this post was submitted on 29 Oct 2025
        
      
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What you're describing sounds like shift work. Also, 3 hours is WAY different than 10 minutes.
Not at all. It could be a consultant going to their customer, with the customer waiting. That has happened in my line of work. The example of 3 hours was with a waiting customer.
Being late also means you will call ahead to tell them that you are late. It's simple courtesy that doesn't require education och skills.
The post says late to work, not late to a meeting.
...and that depends on the work.
If you're meeting with someone and you're late that's rude. If you just need to be in an office at a time but don't have any specific meetings then it isn't a big deal. If you're doing shift work when people need you there at a very specific time then it's rude to be late. If it's not shift work and you're not late for a meeting, I don't see the problem.
What you call shift work is different from the swedish definition of it. Shift work is typically a term reserved for those types of work where there is a briefing between shifts. Industry, hospital etc. 24-hour kind of operations.
What i think you mean is office work, but that could also mean set times. But you would never call it shift work.
Lets say a call center that has a set opening time, or mechanic that has to open the shop at a given time. Those would not be considered shift work, unless they are open 24/7. So thats where we misunderstand each other.
Yeah, that's definitely it then. In the US we call things shift work of you have a shift. Which are things like, show up at 2 PM, leave at 10 PM. It's typically reserved for jobs that relieve other shifts. So showing up late means your coworkers have to work alone for a bit. Something like an office (not call center) wouldn't be considered shift work here because you're generally not directly interfacing with customers or relieving people from a previous shift.