Poll: How many hours do you work per week?
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40 at my full time job... Soon to have a part time job at the ER, and thatll be another 16-24 hrs. And I go to University full time. LOL0
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I work for a university as a secretary at a very laid back office job that I get to run around campus with and do all sorts of awesome things... I work for the IT department.
We are legally not allowed to go over 30 hours a week. Probably a good thing as I am very serious about school and take 12-16 credits of business courses.
I'm loving it though and try to max out at 30 hours per week. I can do homework at work but refuse to lately as it's kind of distracting.
I absolutely love my job and classes though so life is good but insanely busy. :happy:
I will never ever work anything outside of an office job (studying for accountancy) unless things got REAL tough. (I'm young so not burnt out quite yet LOL)0 -
i work two different jobs one part time usually put in 28 hrs then when summer and holidays roll in i work 40 hrs a week, then a full time job with overtime that you have to do,,, which is 40+ hrs.. so my norm is about 65-80+ hrs a week love the money oh did i mention online courses busy busy but there is no excuses comming from this girl0
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I admire so many of you working tons of hours and still making time for a healthy lifestyle/losing weight. I think that's so awesome. That is one of my biggest fears about taking such a job is that I will not have time for anything else. But you all have proved me wrong, it looks like!0
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Around 50hrs0
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50-55Hr's.
Professional salary holllerrrr.
#youngnbossn0 -
im in IT (work in a datacenter) .. I tend to work 50+ hours a week and on call afterhours.... I dont mind the extra hours as im paid hourly0
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168 hours a week, minus tuesday nights, so...164 hours a week
Just kidding. Sorry, I know that doesn't help you at all...just where my brain went. (Stay at home, homeschooling, gardening, part time photographer mom) :P0 -
Salaried at 45hrs but allways do more for hourly rate. In the UK we are legally limitet to the ammount of hours we can work over so many weeks...
In previous role I used to work 95 to 100hrs a week occasionally 140hrs....yes.....rolling 7days of 20hr shifts....cat naps were all the rage:happy:
..probably why my sleep patterns are so ****up now0 -
40 per week at my regular job and when I work the weekends with my own business I do another 16 hours but not every week.0
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24 minimum0
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56. Rotating shift-work.0
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I work 40 hours a week.0
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I currently work 40-42 hours a week depending on if overtime is available or not.
In my previous job I was salaried and 40 hours a week was the minimum expected. 45-50 was what it took to get the job done (i.e. what was expected). Most of the other managers accomplished this by eating at their desks. I preferred to come in early or for a bit on the weekends because I accomplished so much more when I was the only one there.0 -
Self-employed; typically work 60-hour weeks for a quarter of the pay that I made corporate.0
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I'm a self employed ecologist and charge £40 (what's that in US dollars? About $65?) an hour consultancy fees and might work up to 20 hours a week (not all of it chargeable obviously - I need to do my admin ;-p ). That's enough on top of looking after my 3yo :-D And it brings in the same amount of money (if not more) as when I was employed by a private firm.0
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58 until the second week of May. I'm pooped!0
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40 hours here. Although that could change soon.0
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I work 35-40 hours per week with an occasional long day here and there.0
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When I worked it was Mon-Fri 8-5 with 1/2 hour lunch.0
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I work 36 hrs a week, 4 days a week, that's enuf for me! I don't like spending my whole life at work.0
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I work a deadly 40-46 hours a week as a cashier at a supermarket.
Edit: 7.50 minimum wage..... forever!!!!!!!0 -
I work 40 hrs a week at my regular job, but then I babysit after work up to 4 days a week. It might not seem like hard work but it can be exhausting keeping up with a 4 yr old who doesnt know what no means! I also will work overtime when I can at my real job, and babysit for friends and family on the weekends, I like money lol.0
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Thanks for all the responses so far. I wish I knew the salary for the position, but I was afraid to ask. I was always told to never ask about money up front. The company is a mortgage lending company, but I would not be doing any banking stuff. I would be working on their marketing team in the creative dept. as a web designer.
I find the variety in responses interesting. Keep them coming!
thats sad, what if the pay is minimum wage? you just wasted everyones time.
i always ask what the pay is, i have a minimum set, anything less I choose to stay home. to keep from wasting everyones time i ask up front when they first call "whats the pay rate"? simple and to the point. if they say anything less than what my requirement is, thanks for calling, i have better things to do with my life. you can choose to listen to all the hiring BS advice out there or you can be confident in yourself and self worth, if you have the experience they will hire you, if you don't get the job, your not qualified, very simple, nothing personal. go buy a business, that is easier than trying to find a J-O-B.0 -
Hahaha... I thought it said work out.. FAIL0
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Anywhere between 40 & 70. I'm self employed, so the more I work, the more money I can earn (being an artist - no guarantee anything will sell)0
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50-60 hours is pretty standard for a salaried job. I work 39 hours a week0
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37.5 is what I am supposed to work...but I usually get to work an hour before I start....so probably just a little over 41 hrs per week.0
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i work between 35-55 hours a week because i'm a chef but i get paid hourly so its all good! my boyfriend is on salary for 49 hours a week and he does almost 60 sometimes and doesn't get paid for it infact i get paid more than him sometimes but i get paid every 2 weeks meaning i get taxed more!!0
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I work part time now, when I worked full time my mantra was "if it can't get done it 40, it aint worth it." I was a corporate accountant. The only time I worked extra was during quarter or year-end close. And never more than 45 hrs.
My husband is an IT Manager and used to work 60+ hrs some weeks. Then he went to grad school, which meant it wasn't physically possible to do that anymore (grad school was full time, 20+ hrs per week). Since he finished in 2006, I am glad to announce he's worked more than 45 hrs only during crunch times. He's salary. He also gets about 12 weeks paid time off a year. He now expects no more than 45 from anyone on his team. Life-work balance makes for better workers.0
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