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02 March 2007

Help with Query A folklorist correspondent is looking for examples of the workplace folk culture of office workers and high-tech lab workers.[More:]He needs to identify elements of workplace culture that are unofficial. As examples, he gives office/cubicle/door decoration, rituals for the first/last day of work or completed projects, and so on. Can any of you contribute behaviors that are part of your work environment, but did not arise as a result of commercial mass culture or official policy?
I guess Sylvester with the caption "Would you mind taking your silly ass problem down the hall?" falls within the commercial category.

One place I worked, our branch had a monthly birthday party with cake that was not official policy.

At another place with round-the-clock shifts, we all tried to get to work a half-hour to an hour early to relieve members of the previous shift. This was completely against official policy but our manager overlooked it.
posted by mischief 02 March | 17:25
At my last workplace, it was verboten to have anything in your cubicle -- piles of books, vases of flowers on shelves, etc. -- that was above the "sight line" (the cubicle walls).
posted by initapplette 02 March | 17:33
That was not an official policy, though it was informally enforced by all of us including the Dept. Head.
posted by initapplette 02 March | 17:35
* decorations for 30th, 40th, 50th, etc. birthdays
* birthday card everyone in office/deaprtment signs
* non-stop stream of food from outside sales force, vendor sales reps, employees
posted by youngergirl44 02 March | 18:20
Whenever an employee leaves, gets married, or has a baby, our dept. secretary sends around an envelope with a card in it. We're supposed to sign the card and throw a few bucks in for a gift. It's generally acknowledged, but not vocalized, that if you don't really know the employee you still have to sign the card, but you don't have to donate any cash.
posted by muddgirl 02 March | 18:30
two words:
beer-thirty.
posted by matildaben 02 March | 18:38
Um, that's a tradition in [some] IT and software development offices. It means having beer at 3:30 every Friday. Here we do it at 4 p.m. (21 minutes and counting!), but it's still considered "beer-thirty".
posted by matildaben 02 March | 18:39
One place I worked had "Blue Monday", blue pants and shirts (guys only) on Monday. Same place had the rule that you brought donuts in on your birthday.
posted by tommasz 02 March | 19:04
three words:

half-past sandwich.
(lunchtime)
posted by essexjan 02 March | 19:19
We have that rule, tommasz. We bring in treats for our birthdays. The person whose birthday was before yours circulates a card and everyone puts in a dollar. The money is supposed to pay for the treats, but it doesn't really. Not enough people contribute. So they decided to discontinue the 'put in a dollar' part and keep the card part. And people still want you to bring the food.
posted by youngergirl44 02 March | 21:55
matilda, I had no idea that Friday beer was an IT tradition. Our company always did it (though it was 5pm on Fridays for us), but that would explain why the IT guys were always responsible for buying the beer. (I think the dept. paid for it, though.)

At a travel book publisher I worked for, we put the really stupid and/or funny reader mail up on a wall for public mocking. I think for a while it also included some of our *own* work, from past editions of the guides that we thought were particularly bad. (It was always a feel-good thing, though; we never used it to mock current employees.)

At that same place, we would always have Ben & Jerry's during the weekly staff meetings. And that was when Snapple was starting to get popular, and there was a Snapple truck that would drive around the neighborhood and give out free samples, so any time someone spotted it, they'd send an email around, and the entire office would clear out to go get free drinks.

posted by occhiblu 02 March | 22:05
So, like, I just won a hideous vase. || Does the World need Rock Stars?

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