Why unlimited vacation is a TERRIBLE benefit

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  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2021
  • Why unlimited vacation is a TERRIBLE benefit. Think unlimited vacation is a great policy? In this video I'm going to discuss why I feel this benefit is awful for the average working person.
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Komentáře • 641

  • @joshua2524
    @joshua2524 Před 3 lety +263

    Peer pressure is very strong with these policies. In short, unlimited pto = no pto.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +18

      That's not true. I have unlimited, and we don't think of our colleagues that way. It really depends on the work culture at the company. We value work/life balance and mental health, so everyone loves it!

    • @AndroidCyclist
      @AndroidCyclist Před 3 lety +10

      Personally I encourage people to take vacation and not overwork. I have seen people abuse this. I had a coworker literally take half the summer off and leave his coworkers with the extra work.

    • @tohespidhire3808
      @tohespidhire3808 Před 3 lety +2

      Well, perhaps it is better to think of unlimited PTO as giving you the freedom to track your own vacation days, whilst constraining yourself to a reasonable amount, each year. So a new recruit should aim for two weeks per year, perhaps three after being there a few years.
      In other words, instead of the manager or accountant chasing after people to report their days off, each employee is expected to be responsible for themselves and self-manage.
      Technically, this encourages the employees, as a group, to conform themselves in this manner, otherwise abuse will fail to uphold one's portion of the work load.
      Also note that for the employees that are "burdened" with the more troublesome tasks (i.e., the ongoing customer issue, the problematic troubleshooting case, the particularly detailed report, etc.) will, through sheer stress, need a day to recuperate. They will state how bad they feel, that they are taking a day, and the others will agree with their taking a day.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +3

      @@tohespidhire3808 Yes, exactly. More freedom AT work. Companies show their respect and appreciation of employees to be responsible enough to not abuse vacation or work from home. Those are very good things!

    • @benjamincrew1949
      @benjamincrew1949 Před 3 lety +3

      @@myleenjan Last I checked, a lack of autonomy is the number one reason people hate their jobs, and I absolutely agree. If you want workers that act like adults, treat them like adults.

  • @marshallguy301
    @marshallguy301 Před 3 lety +301

    I have NEVER understood people who say they are too "busy" or too ashamed to request PTO off. If I have it, I use it. Period. Literally zero Fs or guilt given. Is it a boomer thing to feel compelled to work 24/7?

    • @jreese46
      @jreese46 Před 3 lety +47

      To some extent, yes. A lot of the older generation were taught, and taught their kids, that work ethic means always being available, not calling out unless in the hospital, etc. Employers, naturally, took complete advantage of it. Granted, we have more than our fair share of lazy, entitled people, collecting checks for doing nothing, but at the same time, we have a lot of people who have simply learned by watching their parents and grandparents give it all and get screwed over. When employers complain "nobody wants to work anymore," what they really mean, even if they don't realize it, is "nobody wants to let us work them through every important event in their lives and then lay them off before they can retire."

    • @kaitlyng.473
      @kaitlyng.473 Před 3 lety +8

      Same. If you work hard when you are at work, and give no one a reason to question your work ethic, I have never experienced someone giving me a hard time for taking time off. If anything, people are happy you're taking some time off. Most places I have worked push for people to take the time they have.

    • @egProductionsMO
      @egProductionsMO Před 3 lety +23

      100% with you there; take that time off. You've earned it, it's yours to use. If anyone has issue with that, that's their problem, not yours. When I had unlimited PTO, never once felt guilty using it and never once made myself available when I was off. If I'm off on a day or week that I specifically set up to be away from work, then I am going to be away from work. And even at places where I accrue PTO, I use all of it, I don't let it roll over to the next year unless I have a specific purpose for it (like a big trip or a planned surgery that needs recovery time.) Use that PTO because your job isn't what defines you and shouldn't be your primary focus 100% of the time.

    • @ryangoff4813
      @ryangoff4813 Před 3 lety +8

      It’s about weak people who can’t stand up for themselves and always try to please their slave master.

    • @lindseyy320
      @lindseyy320 Před 2 lety +8

      I tend to agree, but it's not only peer pressure. Depending on your job, sometimes taking a week vacation just means a 60-70 hour week the week you get back, to finish all the work. No real way around that sometimes, so those people are prone to just not take vacation.

  • @aaronhorowitz6942
    @aaronhorowitz6942 Před 3 lety +78

    - it's your fault, you're taking too much vacation!
    - then don't advertise me an unlimited vacation! Cause I'm going to use it..

    • @starstencahl8985
      @starstencahl8985 Před 3 lety +2

      @@TheWatchernator I'd rather get fired and find a better company than work for a company that works like this tbh

    • @egProductionsMO
      @egProductionsMO Před 3 lety +3

      @@TheWatchernator ohhhh the WWE in the 90s...taking me back to my childhood lol

  • @Caldera510
    @Caldera510 Před 3 lety +128

    I've found that taking PTO at all is hell in the delirious American management style of constantly keeping people busy.

    • @kimcham9949
      @kimcham9949 Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah. And, then you're treated to talk about 'concerns of mental health' everywhere you turn. Well, it's hardly a wonder.

    • @glassmuxxic
      @glassmuxxic Před 3 lety +1

      This is why I don’t work for American companies anymore. Outside of top tier technology companies, most I’ve worked for or with have had a bizarre combination of presentee culture and vertical hierarchy that seems to only exist to justify having managers of managers, mediocre productivity and burning out employees - all whilst burning money on mental health and D&I training.

    • @jfast8256
      @jfast8256 Před 3 lety +7

      In America, we literally force people to stand up 8-10 hours a day for jobs that really should be seated. Visit a grocery store in the UK, then come visit one in the USA. Americans should always be busy, no exceptions.

    • @drunkenmoon289
      @drunkenmoon289 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jfast8256 Americans should always look busy, no exceptions.
      fixed for you

  • @James-li8cm
    @James-li8cm Před 3 lety +88

    PTO is not intended to be "banked"... Many places only allow a certain amount of PTO to be rolled over, or none...
    The biggest problem I have with unlimited PTO is the psychological part...

    • @voidtalongaming4637
      @voidtalongaming4637 Před 3 lety +6

      The biggest flaw with unlimited PTO systems is they support manager paranoia, the office managers I've had often expect more than is possible with the team they have (lack of proper training / lack of career encouraging wage / lack of career path) and don't attract the talent they need for the office they have so those who *are* good enough burnout from doing too much and not getting enough which turns into dissatisfaction and well; a turnover rate of 6-8 months across all baseline positions (administrators, assistants, ect)

    • @bridgetmakesmovies
      @bridgetmakesmovies Před 3 lety +7

      Yeah, not sure where he’s going with all this banked PTO business. I don’t know of anyone who can do that anymore except those with union contracts. And we all know how rare those jobs are these days.

    • @RandomFandomDragon
      @RandomFandomDragon Před 3 lety +4

      @@bridgetmakesmovies - my company was bought out a couple years ago, and our PTO model, which was generous but not bankable, switched to vacation and sick. Vacation cannot be be banked, but sick time can be banked up to 15 days. I'd rather have it all as PTO that I can use as I needed, b/c it felt like I lost a third of my vacation time.

    • @bridgetmakesmovies
      @bridgetmakesmovies Před 3 lety +3

      Nobody Knows many areas of the country are passing laws for mandatory sick time. That might be part of it.

    • @niggaflies
      @niggaflies Před 3 lety +3

      @@bridgetmakesmovies I have worked in corporate America all my life and I know plenty of people who banked weeks of time.

  • @schreds8882
    @schreds8882 Před 3 lety +75

    Having worked in consulting where billable hours rule, time off of any sort eats into that. The people with the most billable hours get promoted. So having set vacation or unlimited vacation didn't matter; people just didn't take time off unless they really needed it. Or, they'd take a vacation but bring their computers with them and still work 12 hour days. The point is that in the U.S. time off is seen as being lazy. If you are really dedicated to your work then you'll be available 24x7 for your employer. It's a culture of abuse that has been built up over decades and employees buy into it or are suckered into it. Either way, by the time you're 50, you're exhausted and burned out. This is fine with your employer because then the old people are laid off and replaced with cheaper newbies and the cycle starts again.
    This is why I advise young people looking for a career to become a plumber. You can't be outsourced to a cheaper person in another country and on a Sunday afternoon, people will pay insane amounts of money to get their toilet fixed.

    • @bridgetmakesmovies
      @bridgetmakesmovies Před 3 lety +4

      Yes, plumbers and pipe fitters do very well! As do plenty of other trades in labor unions.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +2

      I used to work at a Big 4 accounting firm, and it is exactly how you put it. I suffered a lot of mental anguish and workplace stress. Now I'm at a place where I have unlimited vacation and can plan to take longer trips overseas. I'm much happier now! True that it depends on your relationship with your manager. But if you're in a good place, your manager should understand the work/life balance well.

    • @kimcham9949
      @kimcham9949 Před 3 lety +10

      👍🏾 "in the U.S. time off is seen as being lazy". And, you see Americans go to other countries that don't live like this and praise the people there for being so 'unhurried, unstressed and laid-back'. "It's great. They live such a 'relaxed' lifestyle". But, these same Americans will get back home and refer to other Americans that act like that, as "lazy bums with no ambition" and "worthless do-nothings". Such hypocrites.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +2

      @@kimcham9949 You are so spot on! I think many of my North American friends who hear about "unlimited vacation" don't understand something good when it is presented to them. Finally we are catching up to Europeans! Many even became burnt out during the pandemic, so a lot of people leave their stressful jobs. It is simply not worth killing yourself over your job. It happened to me that way.

    • @schreds8882
      @schreds8882 Před 3 lety +4

      @@myleenjan Agreed. This is why I left consulting. One of these days, I hope, the U.S. will see the grace of the EU way. No one I work with says that Europeans are lazy but the same approach in the U.S. will get you on the layoff list. There are companies and industries that have a reasoned approach to work but they are not the norm in the U.S.

  • @SpynCycle57
    @SpynCycle57 Před 3 lety +27

    I'm retired now, and after a 40 year career, working for multiple companies, I've seen the opposite. At every employer, people were harassed because they accumulated too much vacation time. They were told "Take PTO by the end of the year! That's not a request!" When someone planned time off, they were rarely given pushback, and I never knew of anyone who's job was at risk due to taking PTO that they had earned.

    • @JOSECCB10
      @JOSECCB10 Před 3 lety +3

      Weird, I'm not american but I see the same in my country actually I accumulated about 40 vacation days and I wasn't the only one so there were many of my coworkers in similar situation and as you said the employer forced us to take those PTOs xD

    • @sharazar
      @sharazar Před rokem +3

      That is because the earned it and it was on the books. Unlimited mean if you do not take it, you just do not get it. Company will save alot of money

    • @bperez8656
      @bperez8656 Před 4 měsíci

      Unlimited puts pressure on the employe to feel guilted for taking too much

  • @gregd6611
    @gregd6611 Před 3 lety +34

    One thing you didn't mention was that while it's called "unlimited vacation" it's actually still limited. My previous employer switched over to that, and was given a soft 'warning' that there is a "cap" at 4 weeks then it goes to "management approval".

    • @MarkFinance
      @MarkFinance Před 2 lety +3

      Which is wild because you got to assume the first 4 weeks needed managerial approval also.... What a racket

    • @gregd6611
      @gregd6611 Před 2 lety +4

      @@MarkFinance Yep, it was a riot. They obviously had to approve any request, I don't know if they had some sort of metric to approve requests quicker as long as the business wasn't impacted and enough time was given. But everything was totaled together to hit that 4 weeks. So if it was a day here and there, those would add up. It wasn't like 4 weeks consecutive or anything.
      Perhaps the funniest thing of all is that in their advertisement of the policy change, an "example" of unlimited vacation was having every Friday off for an entire year. That obviously is way above 4 weeks worth, so loved the mixed messaging on selling this BS of a policy.

  • @chrislenz6634
    @chrislenz6634 Před 2 lety +8

    We were asked how we felt about unlimited vacation at my company. We all said it was a bad idea for 2 reasons, 1 we would feel guilty for every day we took, and 2, it was free reign for the company to have us work on our vacations, as they don't have to give the days back if we work. So we kept our current policy.

  • @machetekid07
    @machetekid07 Před 3 lety +87

    I worked at a company where after 1.5 years you’d get unlimited vacation and in our yearly retreat our CEO was pleased to announce that among those who had unlimited vacation, they only took the equivalent to 1 vacation day per month. That’s when I knew that this “benefit” was something you weren’t truly meant to use

    • @mcuserton
      @mcuserton Před 3 lety +16

      That CEO made a mistake by even bringing it up. Of course it's there to reduce the amount of time people take off, but the CEO undermined the marketing gimmick by expressing his/her satisfaction of the results.

    • @justinwhite2725
      @justinwhite2725 Před 3 lety +4

      1 day a month is the average amount that a full time employee calls in sick for health or family emergencies.

    • @mcuserton
      @mcuserton Před 3 lety +7

      @@justinwhite2725 that's good to know and it supports the notion that unlimited vacation is closer to no vacation.

    • @Jessehermansonphotography
      @Jessehermansonphotography Před rokem +1

      That was their choice though

    • @julielevesque2668
      @julielevesque2668 Před 11 měsíci

      Too good to be true...no thanks.

  • @M-hc9xm
    @M-hc9xm Před 3 lety +91

    I think unlimited time off also puts too much power in the hands of each individual manager. All they have to do is say ... That week you want isn't going to work for the workload I'm expecting. At least with a defined amount, managers have some pressure to let you take it if you tried to plan appropriately.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +2

      Yes, true, but that means you don't work for a good workplace if they don't value work/life balance and stress/mental issues. A good company culture is critical in being a success with unlimited vacation.

    • @bige3969
      @bige3969 Před 3 lety +2

      My employer offers this. In reality, many jobs require people to be available. So the managers have lots of control, especially if you are a poor performer.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety

      @@bige3969 But even if you didn't have unlimited vacation, one still needs to get managerial approval, no?

    • @bige3969
      @bige3969 Před 3 lety +1

      Managers approve vacation. It's harder to hold managers accountable for work/life balance if there are vacation metrics. If there was a payout for unused days, that is beneficial for workers. Even in use it or lose it, the vacation time is budgeted and wasted. The manager has an incentive to get staff time off.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety

      @@bige3969 However, neither I or my coworkers have the desire or inclination to count other people's vacation days. It never really becomes a problem.

  • @oldmanfresh
    @oldmanfresh Před 3 lety +38

    I understand both sides..I’m going into a new situation with this policy. (Offered today) My prospective boss basically said “I take my time and I expect you to take yours.” So...We’ll see how it goes. Pay is very good. Hopefully it works out.

  • @waleedkhalid7486
    @waleedkhalid7486 Před 3 lety +5

    One thing to mention is that the unlimited pto usually comes with the caveat that your supervisor or boss can deny it. If you tell them ‘hey I’m taking a week off’ they can say ‘mmmm no, things are busy right now so we need everyone’. This can be abused to essentially never allow any time off, although more commonly the boss just says ‘ok take 3-4 days and come back’ as a compromise. The fact of the matter is that we in the US have no culture of taking a break. We aren’t as bad as Japan, but we pride ourselves in our lack of vacations and see those who take their days in a negative light because now thier work is our work. Maybe it would be fine if there was a system that everyone in a team would take a break at the same time? This has its own issues, but maybe this can be a start for a discussion?

  • @destructhit
    @destructhit Před 3 lety +65

    This man tells us all the secrets but rather than Joshua, in a polite way 🤣

    • @ML-yn9yu
      @ML-yn9yu Před 3 lety +14

      I mean, sometimes you need the harsh truth. I frankly love Josh's style more.

    • @destructhit
      @destructhit Před 3 lety +13

      I love both

    • @samswift102
      @samswift102 Před 3 lety +1

      Joshua who?

    • @delphaneuxlacroix
      @delphaneuxlacroix Před 3 lety +3

      @@samswift102 This guy: czcams.com/users/JoshuaFluke1

    • @samswift102
      @samswift102 Před 3 lety +1

      @@delphaneuxlacroix Thanks!

  • @AhmedMohamed-qm4wd
    @AhmedMohamed-qm4wd Před 3 lety +61

    Yeah Josh talks about this concept as well. It really does sound terrible.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +4

      It's not! Unlimited PTO is GREAT, and most of the comments are people secretly jealous of it. LOL

    • @AhmedMohamed-qm4wd
      @AhmedMohamed-qm4wd Před 3 lety +1

      @@myleenjan On paper it does sound great but in practice, as explained in the video, the cons out way the pros in my opinion.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +1

      @@AhmedMohamed-qm4wd There really aren't any cons. He's only talking about senior people who have worked decades and have saved vacation time for years which hardly happens anymore anyway. You would like it if you have family abroad and want to spend a longer time somewhere.

    • @ajbXYZcool
      @ajbXYZcool Před 3 lety +1

      @@myleenjan Out of the 3 reasons why he says it's not great, 2 are geared for people who would lose that benefit in their current company, so I would almost agree with you, but the third point is where it loses its luster, where the company could have sprung out of the ground with this benefit and it would still be poor. If the company decides to downsize, who do you think they'd go after first? Unless they were some sort of amazing Rockstar, probably the person abusing their unlimited vacation. It's a trap. I'm considering that if I'm at an interview for a job with unlimited ot, I'd ask them how they would expect me to make use of that benefit, and see what the TRUE vacation guidelines are.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety

      @@ajbXYZcool You're assuming that people judge their workers according to how much vacation they take and assume that the more vacation, the more they are "considered lazy". Not true in my company and many who have it. Leadership follows the same rules and encourages vacation to help people not get burnt out, and it works! I just left a high-stress big 4 accounting firm, and was thoroughly exhausted during 12-16 hour days, so I had to leave for health reasons. I am now at an unlimited vacation company and feel so much more energized because I can take the time I need to get personal stuff done. I know many who would trade that for $10000 more in their paycheck.

  • @May-qb3vx
    @May-qb3vx Před 3 lety +51

    I really just want enough PTO to actually get to live my life. I don’t want to be stranded in the middle of nowhere in the US where there practically nothing going on for the rest of my life. That prospect is paralyzing in the job hunt. I want the European style of work/life balance where you work to live, not live to work. Good amount of PTO, maternity and paternity leave, and not being punished for not looking at work stuff when I’m not at work. That’s what I want and I’m getting incredibly pessimistic about finding that in the US.

    • @kimcham9949
      @kimcham9949 Před 3 lety +1

      Exactly!

    • @mejdlocraftci
      @mejdlocraftci Před 3 lety +2

      A bit hypocritical from me to say because I myself dont ike the idea of moving to different countries but it sounds like moving would be beneficial to you. What you are describing is fundamental to your mental well being and the decision you make/dont make can affect your entire life incredibly

    • @MNRHayes1
      @MNRHayes1 Před 2 lety +1

      Vote according this because two people in Democratic Party who want bring this lifestyle to states (briene and aoc).

    • @docholliday4546
      @docholliday4546 Před 2 lety +3

      @@MNRHayes1 that's bullshit.. I will NEVER live to work but be the best employee.. I come I do my 8 hrs a day and go home... I don't take about work when I leave with my family.. I take time off whether it's pto or unpto when Evey my wife is off with her job... Don't like it, fire me... I can always find another job in my field... I'm the best in my business... It's like I tell ppl I can work for you or your competition which ever you chose.. I make a very good salary but I only work 6 hrs a day at most, but I get done what most do in 12...

    • @instanthellmurderer
      @instanthellmurderer Před 2 lety

      💯💯💯

  • @stanfordblack.156
    @stanfordblack.156 Před 3 lety +34

    In my state you are legally entitled to be paid out your accrued vacation when you leave the company regardless of if you were terminated voluntarily or involuntarily. I have heard stories of companies offering unlimited PTO as a loophole to be able to avoid paying out employees who leave the company.

    • @4040smokey
      @4040smokey Před 3 lety +8

      That's exactly why it is done.

    • @YourFunkiness
      @YourFunkiness Před 2 lety +4

      If I have unlimited vacation, and I quit, doesn't that mean I get unlimited money? ;-)

    • @Kaboomboo
      @Kaboomboo Před 2 lety +2

      That seems like the main reason why they'd do it. I mean who's really going to be using that unlimited PTO to take month long vacations three times a year?

  • @divinusnobilite
    @divinusnobilite Před 3 lety +63

    As a data scientist at large corporation, we saw a 27% reduction in total vacation time taken when we moved to 'Unlimited' vacation. No set time means no ownership over anytime.

    • @bigjuicefolife
      @bigjuicefolife Před 2 lety +9

      I just accepted a role that has unlimited PTO and declined a role that had 25 days vacation time plus 7 days of sick time. Think I shot myself in the foot?

    • @rayzerot
      @rayzerot Před 2 lety +8

      @@bigjuicefolife Yes. I'm sorry to say, but yes.

    • @jaydee9968
      @jaydee9968 Před 2 lety +4

      @@bigjuicefolife I'd have to say "yes."

    • @wes9451
      @wes9451 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bigjuicefolife Depends make sure you're taking at least 33+ days a year.

    • @karinalumen9722
      @karinalumen9722 Před rokem +3

      Also means they dont pay you for any vacation

  • @jtl9283
    @jtl9283 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I went from having accrued PTO to unlimited PTO. There are pros and cons for sure. The biggest pro is I don't have to wait until I have enough PTO built up to take time off. The biggest issue is that sometimes it can take awhile to get my PTO approved. I've never had trouble getting my PTO approved this year but when it comes to take time off to interview for jobs, it's very unreliable. Not to mention that a few years ago, I've had my boss hold it against me saying that I need more sales if I wanted 2 days off despite trying. When you have accrued PTO, you use what you have and get paid out for what you don't use the next year.

  • @Maki-00
    @Maki-00 Před 3 lety +13

    I had unlimited PTO and I loved it! Everyone took off when they needed and there were no problems. Whether management or otherwise, we all used the time fairly. No one went crazy and took off every other week We had a large company and no one was burdened when one or two people were gone. Work isn’t so bad if you get a break once in a while!

    • @jenniferh189
      @jenniferh189 Před 3 lety +2

      sounds like you worked for a fantastic company!

    • @Maki-00
      @Maki-00 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jenniferh189 It was! Besides unlimited PTO, we had catered breakfast and lunch once a week. We had a kitchen full of snacks, free coffee, and cold brew on tap. It was the rare occasion that I truly loved my job, but unfortunately, there were layoffs because of COVID. 😢

    • @jenniferh189
      @jenniferh189 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Maki-00 aw so sorry! I also lost my job due to Covid and replaced it with a job I hated. Looking around with optimism. Good luck!

    • @Maki-00
      @Maki-00 Před 3 lety

      @@jenniferh189 I went to a crappy job after that and I hope this new one works out better. Good luck to you too!

  • @OudPlayerHBY
    @OudPlayerHBY Před 3 lety +22

    Unlimited vacation = No Vacation.
    For an employer point of view it’s kind of a smart idea.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +2

      Not true. See all my replies above. My manager encourages us to vacate when we need to! I asked for 1 day off to move to another place and she suggested 3 to help relieve stress! That's what unlimited vacation really looks like!!

    • @theelite1x721987
      @theelite1x721987 Před 3 lety +2

      @@myleenjan you are the exception, not the rule. My last company had certain mid and upper positions with this perk. It was unlimited but you couldn't just take it whenever. You needed prior approval and 1 week notice. Often days or weeks would get denied due to work load. Entire months blacked out because "work load". End result is few vacations were taken despite "unlimited vacation". It's a joke. Be lucky you have the company you do. I can assure you most are NOT like that

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety

      @@theelite1x721987 I would say that is completely unfair if it is only given to upper management! Unlimited vacation is available to every single employee in my company. If it wasn't, THEN I can see your point. Otherwise, unlimited is fantastic!

    • @theelite1x721987
      @theelite1x721987 Před 3 lety

      @@myleenjan it was warehouse work. Can't meet fulfillment quotas when all employees have access to unlimited vacation. Thanks to everyone online ordering last year those of us in fulfillment centers got crammed together like sardines working unlimited overtime to process all the orders. Entire months in early pandemic were blacked out for vacation. We were too busy. Y'all really needed your online orders of non-essential stuff apparently...

  • @kiki11974
    @kiki11974 Před 3 lety +28

    Interesting perspectives and thanks for posting this video.
    Personally I’ve experienced both sides. Back in 2016 when I was laid off after 20 years; I had a full month of vacation on the books which was paid out to me - in cash.
    Now that I’m at a new company with unlimited vacation - I love having the benefit. That said, I’m at a point in my career where I feel like I deserve no less than 6 weeks of PTO - regardless of being a tenured employee or not. 😃

    • @ML-yn9yu
      @ML-yn9yu Před 3 lety +7

      Damn, talk about knowing your worth.

    • @kiki11974
      @kiki11974 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ML-yn9yu I think if you’d asked most people who’ve been in their careers for about 20+ years that they would agree.
      That said, you are spot on, I know my worth and work life balance and benefits becomes increasingly relevant when I consider which companies I’d work for

    • @voidtalongaming4637
      @voidtalongaming4637 Před 3 lety +8

      In the EU I believe 4 Weeks of Vacation is mandated by law; something I highly think America would benefit from.

    • @ML-yn9yu
      @ML-yn9yu Před 3 lety +1

      @@kiki11974 100%, agree. it defiantly needs to be placed in more consideration.

    • @SuprousOxide
      @SuprousOxide Před 2 lety

      Always worked at companies where vacation was use it or lose it. No banking vacations past the end of the year (occasionally they made exceptions and let use carry over a few days, but not past March). And no payouts for unused vacation when you leave.

  • @stevenvallarsa1765
    @stevenvallarsa1765 Před 2 lety +7

    In the software development world I'm trying to break into, I've heard that this benefit isn't much of a benefit at all since you're stuck in production groups and you can't just up and leave on vacation until the project is done. And then, look at that, you're pushed into the next project and can't leave until that is done, and so on and so forth.

  • @kellyrutherford5885
    @kellyrutherford5885 Před rokem +1

    Most of the jobs I've experienced in my career have ended with me being laid off. A number of those times, after a week of earned vacation, upon my return, I was soon laid off. So, today I'm anxious about the idea of taking time off. I know there is probably no connection between the two events, but it still unsettles me!

  • @JS-od9dj
    @JS-od9dj Před 3 lety +9

    Never worked for a company that would let you accrue time, so for me it’s been either a few weeks PTO that you lose at the end of the year or unlimited that you lose.

  • @elmudd06
    @elmudd06 Před 3 lety +64

    Friend of mine worked at a non-profit who did leave this way and it's as he says--there were certain people who never came in and the rest were stuck doing their work AND couldn't take time off because they were too busy making up the work. This became ingrained in the culture and management came to expect it and accept it--certain people couldn't be counted on (but got to stay employed!) and the rest were expected to carry the load.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +3

      You make a fair point, but it's not enough to say that unlimited vacation is bad. I have it where I work, but what it states in our benefits is that taking extensive vacation can affect your performance review. So, yes, technically, you can take a 4 month vacation and depend on others to do your work while away, but you better believe it will affect your performance for the year negatively! It's not that there are no consequences. It is just that they stopped counting your days off so you can take whatever time you need to rest, relax or recharge. How could that ever be a bad thing?

    • @hyhhy
      @hyhhy Před 3 lety +6

      @@myleenjan The consequences that you mention sound potentially way more arbitrary than in a system which is based on counting objective things like days off.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +1

      @@hyhhy Consequences matter on whether you count the days or not. Both cases you still need someone to approve your time off. You have the freedom to take off as many days as needed.

    • @jreese46
      @jreese46 Před 3 lety

      This is how it goes, because as long as you're giving, someone else will be there to take.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +1

      @@jreese46 I don't know if you're American, but it seems that any social benefit is seen as "abuse", but many places outside the U.S. (like Europe) see it as a good thing to have. We are all supposed to take advantage of unlimited vacation to take care of personal business, rest and recharge.

  • @heavylogic4204
    @heavylogic4204 Před 3 lety +2

    Great video topic! 💯

  • @le0nz
    @le0nz Před 3 lety +4

    As a software engineer I take 2 weeks each year but I always know I can get fired so I prepare according. I got lucky and got not problem getting jobs offers.

    • @tomwood5896
      @tomwood5896 Před 3 lety +2

      2 weeks! America is crazy.
      In the UK as a software engineer our company gives 5 weeks rising 1 day for every year of service (so if you have been here 5 years you get 6 weeks vacation). Plus 8 days statutory holidays.

  • @charlesbarilleaux2784
    @charlesbarilleaux2784 Před 3 lety +7

    A root cause of the perception issues, I feel, is “the work keeps coming,” and the abuse of exempt employees. I’ve heard too many senior managers view exempt employees as bottomless buckets of capacity. “10% overtime should be standard.” If I deal with my assigned duties and can take time off AWESOME. Unfortunately, any unallocated capacity is viewed as fair game to add projects-working less than 25% overtime is seen as capacity to add projects. Sort *that* out, then talk unlimited vacation.

  • @nicklowe_
    @nicklowe_ Před 3 lety +3

    Been following you for a bit, keep up the good work.

  • @justindadswell8610
    @justindadswell8610 Před 3 lety +13

    The only way I could see this working for the employee is where everyone has a set goal. You can take as much time off as long as you meet the goal.
    Or as with today's work from home culture, if you can do the job from the Bahamas then do it just make sure it is done. Show back up to work every third week to make sure you are caught up and then take the next two weeks as a working vacation.
    But then realistically almost every boss wants to see you at least acting busy even if all the work is done. So the above plan probably wouldn't work because the perception would still be negative even if you outperformed every single one of your coworkers.

  • @ButterflyBree
    @ButterflyBree Před 3 lety +9

    You raise some excellent points about unlimited vacation time not being what it seems. Most companies are constantly looking for cost savings, especially for employee benefits. This is one of the reasons many entry to mid level government jobs aren't protected anymore by the civil service code.
    As a health educator, I take my vacation time regularly. I don't take anything work related with me, as well as, I try my best to reach out to patients before I leave the office. I wish American companies saw the value in having at least 6 weeks of paid vacation.
    People are more productive when they can utilize their vacation, as well as, take a day or two for their mental health. #TeamNoSleep and working without time off isn't healthy and it doesn't lead to more productive outcomes.

  • @AHeru-zt5qd
    @AHeru-zt5qd Před rokem +1

    I had "unlimited" PTO a couple of jobs back and wanted to take time for paternity leave, which the company DID NOT have, and I asked to have six weeks for my new child. Mind you, I had NEVER taken any PTO between the switch from normal to unlimited and the company STILL told me that there was a hidden policy that we were only allowed to take four weeks worth of PTO a year no matter what. I took the four weeks and spent that time welcoming my son and looking for a new job. I came back after leave and handed in my two weeks notice. They were so confused and taken aback. I went on to a job paying nearly twice my salary and haven't looked back.

  • @richardjohansen5371
    @richardjohansen5371 Před 3 lety +20

    The advantage of unlimited vacation is that if something comes up that *needs* to be done outside of work (family issues or life issues for example) you *always* have the time available to go deal with it.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +2

      That's right, and I think everyone else misses this point!

    • @yottlesbottles
      @yottlesbottles Před rokem +1

      If they really wanted this as the outcome they would call it minimum holiday. So you'd get 3/4/5 weeks and you could take more as required.

    • @sharazar
      @sharazar Před rokem +1

      That is called Family Medical Leave. Unlimited is not unlimited if your manager gets to say no you can not take any time right now, Bob is already taking it off

    • @manny9323
      @manny9323 Před rokem

      Not really. Any company worth working for will give you that flexibility. If they’re not willing to do that then chances are they weren’t gonna approve your last-minute emergency PTO request anyway. My current company’s payroll system just takes you into negative hours if you don’t have enough, and as long as you accrue those PTO hours by year end it’s not an issue.

  • @TeacherKellyTag
    @TeacherKellyTag Před 3 lety +3

    I worked at a company that had 6 weeks vacation (sick and vacation was rolled into one). I heard the managers were told they were unprofessional if they tried to use all their time.

  • @richardfroste4548
    @richardfroste4548 Před 3 lety +5

    I worked so long in a Refinery that I had 5 weeks of vacation a year. My job was never on the line but with some people it could be a problem. Because the company learns they can do without you. Probably not a good idea unless you have a union to stand up for you.

  • @pey7777
    @pey7777 Před 3 lety +5

    As long as you get your work done, the amount of time off you take shouldn't matter. If I can get my work done in 4 days and take fridays off, why not?

    • @Juzamdan55
      @Juzamdan55 Před 3 lety

      Exactly

    • @Wythaneye
      @Wythaneye Před 3 lety

      Key word "shouldn't". The problem is, the kinds of companies that offer unlimited PTO are the same kinds of companies that track your every move and micromanage you into the ground.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety

      @@Wythaneye Not true! Where are all these myths coming from? Mostly from people without unlimited PTO! I have it and everyone I know who has it actually LOVES it. Managerial approval happens whether you have unlimited or not. If he/she has a problem granting you vacation, you can always get external support since the WHOLE company has it. I'm someone who has unlimited vacation and can attest that it's wonderful!

    • @jreese46
      @jreese46 Před 3 lety

      Because, more often than not, you're "part of a dynamic team," which of course means one person digs while the rest lean on shovels, or take the week off.

    • @munstergirl25
      @munstergirl25 Před 3 lety

      Personally the risk is where you don't get your work done or you do but you know if you went off a few days, you wouldn't. This isn't because you are a slow worker but maybe just because work is busy, or understaffed, etc.
      Paid time off is a benefit that means I get a Pause from my contractual obligation to provide certain service to my employer. It is then his responsibility to make sure work is sort of covered in my absence.
      If that responsibility Falls on me to take time off, it really isn't a perk anymore

  • @s.b.2450
    @s.b.2450 Před rokem +1

    My company switched to Open Time Off a few years ago. With each lay off cycle my backlog of tasks increases to cover for those who left. My team has been reduced from 18 to 3 developers. I ended up having only national holidays off in order to meet my team's goals, which are embedded into annual performance review. After 23 years, I am leaving the company to get back my family life and piece of mind. If you hear OPEN TIME OFF, run, because this is a sign of a decay and stagnation of the company.

  • @icestationzebraassociates2460

    I accrue more vacation and sick time than I can use. On top of that they gave us several free personal days over the last year. I'm too busy to take more than a couple days off at a time.
    The pay isn't wonderful, but the benefits keep people there.

  • @atomicfirepanda
    @atomicfirepanda Před 2 lety +5

    The right way to do this is to offer unlimited vacation (maybe because the company is very small and they don't want to be bothered tracking PTO) BUT the expectation and the culture is that people take 3 or 4 weeks vacation. Establishing a strong you-first culture turns the unlimited PTO benefit into a real win.

  • @brentbrown2722
    @brentbrown2722 Před 3 měsíci +1

    My toxic organization tried to convince us that if we worked extra, we'd get an extra day of PTO even though we already have open PTO

  • @riacharda
    @riacharda Před rokem +1

    I was about to apply for a job with this benefit. You're totally right. Thanks for the insight.

  • @cberge8
    @cberge8 Před rokem +2

    The only benefit to unlimited pto is if you ever have medical issues that requires an extended leave. Last year I went from having 5 weeks of pto/year, to an unlimited pto plan. In that year I ended up only taking 6 days of pto. Not having a set amount of time off mentally causes you to end up taking less time off. Also, after just being laid off, I had no banked pto to be paid out.

  • @Satchel456
    @Satchel456 Před rokem +1

    As someone who has worked at companies with both policies, I respectfully disagree. For many new employees, the biggest hurdle is knowing that you likely won't be able to take PTO for a little while if you have to accrue it - and life doesn't always allow us to wait to need time off. Also, even after working at a company for three years, I was always scared to dip into my PTO because you never knew when something bigger might pop up where you'd need more time; this forces you to be miserly with PTO. With unlimited PTO so long as you're a responsible person, there's no worry about "do I have enough PTO banked?" or "what if something else comes up afterward that I wouldn't have enough for?"

  • @mowerds33
    @mowerds33 Před 3 lety +4

    My old company decided to cap how much they'd pay out on leaving to 80 hours, I had over 200 hours of time off banked. I left before the policy took effect with my 200 hour payout. I wasn't going to ever manage to use that while still getting more hours, and we were too busy for me to ever use those hours.

  • @marykoritheasmith2411
    @marykoritheasmith2411 Před 3 lety +3

    Luckily I have been employed for years in various positions,however it's great to keep current on corporate strategies. Thank you for that 😊

  • @AA-db9cb
    @AA-db9cb Před rokem +1

    I was in a marketing firm a while back with unlimited vacations. The company wasn't exactly doing so well but I knew one guy who took hundreds of days off in a year. He was only there like 2-3 days a week. Everyone hated him because he slowed the entire pipeline down and made pretty much just left everyone to do the work. He got fired.

  • @kayp9318
    @kayp9318 Před 3 lety +4

    I had to learn this the hard way! I left a large corporation to go to a small start up that offered up unlimited pto, free food, alcohol, etc. I thought it was a dream. Boy was I wrong. Those type of companies work you like a dog. You will work weekends, nights, etc.

    • @Kaboomboo
      @Kaboomboo Před 2 lety

      Really? That sucks dude. Are the tradeoffs worth it? Genuine question. some people are cool as long as they provide the food and such.

    • @EyesWideOpen_B
      @EyesWideOpen_B Před 2 lety

      Is there at least overtime pay because of this?

  • @nlpolak
    @nlpolak Před rokem +1

    I most recently worked for a company that was a startup and offered unlimited vacation, and I always felt weird about taking time off. I worked there almost 2.5 years and would typically only take a couple days off every few months, because I hated that when I’d come back I would take a week to catch up. My boss took tons of time off though, and said she was very rarely “off” but rather working from home. So I never knew if she was taking time off or remote working. A few weeks before I left, I suffered an injury that kept me housebound and it was actually only then I used vacation time and how sad was that that I couldn’t even say I was enjoying it because I was stuck with a broken ankle??😢

  • @RazifHazmi
    @RazifHazmi Před 3 lety +8

    Unlimited PTO is just ridiculous. 90 days is plenty to be honest yet still make an impact at the job.

    • @williamsavary1040
      @williamsavary1040 Před 3 lety +4

      90 days is 18 weeks. You know some jobs with that much vacation lol?

    • @RazifHazmi
      @RazifHazmi Před 3 lety

      @@williamsavary1040 it's in the video. Some companies are already offering unlimited vacation. 18 weeks is being reasonable. Lol.

  • @queenofalldamned3365
    @queenofalldamned3365 Před 3 lety +3

    When I am on vacation there’s ABSOLUTELY NO WAY for me to think about work.
    I am out end of the story!
    And I am doing it so for the sake of myself but also for the work and the eventual quality I put in it. I need to rest and heal from the efforts put into my job, recharge my batteries in order to keep on going when I am back on duty.

  • @01michellehall
    @01michellehall Před 3 lety

    Love your channel

  • @kate215
    @kate215 Před 4 měsíci +1

    My coworkers would 100000% take advantage of this. And my coworkers and I who I know wouldn’t, would absolutely be picking up all the slack. No way.

  • @josevalle7133
    @josevalle7133 Před 2 lety +2

    The best strategy when you have a lot of vacation time or even unlimited vacation is to schedule your dates at the beginning of the year. The key is to space them out and to assure you take at least 4 weeks throughout the year.

  • @dynamicdave2647
    @dynamicdave2647 Před 3 lety +1

    U seem like such a nice relatable recruiter. Love your music intro

  • @deanrobbins8102
    @deanrobbins8102 Před 3 lety +4

    The place I work for went from PTO to FTO (said vacation has "no cash value"). FTO meant you have access to ALL of your vacation for the year up front. They hired a kid this spring. One month later, he took a couple weeks to go to Hawaii. A week after he got back, he put in his two weeks notice...LMAO! Players got played and complained about it.

  • @jennyc5100
    @jennyc5100 Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you for explaining the downside of this!

  • @michaelh5055
    @michaelh5055 Před 3 lety +13

    I use all of my PTO every year. I have absolutely no shame in using it and no one will make me feel guilty about it.
    I am good at my job. But I work to live, not live to work. I also would never hold it against others to use all of their pto.... We all work to make a living.

  • @kesayo
    @kesayo Před 8 měsíci +1

    It probably varies with the manager and the profession, but I personally do not keep track of how much PTO people take when there's unlimited PTO. If you're a high performer, you're still a high performer in my eyes even if you take 3 months off. If you're a low performer, you're still a low performer even if you take 0 time off. If you're in the middle, it doesn't tip it one way or the other because of how much time off you take.
    Also, I take much more time off when I have unlimited time off. I used to work for a company that let me sell back my vacation time at the end of the year and also carry over what I didn't sell or use to the next year. At that company I took almost no time off and just banked it all.

  • @lewis7315
    @lewis7315 Před 3 lety +2

    when you go on vacation, your clients are being reassigned to someone else and you may not get them back.... being on too much vacation is used to weed out workers who are not serious about their job...which could be why companies are implimenting it!!!

  • @EDarien
    @EDarien Před 3 lety +4

    5:45 for the most important part of the video.
    Also, almost half of the entire video is just "If you've already accrued vacation as a senior employee, you lose that time. Over 5 minutes to simply say that 1 point.

    • @justinwhite2725
      @justinwhite2725 Před 3 lety

      Yeah I'm only halfway through and waiting to see why it's a bad policy if you don't already have banked time.

  • @user-zd7id9rx3f
    @user-zd7id9rx3f Před 7 měsíci +1

    Personally as an engineer I wish managers had 52 weeks of vacation a year so I wouldn’t get tied up in meetings that impede me from getting the underlying work done.

  • @joannepark9503
    @joannepark9503 Před 2 lety

    I have a question and I am hoping you can answer. I recently interviewed and it went really well. It’s been 2 weeks and the Director of the program called me and said that they offered the position to someone else only because the position will eventually be a in office position and no longer a remote position. She asked me if I was interested in a temporary remote position for 2 years and I said that is not something I would entertain. She had such nice things to say about me and my interview with her. And she says she really wants me to be a part of her team. She will keep me in mind for other positions and she said if I had an inquiry on other positions she would get with the hiring manager and put a good word in for me. Is this just a way for them to let me go gently? Or do you think this is a person I should keep relationship with?

  • @unknownyoutuber2007
    @unknownyoutuber2007 Před 3 lety +46

    If I wanted unlimited vacation, I'd be unemployed.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +5

      You obviously don't get what unlimited vacation is and the goal of it. Companies do this to prevent burnout.

    • @unknownyoutuber2007
      @unknownyoutuber2007 Před 3 lety +2

      @@myleenjan Hahaha "burn out"? Is that what people call it these days? Man you people are pathetic. Awe a little bit of work is too exhausting for you? Got a little bit of stress? :(
      Let me count the number of ways I give a fuck. It's entitlement. Pathetic, sad entitlement. Everyone these days wants to be rewarded with none of the efforts that come with it.
      You want "unlimited vacation"? Then quit your damn job. You're there to work. Not be paid to sit at home.

    • @webserververse5749
      @webserververse5749 Před 3 lety +4

      @@unknownyoutuber2007 I was working 7, 12 hour shifts (There were days I worked 18 hrs a day) for 6 months straight and lot of people thought I was insane and "Burn-out" was going to hit me hard. I remember days walking into work like a zombie and just working based of muscle memory alone. I don't know what burn-out actually means per everyone else. But I can agree having an employee working as I did is not something a company will want to be the norm. I was putting in good work but if everyone was doing what I was, things would quickly fall into chaos.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +6

      @@unknownyoutuber2007 Uh no. I used to work 12-16 hour days at a Big 4 firm and nearly died of exhaustion because of it. So, to answer your question NO I am not afraid of "a little work". I'd rather be happy and healthy!

    • @kimcham9949
      @kimcham9949 Před 3 lety +4

      @@myleenjan: 👍🏾 Don't worry about "Unknown CZcamsr". He's the kind of person that will eventually come into the workplace with a gun. Forget him.

  • @paulhornbogen980
    @paulhornbogen980 Před 3 lety +2

    Sir, keep making plain english videos. I am amazed at this concept. Continue to be blunt and honest sir. Good job.

  • @Patriot1790
    @Patriot1790 Před rokem +1

    My current employer has unlimited PTO for salaried employees. My manager allows me three weeks for vacation. It has been a God send, as I have a Toddler that gets sick a lot. I don't have to worry when I need to take a day or two off. I have had a couple of job offers that paid more, but when you figured in benefits, they really didn't pay more.

  • @hannahalexie5158
    @hannahalexie5158 Před 2 lety +1

    I thought unlimited PTO basically meant that as long as your boss says it’s ok, then you can take it. I heard most people with unlimited PTO are actually approved for far less than what they would have gotten with a fixed PTO rate. So wouldn’t that be a bigger issue (getting approved for PTO) than people being mad about others taking PTO?

  • @nakedtraitor1802
    @nakedtraitor1802 Před rokem +1

    Here in the UK I came across jobs where they offer unlimited vacation. But I think it is probably exceptions rather than a trend. But then we tend to have more vacation time (typically 25 to 28 working days a year) than our US colleagues.

  • @nightryder21
    @nightryder21 Před 3 lety +12

    Lower level emplyess it's a good benefit. Higher level employees it's not a good thing

    • @icestationzebraassociates2460
      @icestationzebraassociates2460 Před 3 lety +4

      I'm a lower level employee and this would hurt me. I've got 200+ vacation hours banked. I also plan on moving on here, shortly. Currently, I'll get paid for those hours when I leave. If this were the policy, I wouldn't. I'd just lose that time.

    • @voidtalongaming4637
      @voidtalongaming4637 Před 3 lety +3

      It hurts lower level as well; the way management operates in America is to always set goals that can just barely not be met to 'promote growth' and I would lay blame on puritan roots that 'if you aren't working you're slacking/sinning' and PTO is 'not working' even if you have that time you can be seen as slacking off because you aren't working; you should be a good worker and work the whole year and get your vacation bonus like every other good employee.
      If my last statement there sounds like emotional manipulation/abuse that's because it is.

    • @bc1969214
      @bc1969214 Před 3 lety +1

      I've already seen what happens as a lower pay person when people have to take their PTO, the rest of us get pulled from our regular jobs that aren't even part of our job description since there is now an even smaller workforce.

  • @sexysputnik
    @sexysputnik Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks for the video. Can you talk about Indian recruiters in the IT industry? I get so many calls/emails from them and more often than not, they don't follow up. And if I do get any interviews, they never show their face.
    I got to one final interview with the actual employer(American) and it still wasn't the best experience.
    Overseas recruiters just don't seem to be worth my time or any sane person's.

  • @ThomaslIngenieur
    @ThomaslIngenieur Před 2 lety +1

    Hi mate, long time viewer & first comment, love your work. FYI I've 'inspired' myself from your thumbnail as I've made a video in French on a similar topic, and my original thumbnail had poor performance. I've credited you in the description so at least you get sth out of it, hope you don't mind. Please note that I don't use your content, only the idea of your thumbnail (my video is more a reaction video to a French news video, and I tackle other points you don't in your video). Feel free to reach out if you want to speak about it 🙃
    In any case, best with your work on CZcams, love your videos !

  • @picklerix6162
    @picklerix6162 Před rokem +1

    Whenever I see this in a job description, I suspect that employees are expected to take no vacation.
    I use to work at a company that had unlimited sick days and unlimited free soft drinks. Yeah, some employees abused those policies and those policies were dropped after the first big layoff.

  • @lg3103
    @lg3103 Před 3 lety +1

    I worked for a company a little over a year and was offered "unlimited vacation" as I was considered part of the Executive team and shortly after joining understood it is only there to benefit the employer. I took 2 vacations while there (1 week each) and even though approved, it was frowned upon. There never is a good time to take vacation or even a day off for Dr. appointments. People hate this model more now thanks to transparency it is seen for what it is. Hence the reason you see the new change from "unlimited" to "flexible" time off.

  • @everythingandnothingatall

    I watched this whole video, and kept waiting to get a full explanation of what an unlimited vacation offer would be like? I’ve never heard of it before, but I’m curious… do you still have to give two weeks notice for time off? Do you still get paid for this time off? Is it always unlimited paid time off? This just sounds too good to be true.
    Your videos are awesome! But since I had no prior knowledge of unlimited vacation benefits, I am quite confused about it by the end of this video. 🤔

    • @ALifeAfterLayoff
      @ALifeAfterLayoff  Před 3 lety

      I'd imagine it varies from company to company.

    • @jc42598
      @jc42598 Před 3 lety +4

      Basically it's up to your manager. It's usually paid time off-you ask for the time off, and yes, you can ask for as much as you want, but your manager will either approve or deny it. It's basically unlimited but obviously if you abuse it and take too much you're either going to get denied or fired for not getting your job done. Essentially it creates an atmosphere where you feel pressured to not take time off for fear of the perception that you're taking too much time off.

    • @PlatypusPlatoon
      @PlatypusPlatoon Před 3 lety +1

      The benefit is typically called “unlimited PTO”, so it’s paid time off. The main difference is that your yearly total - both how much you’ve accrued and how much you’ve taken - aren’t tracked in the company’s HR system.
      You still request PTO as you would normally. So if you want Friday off, you request that perhaps a week in advance; if you want all of September off, let your manager know early spring.
      As usual, your manager still needs to approve or reject every PTO request. But even moreso than with a normal vacation plan, employees need to have a good relationship with their manager, or risk getting their PTO request rejected for no reason.

    • @citydweller99
      @citydweller99 Před 3 lety

      My company..all I have to do is put on our department calendar. I started 10 weeks ago..put 2 days of PTO for next month..and my boss said I should take more off lol

  • @cooprdog3793
    @cooprdog3793 Před rokem +2

    Employees haven't been able to carry vacation days across more than an 18 month period since the 90s. Because it's essentially an annuity... You will be forced to take it out surrender it. When was the last time you worked for someone?
    2. If US workers wasted 768 million paid vacation days in a single year . How would going to unlimited PTO alienate senior employees (who don't use it at all?)
    3. How is it a stigma to use vacation days... When they are unlimited?
    4. If employees are forced to do all the work that appears when they are on vacation... Then your company doesn't offer vacation
    Everyone is my company has unlimited PTO and on Fridays in the summer we work half days..... People love the company and the benefit as judged by the survey we take every 6 months.
    Your points haven't been relevant since Clinton was in office.

  • @4040smokey
    @4040smokey Před 3 lety +1

    Management still has to approve vacation. It is not up to the employee. Spot on video.

  • @dannyhantx
    @dannyhantx Před 2 lety +3

    I'd rather have unlimited PTO than 15 days of PTO.

  • @abrin5508
    @abrin5508 Před 5 měsíci +1

    It's basically a nonsense. I used to have 20 days PTO - now I have 'unlimited' PTO but it has to be approved even for just 1 day and the guideline is no more than 20 days. So zero benefits but now micromanaged.

  • @jaydee9968
    @jaydee9968 Před 2 lety +1

    Absolute truth! I'm on my way out of a toxic company that has "unlimited vacation." It's a complete scam. With no records or tracking, the amount of vacation a person takes becomes nothing but a matter of perception, which we all know leads to false impressions. For the first time in a forty year career I am about to resign with zero notice -- dropping the resignation letter and walking out the door. They don't deserve anything better.

  • @user-zo4sd3lf1p
    @user-zo4sd3lf1p Před rokem +1

    I hear about this the first time. That's not a widespread phenomenon for Eastern Europe.
    In my opinion, this benefit could lead a company to a chaotic distribution of tasks. When no one could really do their own work and plan ahead... And even if it's unlimited on paper, there certainly should be some limits... for example, what would the management do if all their doers leave work for vacation simultaneously??? Hire new ones? Pay some random people from the street to do a regular employees job? It's getting worse as you think more of it
    If I'd hear this benefit from a potential employer I'd be rather curious about getting HOW this company even functioning with this downside?

  • @karaleise
    @karaleise Před 3 lety +11

    I only want jobs with unlimited vacation. I've had that model in my last 2 jobs and the opposite is true. With unlimited vacation people actually take less time. We had to force people to take a break
    But for me, i love taking time WHENEVER I want because i meet and exceed expectations constantly. Exceptional workers should be allowed to take time off as needed. Give me my time now. I will make my plans for my retirement on my own. Its a great benefit!

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety +1

      Halleluja, finally someone who gets it. More and more IT companies like Netflix, Instacart and GE are following Unlimited PTO.

    • @traveler121
      @traveler121 Před 3 lety +1

      Spot on!

    • @kerriea3149
      @kerriea3149 Před 3 lety

      Absolutely agree

    • @shadowninja6689
      @shadowninja6689 Před 3 lety +2

      "With unlimited vacation people actually take less time. We had to force people to take a break" .... isn't that just proving some of this videos points, that it's really just a way to get people to take less time off while disguising it as a 'benefit'?

    • @karaleise
      @karaleise Před 3 lety +1

      @@shadowninja6689 But the point is it is YOUR choice. As a whole the company benefits because not everyone will take their vacation but you as the individual also benefit because there isn't a cap on what you are allowed.

  • @MyMattinthehat
    @MyMattinthehat Před 3 lety +2

    You hit on some really good points. I'd like to share some other points. Netflix is one of the pioneers with this method and utilizes it quite well. However, other places have tried to adopt the same method and failed in their implementations. Netflix believes that as long as the work gets done then one does not need to stick around aimlessly. While true, there tends to always be work that needs to be done. Sometimes these companies will incentivize their workers with bonus money to relax and take a week off. Another point, in the software development and related fields, work can be very competitive, and taking time off would be like benching yourself. Good points on probing for the work culture at places that offer this as a benefit, getting data on how often the workers actually exercise this benefit would be good to know as well.

  • @errrzarrr
    @errrzarrr Před 2 lety

    What should I do if I actually want free time (call it vacation, off-time, etc) either PAID or unpaid on my next job interview?

  • @barmanvarn
    @barmanvarn Před 3 lety +2

    The downside is they still have to approve PTO requests and unlimited means you aren't guaranteed any PTO at all. I've had coworkers try to guilt me for taking more PTO than them, but I was actually taking what would be considered normal for our roles.....the issue was they were taking LESS and were worried or afraid to take PTO. I refuse to be guilting into taking vacation if I'm not abusing the system.

    • @mattaungst8154
      @mattaungst8154 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Ya exactly if I had a job that had unlimited PTO I would take 1 week off every 2 months that works out to being 6 weeks off which is a huge benefit especially if your a new employee to the company normally it takes a few years to get that much but now I would would be able to take it as a new employee which is amazing. And if others wanna wine about it then let them idgaf lmao
      There are 52 weeks in a year 6 isn't going to kill the business

  • @to4217
    @to4217 Před 2 lety +2

    oh wow guys, it... it almost seems like... requiring everyone to take nice long vacations (Im talking more than a pitiful week that does NOT include holidays and weekends) every year... and... and making overworking a taboo... might... might actually result in happier rested employees that dont have this animosity and infighting over who takes what amount of vacation time.

  • @semimba
    @semimba Před 3 lety +2

    Unlimited vacation is no vacation. First you are at the mercy of management. Having unlimited vacation on paper looks good but in reality it is always based on what management wants to give you. Also since you don't accumulate vacation time you actually get a pay cut.

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety

      This is simply not true. Vacation is not meant to be accumulated is the whole point. It should be TAKEN for your own health!

  • @eriktaylor1225
    @eriktaylor1225 Před rokem +1

    I worked in a place where you would accrue 5 hours of vacation time each pay period.
    Vacation days were bidded for and awarded by seniority. Other days off (called “discretionary time off) throughout the year required management approval and we’re awarded based on how well they like you. If they didn’t, then they wouldn’t approve it. Or if they really wanted to be little bitches, they would approve it, and then withdraw it the day before, citing “facility needs”. It was easier to just call in sick.

  • @kevjackson3501
    @kevjackson3501 Před 3 lety +3

    I take 3 months off per year at about 1 month off per time *without* pay and definitely do not want to ever get into the fake "2 week vacation" which is actually 10 days off per year.

    • @dexm2010
      @dexm2010 Před 3 lety +1

      @Kev Jackson When you say 10 days off per year, you mean that a person is only getting paid *5* days per vacation week, and not *7* days, is that correct?

    • @kevjackson3501
      @kevjackson3501 Před 3 lety

      @@dexm2010 No, I mean just time off. I don't care about paid vacations as they don't matter to me. The 10 days off are 1 working week of 5 days x 2 working weeks = 10 days off. That's awful.

    • @dexm2010
      @dexm2010 Před 3 lety

      @@kevjackson3501 Yeah, it is pretty awful.

  • @Zephas99
    @Zephas99 Před 3 lety +2

    Yes - lost a LOT of accrued vacation, and it's not even possible to use when you don't have a backup. It's a very clever trick.

  • @Matt-wf7ry
    @Matt-wf7ry Před 3 lety +1

    If you are offered unlimited PTO - tell them up front you will take a MINIMUM of all major holidays off, will take 20 vacation days and 20 sick/random days off and that you may even take more if needed and that there is not a possibility of you getting fired for taking this time off and have them sign a document you created that states all this. If they refuse to do so than you already know that this unlimited PTO from that company is a load of BS.

  • @sanjaybarnes5717
    @sanjaybarnes5717 Před rokem +1

    I always said the American work system was designed to destroy you. How do you work for your vacation, take your vacation, then you come back to mountains of work? This means it was best you didn't take vacation at all. How do you leave your work to recharge, then come back just to be drained again from piles of work? This makes no sense. A quality company and manager would redistribute work. I know sometimes there are confidentiality issues with certain position, but you as a manager it is still your job to figure something out. I keep telling people that these managers and recruiters only know human resources, they do not know what human capital is.

  • @johnbushur6080
    @johnbushur6080 Před 2 lety +1

    I’d like to see a video or perhaps a series on the total benefits package. Outside of salary and health insurance what kinds of benefits are common and what might be considered exceptional and/or subpar. Such as stock options, bonuses, vacation etc. And any tips on evaluating and negotiating benefits other than salary.

  • @samanthab5006
    @samanthab5006 Před 3 lety +5

    Unlimited vacation would be a big turn off for me. You really need to trust your boss and thier ability to set clear expectations and balance workload. I think set PTO with flexible holidays (can work holiday and use day another time) and flex hours (core hours with flexibility on either end) are much better

    • @myleenjan
      @myleenjan Před 3 lety

      Managerial approval happens whether you have unlimited or not. If he/she has a problem granting you vacation, you can always get external support since the WHOLE company has it. This is coming from someone who actually HAS unlimited PTO. Don't believe all these strange myths. And question, is it that bad where you wouldn't trust your manager? I think you need to get a new job if this is the case. Managers and everyone should try to take more vacations and not turn into 70 year old workers at Walmart.

    • @samanthab5006
      @samanthab5006 Před 3 lety +1

      @@myleenjan I'm not saying that it can't work just that you're rolling the dice on your manager, you team, and the culture (and possibly your own insecurities). You can try to figure these things out in an interview but it's not always that easy. I'm glad it works out for you though. In my current role I get a certain number of PTO days and my boss is really flexible with not requiring time off for appointments etc as long as you get work done and don't overuse it. I prefer this but I realize not everyone would.

  • @MTimWeaver
    @MTimWeaver Před 2 lety +2

    My first experience with unlimited PTO was in 2013, when the company I worked at switched to it. I specifically called out the CEO during the conference call (we were 60% remote employees) in that it was a nice way to wipe all that vacation liability off the books and that anyone who had hours banked suddenly lost those hours. You could have heard a pin drop, even on those crappy conference lines.
    CEO piped up about 2 seconds later with the restated "it'll be great". Of course, it wasn't "great" and people took less time.
    Same thing with my most recent experience. The company overall was pretty good (at least from where I was positioned), but the number of people taking actual time off (not a long weekend, but 1-2 weeks at a time) was VERY small in number.
    Unlimited PTO is great for the company, not so much for the employee. When you have a "use it or lose it" PTO plan, then people wind up taking at least what they need to achieve parity in the earned/taken hour structure. And, of course, there's the payout when you leave.

    • @matteosposato9448
      @matteosposato9448 Před rokem

      1) Pay off the accrued PTO to those who have it at the beginning of the unlimited vacation policy.
      2) Set a minimum amount of days off that employees have to actually take.

  • @Jessehermansonphotography
    @Jessehermansonphotography Před 11 měsíci +1

    So the only rebuttal so far is that folks don’t actually take the time off. That’s up to the employee. I haven’t yet heard of someone complaining that their company said no.
    The real trick of this is that employers don’t have tons of PTO on the books. In Montana, you have to pay that out when an employee leaves. Idk how it is everywhere else, but that can be a huge number on the books.
    I admit, I would feel kinda guilty taking more than 10 to 14 days in a year. So I do think it’s a bit of a gimmick.
    I have PTO and I can never take it since I’m the lone IT for the entire company. I have 7 weeks on the books. (Not a badge, I literally hate it)

  • @migsteele
    @migsteele Před 3 lety

    I worked somewhere with unlimited paid time off. It just mean't that the managers got months off and all my holiday requests were declined. I was working while I was a student at the time, I booked my exam off over a month in advance, they sat on it and only on the week of the exam did they reject the request. I told them I wouldn't be working. They weren't happy with me, but there was nothing I could do.

  • @firebird6522
    @firebird6522 Před 2 lety

    I interviewed for a job with unlimited vacation. My current company doesn't allow you to build up vacation time, you only accrue 0.83 days per month, the only day of the year where you have all 10 days available is Dec. 31. And you lose it all at midnight. I'm not a long-tenured employee, so I only get 10 days. My wife has retired early while I still have a few years to go, so I'd like to be able to take more vacation so we can do things while we're healthy. So I fail to see how unlimited vacation is a bad benefit. I can't imagine taking more than 20 days off.

  • @tscoff
    @tscoff Před 3 lety +2

    Accrued PTO time is a liability on the company’s books. Discretionary PTO, aka unlimited vacation, isn’t a liability on the company’s books. Wall Street hates liabilities so stock prices go up when a company institutes unlimited vacation time.

  • @MikeIsCannonFodder
    @MikeIsCannonFodder Před 3 lety +1

    My last job was unlimited PTO and taking any was never a problem. Granted most of the time I was there was during COVID. But when I started in 2019 I was able to take a ratio amount of having either 4 or 5 weeks available. My new job is also unlimited PTO (weirdly accrued sick time too) and I like what I've heard from management but I haven't been here long enough to see how it really plays out.

  • @Kenroy112
    @Kenroy112 Před 3 lety +2

    I have unlimited time off, prior to that we I had 4 weeks off. So I try to either take 4 or 5 weeks Per year, I do notice my peers do take less time off than myself but I don`t let that bother me. My health is my wealth :)