongly advise against bypassing the boss and complaining to the higher authority. If it turns out to be something like the above, your boss will wonder, "Why didn't you just ask me first, if you were so worried about it?" and both you and your boss will lose face.



        Tell your manager that you have been idle for a while, and ask him what are his plans for you. No matter how much this frustrates you, don't drag the newcomer into your discussion or blame the boss, that is, don't say something like, "Hey Boss, why did you bring this new guy, and give all my work to him?" Focus only on your work, complaining about others (or even appearing to be complaining about others) doesn't help you in any way.






        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          15
          down vote













          This is most likely a simple issue of miscommunication, don't get so worked up over it. Given your level of experience and good track record, your boss and the higher-ups are probably making plans to move you into a different role, where they see you would be valuable.



          Of course, they have to bring in someone new to take over the work you are currently doing. The boss should have ideally communicated this to you already, but humans make mistakes. Maybe he simply forgot to tell you, or he thinks you have other work to do and doesn't realize that you are idle, or he doesn't think this is critical enough to tell you now and plans to tell you later, etc.



          I would strongly advise against bypassing the boss and complaining to the higher authority. If it turns out to be something like the above, your boss will wonder, "Why didn't you just ask me first, if you were so worried about it?" and both you and your boss will lose face.



          Tell your manager that you have been idle for a while, and ask him what are his plans for you. No matter how much this frustrates you, don't drag the newcomer into your discussion or blame the boss, that is, don't say something like, "Hey Boss, why did you bring this new guy, and give all my work to him?" Focus only on your work, complaining about others (or even appearing to be complaining about others) doesn't help you in any way.






          share|improve this answer






















            up vote
            15
            down vote










            up vote
            15
            down vote









            This is most likely a simple issue of miscommunication, don't get so worked up over it. Given your level of experience and good track record, your boss and the higher-ups are probably making plans to move you into a different role, where they see you would be valuable.



            Of course, they have to bring in someone new to take over the work you are currently doing. The boss should have ideally communicated this to you already, but humans make mistakes. Maybe he simply forgot to tell you, or he thinks you have other work to do and doesn't realize that you are idle, or he doesn't think this is critical enough to tell you now and plans to tell you later, etc.



            I would strongly advise against bypassing the boss and complaining to the higher authority. If it turns out to be something like the above, your boss will wonder, "Why didn't you just ask me first, if you were so worried about it?" and both you and your boss will lose face.



            Tell your manager that you have been idle for a while, and ask him what are his plans for you. No matter how much this frustrates you, don't drag the newcomer into your discussion or blame the boss, that is, don't say something like, "Hey Boss, why did you bring this new guy, and give all my work to him?" Focus only on your work, complaining about others (or even appearing to be complaining about others) doesn't help you in any way.






            share|improve this answer












            This is most likely a simple issue of miscommunication, don't get so worked up over it. Given your level of experience and good track record, your boss and the higher-ups are probably making plans to move you into a different role, where they see you would be valuable.



            Of course, they have to bring in someone new to take over the work you are currently doing. The boss should have ideally communicated this to you already, but humans make mistakes. Maybe he simply forgot to tell you, or he thinks you have other work to do and doesn't realize that you are idle, or he doesn't think this is critical enough to tell you now and plans to tell you later, etc.



            I would strongly advise against bypassing the boss and complaining to the higher authority. If it turns out to be something like the above, your boss will wonder, "Why didn't you just ask me first, if you were so worried about it?" and both you and your boss will lose face.



            Tell your manager that you have been idle for a while, and ask him what are his plans for you. No matter how much this frustrates you, don't drag the newcomer into your discussion or blame the boss, that is, don't say something like, "Hey Boss, why did you bring this new guy, and give all my work to him?" Focus only on your work, complaining about others (or even appearing to be complaining about others) doesn't help you in any way.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Apr 21 '15 at 8:08









            Masked Man♦

            43.6k25114163




            43.6k25114163






















                up vote
                2
                down vote













                First ask to your boss with respect that why he/she is doing like this. Is there any your mistake or other issue?



                After that if you do not get satisfied answer/reply from boss then you can write/speak to higher authority.






                share|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote













                  First ask to your boss with respect that why he/she is doing like this. Is there any your mistake or other issue?



                  After that if you do not get satisfied answer/reply from boss then you can write/speak to higher authority.






                  share|improve this answer






















                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote









                    First ask to your boss with respect that why he/she is doing like this. Is there any your mistake or other issue?



                    After that if you do not get satisfied answer/reply from boss then you can write/speak to higher authority.






                    share|improve this answer












                    First ask to your boss with respect that why he/she is doing like this. Is there any your mistake or other issue?



                    After that if you do not get satisfied answer/reply from boss then you can write/speak to higher authority.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Apr 21 '15 at 7:44









                    Helping Hands

                    1,7781922




                    1,7781922




















                        up vote
                        2
                        down vote













                        You should plan a meeting with your boss and ask them "What are your expectations for me, short term and long term?" and if he doesn't understand, say something like "Well, right now I don't have a lot of work so I wanted to make sure I'm meeting your expectations". Don't ask them "why did the work stop coming my way" and avoid mentioning the new colleague at all cost, you don't want to appear to be accusing anyone of anything.



                        This way you should be able to find out what your boss has planned for you in a natural way. It could be that they have dialed down your responsibilities in preparation of moving you to another role, or maybe he will say "we don't have a lot of work for you right now, but we have X in the pipeline that's coming your way". Worst case scenario is that they will be evasive or intentionally vague, which would mean you need to start looking for new employment.



                        Throughout this process, maintain a positive attitude. Chances are he had no intention of making you feel useless, he likely simply forgot to communicate his plans to you. By going to him you also show that you are still motivated, which can never hurt.






                        share|improve this answer
























                          up vote
                          2
                          down vote













                          You should plan a meeting with your boss and ask them "What are your expectations for me, short term and long term?" and if he doesn't understand, say something like "Well, right now I don't have a lot of work so I wanted to make sure I'm meeting your expectations". Don't ask them "why did the work stop coming my way" and avoid mentioning the new colleague at all cost, you don't want to appear to be accusing anyone of anything.



                          This way you should be able to find out what your boss has planned for you in a natural way. It could be that they have dialed down your responsibilities in preparation of moving you to another role, or maybe he will say "we don't have a lot of work for you right now, but we have X in the pipeline that's coming your way". Worst case scenario is that they will be evasive or intentionally vague, which would mean you need to start looking for new employment.



                          Throughout this process, maintain a positive attitude. Chances are he had no intention of making you feel useless, he likely simply forgot to communicate his plans to you. By going to him you also show that you are still motivated, which can never hurt.






                          share|improve this answer






















                            up vote
                            2
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            2
                            down vote









                            You should plan a meeting with your boss and ask them "What are your expectations for me, short term and long term?" and if he doesn't understand, say something like "Well, right now I don't have a lot of work so I wanted to make sure I'm meeting your expectations". Don't ask them "why did the work stop coming my way" and avoid mentioning the new colleague at all cost, you don't want to appear to be accusing anyone of anything.



                            This way you should be able to find out what your boss has planned for you in a natural way. It could be that they have dialed down your responsibilities in preparation of moving you to another role, or maybe he will say "we don't have a lot of work for you right now, but we have X in the pipeline that's coming your way". Worst case scenario is that they will be evasive or intentionally vague, which would mean you need to start looking for new employment.



                            Throughout this process, maintain a positive attitude. Chances are he had no intention of making you feel useless, he likely simply forgot to communicate his plans to you. By going to him you also show that you are still motivated, which can never hurt.






                            share|improve this answer












                            You should plan a meeting with your boss and ask them "What are your expectations for me, short term and long term?" and if he doesn't understand, say something like "Well, right now I don't have a lot of work so I wanted to make sure I'm meeting your expectations". Don't ask them "why did the work stop coming my way" and avoid mentioning the new colleague at all cost, you don't want to appear to be accusing anyone of anything.



                            This way you should be able to find out what your boss has planned for you in a natural way. It could be that they have dialed down your responsibilities in preparation of moving you to another role, or maybe he will say "we don't have a lot of work for you right now, but we have X in the pipeline that's coming your way". Worst case scenario is that they will be evasive or intentionally vague, which would mean you need to start looking for new employment.



                            Throughout this process, maintain a positive attitude. Chances are he had no intention of making you feel useless, he likely simply forgot to communicate his plans to you. By going to him you also show that you are still motivated, which can never hurt.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Apr 22 '15 at 16:28









                            Cronax

                            7,69432235




                            7,69432235




















                                up vote
                                -3
                                down vote













                                I agree with the previous responses, but I would like to suggest something additional: Use your idle time to update your resume and at least tentatively explore the job market. I am not saying you should quit your job. I'm not saying you want to move on. I am just suggesting that there is a use for this idle time. Have a "plan B". But by all means do talk to your boss as others have suggested.






                                share|improve this answer
















                                • 2




                                  I'd have immediate misgivings about an employee who spent his work hours updating his resume or searching job boards. I'm not paying you for that.
                                  – Adam V
                                  Apr 22 '15 at 17:01






                                • 2




                                  The problem in this case is that if he does what you have made mention in your answer, he's using the company's resources for job hunting, which may show that the employee has plans of resignation, thus strengthening the manager's reason not to give him anymore tasks (that is if the manager wants him laid off). I do understand your point about exploring the job market. In fact, exploration is good for finding out what's new, but you must do this "off the clock".
                                  – Ju-chan
                                  Apr 22 '15 at 21:08











                                • @AdamV he is being paid regardless of what he does, which right now is nothing. I see nothing wrong with a little polishing, but I would stay away from active job hunting while at the office. I had a boss that liked us to update our resume every year. I do suspect he may have been using it as a self evaluation for review time though.
                                  – Bill Leeper
                                  Apr 23 '15 at 14:21















                                up vote
                                -3
                                down vote













                                I agree with the previous responses, but I would like to suggest something additional: Use your idle time to update your resume and at least tentatively explore the job market. I am not saying you should quit your job. I'm not saying you want to move on. I am just suggesting that there is a use for this idle time. Have a "plan B". But by all means do talk to your boss as others have suggested.






                                share|improve this answer
















                                • 2




                                  I'd have immediate misgivings about an employee who spent his work hours updating his resume or searching job boards. I'm not paying you for that.
                                  – Adam V
                                  Apr 22 '15 at 17:01






                                • 2




                                  The problem in this case is that if he does what you have made mention in your answer, he's using the company's resources for job hunting, which may show that the employee has plans of resignation, thus strengthening the manager's reason not to give him anymore tasks (that is if the manager wants him laid off). I do understand your point about exploring the job market. In fact, exploration is good for finding out what's new, but you must do this "off the clock".
                                  – Ju-chan
                                  Apr 22 '15 at 21:08











                                • @AdamV he is being paid regardless of what he does, which right now is nothing. I see nothing wrong with a little polishing, but I would stay away from active job hunting while at the office. I had a boss that liked us to update our resume every year. I do suspect he may have been using it as a self evaluation for review time though.
                                  – Bill Leeper
                                  Apr 23 '15 at 14:21













                                up vote
                                -3
                                down vote










                                up vote
                                -3
                                down vote









                                I agree with the previous responses, but I would like to suggest something additional: Use your idle time to update your resume and at least tentatively explore the job market. I am not saying you should quit your job. I'm not saying you want to move on. I am just suggesting that there is a use for this idle time. Have a "plan B". But by all means do talk to your boss as others have suggested.






                                share|improve this answer












                                I agree with the previous responses, but I would like to suggest something additional: Use your idle time to update your resume and at least tentatively explore the job market. I am not saying you should quit your job. I'm not saying you want to move on. I am just suggesting that there is a use for this idle time. Have a "plan B". But by all means do talk to your boss as others have suggested.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Apr 22 '15 at 6:15









                                Kurt Tappe

                                73135




                                73135







                                • 2




                                  I'd have immediate misgivings about an employee who spent his work hours updating his resume or searching job boards. I'm not paying you for that.
                                  – Adam V
                                  Apr 22 '15 at 17:01






                                • 2




                                  The problem in this case is that if he does what you have made mention in your answer, he's using the company's resources for job hunting, which may show that the employee has plans of resignation, thus strengthening the manager's reason not to give him anymore tasks (that is if the manager wants him laid off). I do understand your point about exploring the job market. In fact, exploration is good for finding out what's new, but you must do this "off the clock".
                                  – Ju-chan
                                  Apr 22 '15 at 21:08











                                • @AdamV he is being paid regardless of what he does, which right now is nothing. I see nothing wrong with a little polishing, but I would stay away from active job hunting while at the office. I had a boss that liked us to update our resume every year. I do suspect he may have been using it as a self evaluation for review time though.
                                  – Bill Leeper
                                  Apr 23 '15 at 14:21













                                • 2




                                  I'd have immediate misgivings about an employee who spent his work hours updating his resume or searching job boards. I'm not paying you for that.
                                  – Adam V
                                  Apr 22 '15 at 17:01






                                • 2




                                  The problem in this case is that if he does what you have made mention in your answer, he's using the company's resources for job hunting, which may show that the employee has plans of resignation, thus strengthening the manager's reason not to give him anymore tasks (that is if the manager wants him laid off). I do understand your point about exploring the job market. In fact, exploration is good for finding out what's new, but you must do this "off the clock".
                                  – Ju-chan
                                  Apr 22 '15 at 21:08











                                • @AdamV he is being paid regardless of what he does, which right now is nothing. I see nothing wrong with a little polishing, but I would stay away from active job hunting while at the office. I had a boss that liked us to update our resume every year. I do suspect he may have been using it as a self evaluation for review time though.
                                  – Bill Leeper
                                  Apr 23 '15 at 14:21








                                2




                                2




                                I'd have immediate misgivings about an employee who spent his work hours updating his resume or searching job boards. I'm not paying you for that.
                                – Adam V
                                Apr 22 '15 at 17:01




                                I'd have immediate misgivings about an employee who spent his work hours updating his resume or searching job boards. I'm not paying you for that.
                                – Adam V
                                Apr 22 '15 at 17:01




                                2




                                2




                                The problem in this case is that if he does what you have made mention in your answer, he's using the company's resources for job hunting, which may show that the employee has plans of resignation, thus strengthening the manager's reason not to give him anymore tasks (that is if the manager wants him laid off). I do understand your point about exploring the job market. In fact, exploration is good for finding out what's new, but you must do this "off the clock".
                                – Ju-chan
                                Apr 22 '15 at 21:08





                                The problem in this case is that if he does what you have made mention in your answer, he's using the company's resources for job hunting, which may show that the employee has plans of resignation, thus strengthening the manager's reason not to give him anymore tasks (that is if the manager wants him laid off). I do understand your point about exploring the job market. In fact, exploration is good for finding out what's new, but you must do this "off the clock".
                                – Ju-chan
                                Apr 22 '15 at 21:08













                                @AdamV he is being paid regardless of what he does, which right now is nothing. I see nothing wrong with a little polishing, but I would stay away from active job hunting while at the office. I had a boss that liked us to update our resume every year. I do suspect he may have been using it as a self evaluation for review time though.
                                – Bill Leeper
                                Apr 23 '15 at 14:21





                                @AdamV he is being paid regardless of what he does, which right now is nothing. I see nothing wrong with a little polishing, but I would stay away from active job hunting while at the office. I had a boss that liked us to update our resume every year. I do suspect he may have been using it as a self evaluation for review time though.
                                – Bill Leeper
                                Apr 23 '15 at 14:21



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