Were these hourly rate rooms?Once on a trip, a female coworker and I got accidentally booked into same room. The hotel was full, We had been drinking and… let’s just say we shared rooms many times.
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Were these hourly rate rooms?Once on a trip, a female coworker and I got accidentally booked into same room. The hotel was full, We had been drinking and… let’s just say we shared rooms many times.
Would be interesting to know if the CEO or other big wigs of your organization share rooms on their road ventures.In re-reading the email from our CEO, I noticed that he never used the word “policy.” He referred to it as “we are returning to our practice of shared rooms.”
To me that says they know they can’t push this on people if they resist. It’s not a policy, it’s an “encouraged practice.” It would create a huge HR liability if someone tells you they are uncomfortable with it and you make them do it anyway.
Based on that, and my boss saying “use your judgment,” I’m going to avoid doing this because it is not something I’m comfortable with. I’ll consider it, but not something I’m going to do as part of normal practice.
I don’t feel like I owe them any explanation beyond “I’m not comfortable with this” and leave it at that. I’m not required to disclose anything that gives specific reasons why.
If they really want to push it on me, that will change the tone of conversation.
In re-reading the email from our CEO, I noticed that he never used the word “policy.” He referred to it as “we are returning to our practice of shared rooms.”
To me that says they know they can’t push this on people if they resist. It’s not a policy, it’s an “encouraged practice.” It would create a huge HR liability if someone tells you they are uncomfortable with it and you make them do it anyway.
Based on that, and my boss saying “use your judgment,” I’m going to avoid doing this because it is not something I’m comfortable with. I’ll consider it, but not something I’m going to do as part of normal practice.
I don’t feel like I owe them any explanation beyond “I’m not comfortable with this” and leave it at that. I’m not required to disclose anything that gives specific reasons why.
If they really want to push it on me, that will change the tone of conversation.
They claim that they do and I haven’t heard any evidence to the contrary. I still don’t plan on doing it.Would be interesting to know if the CEO or other big wigs of your organization share rooms on their road ventures.
Totally don't think you should. As cockeyed as their logic seems to be about this, it wouldn't surprise me that they were hypocrites.They claim that they do and I haven’t heard any evidence to the contrary. I still don’t plan on doing it.
I still don't understand the CEO's argument that sharing rooms improves the culture. If anything, it makes it worse.
I once went to an engineering conference through Iowa State. We came with the knowledge that the conference had booked our hotels. When we got there, we found out it was 4 to a room and they mixed colleges. I slept in the same bed as a dude from U of Arkansas and OkSt and WashU of St Louis guys were in the other bed. Everyone was uncomfortable.
If I knew better, I would have booked my own room at my expense.
Never share a room. Treat yourself better than that.
Not just the same room…..same bed???? Hellz noI once went to an engineering conference through Iowa State. We came with the knowledge that the conference had booked our hotels. When we got there, we found out it was 4 to a room and they mixed colleges. I slept in the same bed as a dude from U of Arkansas and OkSt and WashU of St Louis guys were in the other bed. Everyone was uncomfortable.
If I knew better, I would have booked my own room at my expense.
Never share a room. Treat yourself better than that.
As a quasi introvert, being around another person after a day of conferencing or whatever is basically a nightmare.
I still don't understand the CEO's argument that sharing rooms improves the culture. If anything, it makes it worse.
Not just the same room…..same bed???? Hellz no