Why would anyone work for free …

I am writing this on a Saturday.  I did two hours of work today and two hours last night. I have already worked many hours over my allotted workdays this week. It is unlikely I will get paid for this extra time.

Why do I and so many other people do this? Are we out of our minds?

To answer the second question; the answer is simple, I don’t think I am out of my mind, but I am doing something most people would view as crazy. The first question is a little more complicated to answer.

Why would anyone willingly work for free … the reasons vary, some are simple and others very complex. I began because I believe in providing value, doing the best work I possibly can, gaining valuable experience, and standing out, to demonstrate I am motivated, reliable, and dependable. Now I work longer because if I do not do this work, nobody else will and I feel responsible to those people I try to help. During Covid when I was out of work, I offered to work for free because nobody was hiring and I needed an opportunity.

I believe what I do is important, in my situation, overtime is not allowed, and there is simply no way to provide the expected services within the time allocated … so instead of reducing services or the number of people I help … I began providing my time outside of what I get paid for. For people who work in the non-profit sector or for charities, this is quite common. In the business world, 50/60/70-hour weeks for salaried staff is far from unusual. My personal record for one week was 77 hours.

When would you work for free?

For me, it began slowly. Sometimes someone was sick and a shift needed to be covered so I worked. In the private sector and as well in the non-profit world, for as long as I can remember there have been financial and budgetary pressures to “do more with less,” despite the fact there was the same or more work that was expected. Other times, due to pressing commitments, you begin taking shorter lunches, skipping breaks, and often working later to finish an assignment that just needs to be done.

What would motivate you to work for free?

Expectations. Senior leaders and other managers wanted the work done, pressure was applied, and I wanted to show I was the right person for my job. As above, one doesn’t go from working a normal number of hours, it happens slowly; maybe initially over-time is approved but then you are told there is a “hard cap” on your hours and you decide I can do a few hours just to stay caught up and soon your organization will notice and give you more resources. That doesn’t usually happen, they expect more; soon, those few hours become more significant and you become trapped or worse you become acclimatized to doing it and it becomes a habit because you need and like your job.

What is the cost of working for free?

Family time, time for yourself, additional stress and anxiety, and peer pressure; are all costs that will eventually impact you and those people who care about you.

Will you get into trouble?

Is it worth it?

As a person who has worked for free for years, if not decades, I can categorically say that it is not worth it, at the time now and in the past when I have engaged in this behavior, whether it is worth it or not, it is quite often the only way to survive in the short-term.

If I work extra, even for free, our clients, our organization, and our funders achieve their goals, and without being a martyr the only person who loses is me; however, that is not true entirely, because my family, friends, and life loses because I am absent, missing from responsibilities at home, and am tired and/or frustrated.

So what do you do and how do you escape from this trap?

Context and perspective are important, if you are logging occasional extra hours that are not expected or often, that is likely acceptable; consistently working the equivalent of extra whole days each pay period is going to have negative consequences for everyone.

 So why do I continue to work for free?

I care, like most people in these situations, I care deeply about the work I do, the people I work with and for, and the clients we help.

I am highly motivated, extremely reliable, and super dependable. I am my own worst enemy and I need to realize I am past the point where I can win.

Am I out of mind? The simple answer is “yes.” 

Working excess hours for free is not worth the personal costs in the long run. As a leader of people, I did not expect my people to work for free and I set a poor example personally because of this double standard.

If I cannot change my situation now, I need to find another way or another job. This will be difficult but necessary. My advice to you is to recognize the signs early, step back and create a plan to extricate yourself before you get as deep as me.

Good luck,

Paul.

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