• Jrockwar
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    6 hours ago

    Something I find incredibly weird about US company culture is how they talk about overtime like it’s a good thing.

    “Our employees worked weekends, days and nights to make this happen! We wouldn’t have succeeded without people who are willing to give up their personal lives!”

    I hope they not only succeed but get shares. Doing weekends or nights for a company you don’t (partially) own feels like a con.

    • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      28 minutes ago

      I was thinking about the US lately. Can’t remember why exactly maybe some friends popped up on my Facebook.

      But I decided it actually wouldn’t be that bad of a place to live. If it wasn’t for the toxic work culture.

      If they worked normal hours and had 20+ holidays it would be alright. Other shit annoy me and you would have to make sure you live in the nice areas but I could live there and enjoy it. But the work culture is an absolute no go. Wish they were like the Aussie. Show up do hard day of work fuck off for some beers. If the surfs good call in sick and end up seeing your boss in the line up. Work hard for a few months then decide fuck it and go to Bali for a weekend accidentally stay there for two months then decide you need to go back to work because travelling is too much effort walk into a job 1 week after landing home.

    • IMALlama@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Find people who care about what they’re working on and they’ll go well beyond the extra mile. As an extra motivator, make it clear the company won’t be around if they don’t succeed. I’m sure these employees have shares, but tha only really matters if the company succeeds (extra motivation!). Unfortunately, there have been a ton of green/green-adjacent automotive “startups” that have struggled to gain a foothold. See also:

      (I’m sure many others)

      • Yaky@slrpnk.net
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        2 hours ago

        Here are a few other interesting green automotive startups that didn’t make it:

        • Sono Motors’ Sono: Compact EV with solar panels, power sharing, intended to be easily repairable and included a detail manual. They had prototypes but never went to production. Now the company does niche solar applications.
        • Workhorse: Series Hybrid (think Chevy Volt) Pickup truck with onboard power for tools etc (was announced around or even before Rivian). Was a very pragmatic idea IMO. Later sort-of resold to Lordstown. Now company does some other things, like drones.
        • Lordstown Motors’ Endurance: EV Pickup Truck with hub motors. Made a few hundred, but they have been dragging it out long enough for Ford to make electric pickups. And the idea wasn’t too original even when it was announced.