• @[email protected]
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      64 months ago

      It becomes a negotiation every time you want to use it. It’s terrible unless you’re good at haggling over your own wellbeing.

    • @[email protected]
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      44 months ago

      Exactly. If a company tells me that I get unlimited time off then tell me when the Christmas party is because I’m on PTO until then.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        My current job has unlimited PTO, but it’s not called unlimited. It’s called “discretionary” time off. And I think that’s an OK term for it. You don’t have a limit to your vacation/sick days, but you have to be a professional about it and not let things fall apart at work.

        I’m fortunate in that we mostly work as a team and treat each other as human beings, even including the project manager and our direct management. So it can be alright at a good place. For example, we were asked our vacation plans for the quarter and I decided to add an extra day to a decent short break, and I gave myself a week long staycation next month.

        But no limit also means no minimum, so of course the shittier places will use it to make things worse.