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QC@QiaochuYuan• 6 months ago

does anyone actually have a straight no-bullshit answer to what a 40-hour work week for a remote white-collar job is supposed to actually look like concretely? i don't believe most people can do e.g. serious technical research 8 hours a day, maybe 4 max. what's the other 4?

6.8K 233
4/17/2025
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ian hines@imhinesmi• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan the rest of the time is some combination of admin work, being on-call for questions or quick tasks, & tradition/legal requirements

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4/17/2025
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MD šŸ‰@quantumNoJutsu• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Pomodoro and short runs

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4/17/2025
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gt.dad@gtdad• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Most white collar jobs aren’t 8 hours of paradigmatic-letter-of-the-job-scope production. There’s lots of collaboration, lots of scope fuzziness, lots of opportunities to do different things, just like there would be in any project. Maybe this is just your point.

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QC@QiaochuYuan• 6 months ago
Replying to @gtdad

@gtdad i'm asking because i genuinely don't know lol i'm not trying to make a point i am very inexperienced. that makes more sense to me in-person, do people replace this remotely with, like... a ton of zoom meetings?

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gt.dad@gtdad• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Emails, mtgs, phone calls, texts, slack, contributing to or reading collab docs—where these have diverse forms and purposes, just like normal human conversations—jumping in and helping with something tangential, etc.

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4/17/2025
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ćƒžćƒŖć‚ŖīØ€@n03xp3ct1ng• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I mean, when processing cases for govt benefits you take calls and fill out forms- with occasional meetings in between it all. We get PIPs if we're not processing cases fast enough and that affects bonuses or in severe cases can be fodder for building up a case to fire you

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4/17/2025
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Sam Lowen@samlowen5105• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

Sure. My cousin starts work at 8:30 after taking the kids to school. At noon he stops for lunch. At 3 he picks up the kids and starts the afternoon Ubers to various events. He gets back to work at night after dinner and parenting. He works at least one full day most weekends. About 5-6 hrs of actual work a day at best.

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4/17/2025
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Richard Ludlow@richardludlow• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan 4 hours technical work, 1 hour lunch and breaks, 2 hours of meetings, 1 hour of email and Slack

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4/17/2025
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Hellvis@schaumuniversum• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan discussing planned trips to the barber and such on slack: 'out for a half hour picking up X' 'oops doorbell, probably am***n package, brb!' 'got the plumber here, won't make 15:00 catch-up sorry' 'shattered for today, will do some coding after dinner, see u tmrw at standup!'

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Some Guy@extelligentz• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Lots of it is being connective tissue to other people’s couple of deep work hours per week

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4/17/2025
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Ryan Sorensen@rcsorensen• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Lot of context sharing and bullshitting with coworkers to turn the relationships non transactional, simmering thinking time for the job itself, and in more senior roles sense making and connecting people in the org.

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4/17/2025
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Andrew Quinn@hiAndrewQuinn• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan they don't. you have made two errors here, first by painting too broad of a brush with "white-collar jobs", and second by not seeing the economic incentives at play. anybody who is actually trying to max out ROI per hour like that is not working as a 40 hour FTE.

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Poi@poiThePoi• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Meetings, lunch.

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Reed Rawlings@reed_rawlings• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan That time will be filled with zoom meetings or requirements gathering. 40 hour work weeks are rare when you're waiting for your teammates to catch up

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Will Provost@GremlinIndustry• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan It's possible for some people to grind 12 hrs straight. But the motivation is usually not present.

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4/17/2025
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beausolai@beausolai• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

I think it’s more ā€œassigning 40 hoursā€ to the task at hand that’s important. I know that in-office 2-3 hours a day was always wasted by bosses and coworkers chatting with us or doing stupid ā€œworkplace bonding.ā€ At home I do more in 4 hours than I would most days in office, but those are going to not necessarily align with the team that may rely on me so ā€œbeing availableā€ is what I’d assign the other time too. If someone had a problem with me not being productive or clicking and clacking the whole 40 they can go to hell and I’ll get money elsewhere.

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Rat King Crimson@Alphiloscorp• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan IME: Meetings: 20-60% of the 8hrs Recovering between meetings: 15m per Whatever is left: actual work I'm an analyst, though, so a more technical role might have less meetings and more time to focus on productive work.

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MLSophist@MLSophist• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I think 4 hours daily of serious technical research is much higher than the average. I would say 2-3 hours daily for administrative tasks (meetings, emails, maintenance stuff) with remainder allocated to whatever is urgent is typical

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GC@GCinvests8• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Sprinkle some meetings, emails, and deep work, and you have yourself an 8 hour workday

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David šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡¦šŸ‡µšŸ‡ø@discordspies• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan My job offers the option of working remotely, and while most people are largely in the office, most of the work is data entry, engineering drawings and emails/messages and other technical work. But even in an office nobody is actually working 8 hours flat out every day

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TechnoPulp@TechnoPulp• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Those types of jobs are more task / output oriented than your framing kinda suggests (ie, if not each hour of work creates x amount of output). Your job is to create a document or follow up with a bunch of people to make sure they’re on track. Being remote means…

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Dr. Dad, PhD šŸ”„šŸ”¼ā—€ļøšŸ”½ā–¶ļø@GarrettPetersen• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Meetings, communication, planning

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Gertie@gertieok• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan We should have all switched to 20-30 hour work weeks when the computer/internet came into the workplace

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4/17/2025
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Xavier Moss@xav_moss• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I'll have 1-3 hours of calls, and then there's always little low-intensity tasks like checking in on things, writing reports, getting back to people, etc. About half is high-intensity tasks like research, design, or coding, depending on the current workload. Can vary widely tho.

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Laptop Mercenary@maceskridge• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Let me introduce you to my friend, zoom calls

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Ben Liddicott@BenLiddicott• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan There's an old Dilbert cartoon where he's asked to account for his time, and he does so, something like this "Timesheet includes four hours sitting at my desk staring out of the window, but I have not included the time I spent in the shower thinking about circuit design"

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4/18/2025
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Eli Gaultney@eligaultney• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Meetings take up most of the time for our company. I actually have worked pretty hard to get them down to only like 25% of my time (bless my manager for being my "meeting shield") and the rest of the time I'm responding to a queue of alerts or tuning our systems.

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4/18/2025
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Omiron — e/acc@Omiron33• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Talking about the last episode of Severance in the break room

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4/18/2025
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midwit crisis@johnniac_3• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan You can work 60 hrs/ week creatively and efficiently. Just 1) plan ahead and block off time. 2) stick to it no matter what, only adjust as *necessary*. 3) don't do anything "fun" during those blocks (no twitter breaks). 4) when it's time to do nothing, do nothing (actually chill)

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4/18/2025
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Christopher C. Smith@christophcsmith• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I typically put up 4-6 actual billable hours per day. The rest tends to be admin, learning, meetings, service, doomscrolling, etc. There's enough work to do 8 billable hours per day, but a lot of it's intense, and I can't sustain it every week.

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Opener of the way@way_opener• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Meetings. If you're lucky you get 2 hours of meetings, 2-3 hours of technical work, an hour of answering ad hoc requests. If you're not you get 6 hours of meetings with the expectation you will also do 6 hours of technical work-which no one actually does, cutting corners instead

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4/18/2025
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kache@yacineMTB• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan dude I literally sit in front of my computer From 9-5 And read and write code And send slack messages when I get stuck I am working 100% of the time I don't have time. I am always behind

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RED3@REDavidson3• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan For me it varies. Crunch time it’s min 8 hours per day doing serious work. Can be like 14. But that burns me out. Most days it’s 2-4 hours of serious work then a few hours of meetings and such. So, exactly the same as in the office but I have an extra 1-2 hours.

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shb@himbodhisattva• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan this varies so much. one thing about high performing companies is that they really do select for people who are doing hard work for 10 hours a day. it isn't fair. you get yelled at for saying it's possible. but I've been at the 2h of real work a day places and the 10h places

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QC@QiaochuYuan• 6 months ago
Replying to @himbodhisattva

@himbodhisattva šŸ‘€

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Fergus Meiklejohn šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡¦@airuyi• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Meetings and slack

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4/18/2025
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malmesburyman@malmesburyman• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan You answer some emails and then the rest of the time you can golf, drink, jerk off, basically whatever.

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4/18/2025
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Elissa@ElissaBeth• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

I worked a 60 - 70+ week while overseeing both Tech and Product for a worldwide team. Worked M - F plus Sat night and Sun am. Some research but mostly working with ICs on code and user interfaces (zoom calls all day.) Sample daily schedule: Get up 7am, team calls started 7:30, oversee daily sprints and project calls until 11:30. Afternoon: 1:1s and PM/Design calls to work on new features, put out fires as needed, do vendor calls, interview potential new hires. Day slows down towards 7:30pm. Twice weekly record a company branded podcast. If needed, from 11:30pm - 1:30am do team calls with Pakistani teams.

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Sokoban_hero@SokobanHero• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Meetings take up some time. When you’re out of energy / don’t feel like working you might look at internet, chat with people (In person or online), read email, read a relevant book, go on a walk, work at a slower pace.

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fj@fjzeit• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I do 38 a week on average. Don’t stop for the entire day. Meetings, individual chats, planning, execution. Yesterday I had to tear myself away from my desk I was to locked in.

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Surrealistship@SurrealistShip• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan If big Corp, learning about what the Corp plans are via automated email lists and 100+ person meetings, complaining about work to build comradery with subordinates peers and superiors, documenting what work you have done for performance review and other internal metrics

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Surrealistship@SurrealistShip• 6 months ago
Replying to @SurrealistShip

@QiaochuYuan Keeping tabs on what your boss is doing so you are aligned with it (but not using their time to do so)Same with their boss

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Sambitesh Dash@dadua_daku• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan It's a different story when you're in SaaS. In a typical SaaS company you spend half the time on Sev2 and Sev3s and other half time on development work.

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Chris Pezza@chrispezza• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I'm pretty sure folks can feed tokens to chatbots for much more than 8 hrs

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4/18/2025
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Magnus Malm āš”ļø@malm_magnus• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Reading and writing code, customer req docs, prospects, tools improvement, etc. There's always stuff to do and one is always behind. One negative of WFH: Tend to lose track of time and working longer hours. šŸ˜†

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Minh Nhat Nguyen@menhguin• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I think i get 6-8 hours serious brainpower hours per day that I can allocate to anything w 100% efficiency, then about 6-8 hours just reading things I find interesting (which often does supplement serious work)

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Peter Piekarczyk@peterpme• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I find myself wiring in for hours on end. I think 8 hours is pretty easy if you’re captivated by a problem Not every day but many days are wired in

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Nathan@norsegaud• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I find it very easy to work 12 hours a day of uninterrupted work. My wife gets pissed, but I find that I’m juggling 10 different components that all have an order of operations and dependencies that I find really enjoyable. It’s like legos for adults.

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Sol 솔@Solzi_Sez• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan This is the problem for remote consultants, because we only bill for real hours worked. So while the employee sits there for eight hours (meetings, chit chat, surfing the web), we get it done in four (higher hourly rate, but in total can end up being less, plus no benefits).

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0xSignal@0signal• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Meetings, reading and answering emails. More meetings.

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Allen, Allen, Allen, & Allen@MatthewHokie• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

It's just like a regular office job in that sometimes you are slammed and there is not enough time in the day and sometimes things slow down and you bullshit around. The bullshitting around tends to be getting stuff done around your house instead of trying to find the one or two people in your office you actually want to hang with.

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Japple@Japple• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan academic here. during term/teaching/marking time we work more than the allotment, but during holidays the office is a ghost town. Very good gig generally for a salaryman lifestyle.

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lovable rogue@lovabler0gue• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan 10am drop a gm in chat 10am - 12pm drink my coffee, catch up on slack / email, quick chats 12pm - 1pm lunch & a walk 1pm - 4pm heads down coding 4-5:30pm gym, shower 5:30pm - 2am coding, takeout at desk that’s the schedule 4d/wk. 2d/wk ends at 7, sunday rest

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FlyingMonkey@FlyingMonkey24• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

For me it looks like 30-70 hours in front of my PC.. - Engineering (applying tech to solve new problems) - Operations (infra migrations/simple code migrations to support infra changes/etc) - Dev team meetings - Staff meetings - Joint client mgmt/engineering meetings - Coding - DBA - Sys Admin generalist stuff - Lots of chat w/ other devs to hammer out interface details, requirements, constraints, etc, etc.

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Trust | Guide of the Aether@TrustOriginal• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan From what I understand, you only get 2-3 real productive hours out of any employee doing any standard 8hr/day job

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4/18/2025
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yosoymario@yosoymario91• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan > Wake up > Make breakfast and coffee > Attend stand up ā€œnothing from my endā€ > Gym, Clean the house, grocery shop, cook > do whatever you have to do for that day in the remaining 2 hours > log off

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Alex Napier Holland šŸ¦@NapierHolland• 6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan 'Humans max-out at around five hours of creative work in one day' according to Deep Work, by Cal Newport. I agree. The rest is admin: which should be slashed or automated as much as possible because it's a waste of human effort.

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