Hmm….I haven’t seen my company’s CEO since last March. Just an occasional email blast to everyone saying we are doing a great job. But I suppose that could have been from his assistant.
The virtual absence of upper management has been a blessing to getting actual work done. Likewise, the absence of federal and corporate auditors has been great (though we maintain compliance always anyway, easier to run a tight ship than damage control), meaning middle management isn’t jumping around creating a tight sphincter environment.
David OBrien almost 4 years ago
Obviously, he’s all at sea.
julie.mason1 Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Can’t let any of the billionaires suffer just because of a little pandemic. That’s the job of regular people.
StackableContainers almost 4 years ago
Hmm….I haven’t seen my company’s CEO since last March. Just an occasional email blast to everyone saying we are doing a great job. But I suppose that could have been from his assistant.
syzygy47 almost 4 years ago
The virtual absence of upper management has been a blessing to getting actual work done. Likewise, the absence of federal and corporate auditors has been great (though we maintain compliance always anyway, easier to run a tight ship than damage control), meaning middle management isn’t jumping around creating a tight sphincter environment.
mistercatworks almost 4 years ago
I have always thought it would be better to have two days off in a row rather than one at the beginning of the week and another at the end. :)