Should i ask for more work , when i have completed all the tasks assigned to me for the day? [duplicate]
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How can I “kill†time at work when there is no work for me to do?
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I work as software test engineer in a medium sized IT company. My lead usually assigns me task for the day which I try to finish asap. Sometimes when there is no build to test or when all the test execution is done, i have nothing to do for rest of the day. I read in a self-improvement/productivity article that to be more effective always ask more and more work from your boss. Would this be the right thing to do as a professional?
work-environment manager task-management
marked as duplicate by Monica Cellio♦ Feb 4 '16 at 2:15
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.
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up vote
2
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
How can I “kill†time at work when there is no work for me to do?
12 answers
I work as software test engineer in a medium sized IT company. My lead usually assigns me task for the day which I try to finish asap. Sometimes when there is no build to test or when all the test execution is done, i have nothing to do for rest of the day. I read in a self-improvement/productivity article that to be more effective always ask more and more work from your boss. Would this be the right thing to do as a professional?
work-environment manager task-management
marked as duplicate by Monica Cellio♦ Feb 4 '16 at 2:15
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.
1
Double check your work. Tell your boss you are done and ask if there anything else. If he/she tell you no three times then stop then stop asking.
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 16:49
Thanks for the advice. Once i didn't ask for my next task and i was told that i wasted time..:/
– harry223
Dec 20 '15 at 16:59
2
If you have been told that not asking is wasting time then why did you feel you needed to ask this question?
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 17:39
This question was originally closed by the community as a duplicate of a different question, which is itself a duplicate. I want to delete that one, so I've reopened and reclosed this one to move the pointer.
– Monica Cellio♦
Feb 4 '16 at 2:17
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
How can I “kill†time at work when there is no work for me to do?
12 answers
I work as software test engineer in a medium sized IT company. My lead usually assigns me task for the day which I try to finish asap. Sometimes when there is no build to test or when all the test execution is done, i have nothing to do for rest of the day. I read in a self-improvement/productivity article that to be more effective always ask more and more work from your boss. Would this be the right thing to do as a professional?
work-environment manager task-management
This question already has an answer here:
How can I “kill†time at work when there is no work for me to do?
12 answers
I work as software test engineer in a medium sized IT company. My lead usually assigns me task for the day which I try to finish asap. Sometimes when there is no build to test or when all the test execution is done, i have nothing to do for rest of the day. I read in a self-improvement/productivity article that to be more effective always ask more and more work from your boss. Would this be the right thing to do as a professional?
This question already has an answer here:
How can I “kill†time at work when there is no work for me to do?
12 answers
work-environment manager task-management
asked Dec 20 '15 at 16:43
harry223
14112
14112
marked as duplicate by Monica Cellio♦ Feb 4 '16 at 2:15
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 Monica Cellio♦ Feb 4 '16 at 2:15
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.
1
Double check your work. Tell your boss you are done and ask if there anything else. If he/she tell you no three times then stop then stop asking.
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 16:49
Thanks for the advice. Once i didn't ask for my next task and i was told that i wasted time..:/
– harry223
Dec 20 '15 at 16:59
2
If you have been told that not asking is wasting time then why did you feel you needed to ask this question?
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 17:39
This question was originally closed by the community as a duplicate of a different question, which is itself a duplicate. I want to delete that one, so I've reopened and reclosed this one to move the pointer.
– Monica Cellio♦
Feb 4 '16 at 2:17
suggest improvements |Â
1
Double check your work. Tell your boss you are done and ask if there anything else. If he/she tell you no three times then stop then stop asking.
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 16:49
Thanks for the advice. Once i didn't ask for my next task and i was told that i wasted time..:/
– harry223
Dec 20 '15 at 16:59
2
If you have been told that not asking is wasting time then why did you feel you needed to ask this question?
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 17:39
This question was originally closed by the community as a duplicate of a different question, which is itself a duplicate. I want to delete that one, so I've reopened and reclosed this one to move the pointer.
– Monica Cellio♦
Feb 4 '16 at 2:17
1
1
Double check your work. Tell your boss you are done and ask if there anything else. If he/she tell you no three times then stop then stop asking.
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 16:49
Double check your work. Tell your boss you are done and ask if there anything else. If he/she tell you no three times then stop then stop asking.
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 16:49
Thanks for the advice. Once i didn't ask for my next task and i was told that i wasted time..:/
– harry223
Dec 20 '15 at 16:59
Thanks for the advice. Once i didn't ask for my next task and i was told that i wasted time..:/
– harry223
Dec 20 '15 at 16:59
2
2
If you have been told that not asking is wasting time then why did you feel you needed to ask this question?
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 17:39
If you have been told that not asking is wasting time then why did you feel you needed to ask this question?
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 17:39
This question was originally closed by the community as a duplicate of a different question, which is itself a duplicate. I want to delete that one, so I've reopened and reclosed this one to move the pointer.
– Monica Cellio♦
Feb 4 '16 at 2:17
This question was originally closed by the community as a duplicate of a different question, which is itself a duplicate. I want to delete that one, so I've reopened and reclosed this one to move the pointer.
– Monica Cellio♦
Feb 4 '16 at 2:17
suggest improvements |Â
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
up vote
14
down vote
Yes.
Even better than asking for more work, demonstrate some initiative. Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company then take that proposal to your boss.
You know what bosses like even more than employees who get their work done? Employees who don't even have to be told what to do, because they'll create value of their own accord.
1
Both strategies can work together. When you finish assigned work, if the lead is available ask for any new assignments. If not, get on with a self-assigned background task.
– Patricia Shanahan
Dec 20 '15 at 18:09
3
With the self-assigned background task, I would send an email to your manager to confirm that it is okay for you to do that before just going in - someone else might already be working on it.
– HorusKol
Dec 20 '15 at 23:24
4
Plus, if you just assign yourself work, then your manager doesn't know that you did it, which means you get no kudos for doing it, you might be duplicating work elsewhere in your team/company, there might've been a great opportunity to tie it in to some other project that your manager knows of but you don't etc. etc.
– Kaz
Dec 20 '15 at 23:52
+1 for "Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company than take that proposal to your boss."
– mhwombat
Dec 21 '15 at 1:27
If no one knows you did it, it's wasted work time ;) At least show the results to whomever it concerns, so that credit will go where credit's due.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 21 '15 at 12:24
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up vote
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Yes, it's a good thing to do once in a while. It shows you're keen. Bear in my mind that it can also have two repercussions.
Firstly it adds more work to your manager, which he/she may or may not be happy about if it's constantly happening. They need to then find or make up more work for you to do.
Secondly you may find yourself lumped with all the more distasteful jobs available and it can become the norm to just assign those and any extra work to you.
But it is still a good idea in moderation. In that situation when I had time on my hands, before asking for more work I would look for other things to do first. So I would doublecheck my work, clean my work area thoroughly, organise my files and other things I may have been putting off. I spent a whole constructive afternoon once just organising my email folders and filing system on my computer. It wasn't wasted time, it made things easier and more efficient for me.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
Yes, if you're just starting out. As a habit, no.
If you're new, it makes sense that your lead would have to search a bit to find work that you can do that fits your skills and knowledge. Then they would maybe want to review it before moving on to the next one.
As you gain experience, it is expected that you "dive in" more, understand the projects you're working on and the tasks that are needed to complete them, and those would take more than a few hours. When that happens, you should take more initiative and, while communicating and consulting your lead about the tasks (prioritization, design questions etc.), you would not ask them for a new task every day.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
You should ask for more work.
The only exception is if your manager knows you are finished, knows you are looking for more work, and there is no more work, and you asked before, so you know that asking for more work is pointless and only gets on his nerves.
In that case you can search for useful things to do. Always an excellent thing to do is learning things that both improve your knowledge and value to the general world, and your value to the company. In your company's interest you pick something that is of value of the company, in your own interest you pick something that is generally useful out of the things you might learn.
And most people have a huge backlog of things that would have been nice to do, but never had high enough priority, and that you can do. Much better to go to your boss and say "Hey boss, I finished my tasks and have nothing else to do, so I decided to do XYZ, which we always wanted to do and never had the time for, unless you have something more important".
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
You may work on perfecting the given task. Could we have an extra Unit test? Could we improve the code? Have you tested everything properly, have you documented everything as required? Have you read all documentation you are supposed to know? And is it clear enough what this third party library method you call actually does?
Completing the task quickly but badly may not be the best way to impress. If the manager has allocated that amount of time for the task, maybe he wants the best possible implementation that could be written during this time.
Procedures like code reviews mostly aim to increase the quality of the work, even with understanding that it will take longer to complete it.
suggest improvements |Â
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
14
down vote
Yes.
Even better than asking for more work, demonstrate some initiative. Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company then take that proposal to your boss.
You know what bosses like even more than employees who get their work done? Employees who don't even have to be told what to do, because they'll create value of their own accord.
1
Both strategies can work together. When you finish assigned work, if the lead is available ask for any new assignments. If not, get on with a self-assigned background task.
– Patricia Shanahan
Dec 20 '15 at 18:09
3
With the self-assigned background task, I would send an email to your manager to confirm that it is okay for you to do that before just going in - someone else might already be working on it.
– HorusKol
Dec 20 '15 at 23:24
4
Plus, if you just assign yourself work, then your manager doesn't know that you did it, which means you get no kudos for doing it, you might be duplicating work elsewhere in your team/company, there might've been a great opportunity to tie it in to some other project that your manager knows of but you don't etc. etc.
– Kaz
Dec 20 '15 at 23:52
+1 for "Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company than take that proposal to your boss."
– mhwombat
Dec 21 '15 at 1:27
If no one knows you did it, it's wasted work time ;) At least show the results to whomever it concerns, so that credit will go where credit's due.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 21 '15 at 12:24
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
14
down vote
Yes.
Even better than asking for more work, demonstrate some initiative. Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company then take that proposal to your boss.
You know what bosses like even more than employees who get their work done? Employees who don't even have to be told what to do, because they'll create value of their own accord.
1
Both strategies can work together. When you finish assigned work, if the lead is available ask for any new assignments. If not, get on with a self-assigned background task.
– Patricia Shanahan
Dec 20 '15 at 18:09
3
With the self-assigned background task, I would send an email to your manager to confirm that it is okay for you to do that before just going in - someone else might already be working on it.
– HorusKol
Dec 20 '15 at 23:24
4
Plus, if you just assign yourself work, then your manager doesn't know that you did it, which means you get no kudos for doing it, you might be duplicating work elsewhere in your team/company, there might've been a great opportunity to tie it in to some other project that your manager knows of but you don't etc. etc.
– Kaz
Dec 20 '15 at 23:52
+1 for "Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company than take that proposal to your boss."
– mhwombat
Dec 21 '15 at 1:27
If no one knows you did it, it's wasted work time ;) At least show the results to whomever it concerns, so that credit will go where credit's due.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 21 '15 at 12:24
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
14
down vote
up vote
14
down vote
Yes.
Even better than asking for more work, demonstrate some initiative. Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company then take that proposal to your boss.
You know what bosses like even more than employees who get their work done? Employees who don't even have to be told what to do, because they'll create value of their own accord.
Yes.
Even better than asking for more work, demonstrate some initiative. Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company then take that proposal to your boss.
You know what bosses like even more than employees who get their work done? Employees who don't even have to be told what to do, because they'll create value of their own accord.
edited Dec 8 '16 at 15:38
answered Dec 20 '15 at 18:02
Kaz
5,74852133
5,74852133
1
Both strategies can work together. When you finish assigned work, if the lead is available ask for any new assignments. If not, get on with a self-assigned background task.
– Patricia Shanahan
Dec 20 '15 at 18:09
3
With the self-assigned background task, I would send an email to your manager to confirm that it is okay for you to do that before just going in - someone else might already be working on it.
– HorusKol
Dec 20 '15 at 23:24
4
Plus, if you just assign yourself work, then your manager doesn't know that you did it, which means you get no kudos for doing it, you might be duplicating work elsewhere in your team/company, there might've been a great opportunity to tie it in to some other project that your manager knows of but you don't etc. etc.
– Kaz
Dec 20 '15 at 23:52
+1 for "Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company than take that proposal to your boss."
– mhwombat
Dec 21 '15 at 1:27
If no one knows you did it, it's wasted work time ;) At least show the results to whomever it concerns, so that credit will go where credit's due.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 21 '15 at 12:24
suggest improvements |Â
1
Both strategies can work together. When you finish assigned work, if the lead is available ask for any new assignments. If not, get on with a self-assigned background task.
– Patricia Shanahan
Dec 20 '15 at 18:09
3
With the self-assigned background task, I would send an email to your manager to confirm that it is okay for you to do that before just going in - someone else might already be working on it.
– HorusKol
Dec 20 '15 at 23:24
4
Plus, if you just assign yourself work, then your manager doesn't know that you did it, which means you get no kudos for doing it, you might be duplicating work elsewhere in your team/company, there might've been a great opportunity to tie it in to some other project that your manager knows of but you don't etc. etc.
– Kaz
Dec 20 '15 at 23:52
+1 for "Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company than take that proposal to your boss."
– mhwombat
Dec 21 '15 at 1:27
If no one knows you did it, it's wasted work time ;) At least show the results to whomever it concerns, so that credit will go where credit's due.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 21 '15 at 12:24
1
1
Both strategies can work together. When you finish assigned work, if the lead is available ask for any new assignments. If not, get on with a self-assigned background task.
– Patricia Shanahan
Dec 20 '15 at 18:09
Both strategies can work together. When you finish assigned work, if the lead is available ask for any new assignments. If not, get on with a self-assigned background task.
– Patricia Shanahan
Dec 20 '15 at 18:09
3
3
With the self-assigned background task, I would send an email to your manager to confirm that it is okay for you to do that before just going in - someone else might already be working on it.
– HorusKol
Dec 20 '15 at 23:24
With the self-assigned background task, I would send an email to your manager to confirm that it is okay for you to do that before just going in - someone else might already be working on it.
– HorusKol
Dec 20 '15 at 23:24
4
4
Plus, if you just assign yourself work, then your manager doesn't know that you did it, which means you get no kudos for doing it, you might be duplicating work elsewhere in your team/company, there might've been a great opportunity to tie it in to some other project that your manager knows of but you don't etc. etc.
– Kaz
Dec 20 '15 at 23:52
Plus, if you just assign yourself work, then your manager doesn't know that you did it, which means you get no kudos for doing it, you might be duplicating work elsewhere in your team/company, there might've been a great opportunity to tie it in to some other project that your manager knows of but you don't etc. etc.
– Kaz
Dec 20 '15 at 23:52
+1 for "Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company than take that proposal to your boss."
– mhwombat
Dec 21 '15 at 1:27
+1 for "Try and think of something you could do to improve some aspect of your job/division/company than take that proposal to your boss."
– mhwombat
Dec 21 '15 at 1:27
If no one knows you did it, it's wasted work time ;) At least show the results to whomever it concerns, so that credit will go where credit's due.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 21 '15 at 12:24
If no one knows you did it, it's wasted work time ;) At least show the results to whomever it concerns, so that credit will go where credit's due.
– Juha Untinen
Dec 21 '15 at 12:24
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
Yes, it's a good thing to do once in a while. It shows you're keen. Bear in my mind that it can also have two repercussions.
Firstly it adds more work to your manager, which he/she may or may not be happy about if it's constantly happening. They need to then find or make up more work for you to do.
Secondly you may find yourself lumped with all the more distasteful jobs available and it can become the norm to just assign those and any extra work to you.
But it is still a good idea in moderation. In that situation when I had time on my hands, before asking for more work I would look for other things to do first. So I would doublecheck my work, clean my work area thoroughly, organise my files and other things I may have been putting off. I spent a whole constructive afternoon once just organising my email folders and filing system on my computer. It wasn't wasted time, it made things easier and more efficient for me.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
Yes, it's a good thing to do once in a while. It shows you're keen. Bear in my mind that it can also have two repercussions.
Firstly it adds more work to your manager, which he/she may or may not be happy about if it's constantly happening. They need to then find or make up more work for you to do.
Secondly you may find yourself lumped with all the more distasteful jobs available and it can become the norm to just assign those and any extra work to you.
But it is still a good idea in moderation. In that situation when I had time on my hands, before asking for more work I would look for other things to do first. So I would doublecheck my work, clean my work area thoroughly, organise my files and other things I may have been putting off. I spent a whole constructive afternoon once just organising my email folders and filing system on my computer. It wasn't wasted time, it made things easier and more efficient for me.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
Yes, it's a good thing to do once in a while. It shows you're keen. Bear in my mind that it can also have two repercussions.
Firstly it adds more work to your manager, which he/she may or may not be happy about if it's constantly happening. They need to then find or make up more work for you to do.
Secondly you may find yourself lumped with all the more distasteful jobs available and it can become the norm to just assign those and any extra work to you.
But it is still a good idea in moderation. In that situation when I had time on my hands, before asking for more work I would look for other things to do first. So I would doublecheck my work, clean my work area thoroughly, organise my files and other things I may have been putting off. I spent a whole constructive afternoon once just organising my email folders and filing system on my computer. It wasn't wasted time, it made things easier and more efficient for me.
Yes, it's a good thing to do once in a while. It shows you're keen. Bear in my mind that it can also have two repercussions.
Firstly it adds more work to your manager, which he/she may or may not be happy about if it's constantly happening. They need to then find or make up more work for you to do.
Secondly you may find yourself lumped with all the more distasteful jobs available and it can become the norm to just assign those and any extra work to you.
But it is still a good idea in moderation. In that situation when I had time on my hands, before asking for more work I would look for other things to do first. So I would doublecheck my work, clean my work area thoroughly, organise my files and other things I may have been putting off. I spent a whole constructive afternoon once just organising my email folders and filing system on my computer. It wasn't wasted time, it made things easier and more efficient for me.
answered Dec 20 '15 at 21:01


Kilisi
94.7k50216376
94.7k50216376
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
Yes, if you're just starting out. As a habit, no.
If you're new, it makes sense that your lead would have to search a bit to find work that you can do that fits your skills and knowledge. Then they would maybe want to review it before moving on to the next one.
As you gain experience, it is expected that you "dive in" more, understand the projects you're working on and the tasks that are needed to complete them, and those would take more than a few hours. When that happens, you should take more initiative and, while communicating and consulting your lead about the tasks (prioritization, design questions etc.), you would not ask them for a new task every day.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
Yes, if you're just starting out. As a habit, no.
If you're new, it makes sense that your lead would have to search a bit to find work that you can do that fits your skills and knowledge. Then they would maybe want to review it before moving on to the next one.
As you gain experience, it is expected that you "dive in" more, understand the projects you're working on and the tasks that are needed to complete them, and those would take more than a few hours. When that happens, you should take more initiative and, while communicating and consulting your lead about the tasks (prioritization, design questions etc.), you would not ask them for a new task every day.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
Yes, if you're just starting out. As a habit, no.
If you're new, it makes sense that your lead would have to search a bit to find work that you can do that fits your skills and knowledge. Then they would maybe want to review it before moving on to the next one.
As you gain experience, it is expected that you "dive in" more, understand the projects you're working on and the tasks that are needed to complete them, and those would take more than a few hours. When that happens, you should take more initiative and, while communicating and consulting your lead about the tasks (prioritization, design questions etc.), you would not ask them for a new task every day.
Yes, if you're just starting out. As a habit, no.
If you're new, it makes sense that your lead would have to search a bit to find work that you can do that fits your skills and knowledge. Then they would maybe want to review it before moving on to the next one.
As you gain experience, it is expected that you "dive in" more, understand the projects you're working on and the tasks that are needed to complete them, and those would take more than a few hours. When that happens, you should take more initiative and, while communicating and consulting your lead about the tasks (prioritization, design questions etc.), you would not ask them for a new task every day.
answered Dec 21 '15 at 9:34
Michal Tenenberg
1112
1112
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suggest improvements |Â
up vote
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You should ask for more work.
The only exception is if your manager knows you are finished, knows you are looking for more work, and there is no more work, and you asked before, so you know that asking for more work is pointless and only gets on his nerves.
In that case you can search for useful things to do. Always an excellent thing to do is learning things that both improve your knowledge and value to the general world, and your value to the company. In your company's interest you pick something that is of value of the company, in your own interest you pick something that is generally useful out of the things you might learn.
And most people have a huge backlog of things that would have been nice to do, but never had high enough priority, and that you can do. Much better to go to your boss and say "Hey boss, I finished my tasks and have nothing else to do, so I decided to do XYZ, which we always wanted to do and never had the time for, unless you have something more important".
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
You should ask for more work.
The only exception is if your manager knows you are finished, knows you are looking for more work, and there is no more work, and you asked before, so you know that asking for more work is pointless and only gets on his nerves.
In that case you can search for useful things to do. Always an excellent thing to do is learning things that both improve your knowledge and value to the general world, and your value to the company. In your company's interest you pick something that is of value of the company, in your own interest you pick something that is generally useful out of the things you might learn.
And most people have a huge backlog of things that would have been nice to do, but never had high enough priority, and that you can do. Much better to go to your boss and say "Hey boss, I finished my tasks and have nothing else to do, so I decided to do XYZ, which we always wanted to do and never had the time for, unless you have something more important".
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
You should ask for more work.
The only exception is if your manager knows you are finished, knows you are looking for more work, and there is no more work, and you asked before, so you know that asking for more work is pointless and only gets on his nerves.
In that case you can search for useful things to do. Always an excellent thing to do is learning things that both improve your knowledge and value to the general world, and your value to the company. In your company's interest you pick something that is of value of the company, in your own interest you pick something that is generally useful out of the things you might learn.
And most people have a huge backlog of things that would have been nice to do, but never had high enough priority, and that you can do. Much better to go to your boss and say "Hey boss, I finished my tasks and have nothing else to do, so I decided to do XYZ, which we always wanted to do and never had the time for, unless you have something more important".
You should ask for more work.
The only exception is if your manager knows you are finished, knows you are looking for more work, and there is no more work, and you asked before, so you know that asking for more work is pointless and only gets on his nerves.
In that case you can search for useful things to do. Always an excellent thing to do is learning things that both improve your knowledge and value to the general world, and your value to the company. In your company's interest you pick something that is of value of the company, in your own interest you pick something that is generally useful out of the things you might learn.
And most people have a huge backlog of things that would have been nice to do, but never had high enough priority, and that you can do. Much better to go to your boss and say "Hey boss, I finished my tasks and have nothing else to do, so I decided to do XYZ, which we always wanted to do and never had the time for, unless you have something more important".
answered Dec 21 '15 at 11:59
gnasher729
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You may work on perfecting the given task. Could we have an extra Unit test? Could we improve the code? Have you tested everything properly, have you documented everything as required? Have you read all documentation you are supposed to know? And is it clear enough what this third party library method you call actually does?
Completing the task quickly but badly may not be the best way to impress. If the manager has allocated that amount of time for the task, maybe he wants the best possible implementation that could be written during this time.
Procedures like code reviews mostly aim to increase the quality of the work, even with understanding that it will take longer to complete it.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
You may work on perfecting the given task. Could we have an extra Unit test? Could we improve the code? Have you tested everything properly, have you documented everything as required? Have you read all documentation you are supposed to know? And is it clear enough what this third party library method you call actually does?
Completing the task quickly but badly may not be the best way to impress. If the manager has allocated that amount of time for the task, maybe he wants the best possible implementation that could be written during this time.
Procedures like code reviews mostly aim to increase the quality of the work, even with understanding that it will take longer to complete it.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
You may work on perfecting the given task. Could we have an extra Unit test? Could we improve the code? Have you tested everything properly, have you documented everything as required? Have you read all documentation you are supposed to know? And is it clear enough what this third party library method you call actually does?
Completing the task quickly but badly may not be the best way to impress. If the manager has allocated that amount of time for the task, maybe he wants the best possible implementation that could be written during this time.
Procedures like code reviews mostly aim to increase the quality of the work, even with understanding that it will take longer to complete it.
You may work on perfecting the given task. Could we have an extra Unit test? Could we improve the code? Have you tested everything properly, have you documented everything as required? Have you read all documentation you are supposed to know? And is it clear enough what this third party library method you call actually does?
Completing the task quickly but badly may not be the best way to impress. If the manager has allocated that amount of time for the task, maybe he wants the best possible implementation that could be written during this time.
Procedures like code reviews mostly aim to increase the quality of the work, even with understanding that it will take longer to complete it.
answered Dec 21 '15 at 18:48


eee
1,80221229
1,80221229
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1
Double check your work. Tell your boss you are done and ask if there anything else. If he/she tell you no three times then stop then stop asking.
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 16:49
Thanks for the advice. Once i didn't ask for my next task and i was told that i wasted time..:/
– harry223
Dec 20 '15 at 16:59
2
If you have been told that not asking is wasting time then why did you feel you needed to ask this question?
– paparazzo
Dec 20 '15 at 17:39
This question was originally closed by the community as a duplicate of a different question, which is itself a duplicate. I want to delete that one, so I've reopened and reclosed this one to move the pointer.
– Monica Cellio♦
Feb 4 '16 at 2:17