If you’ve ever worked in tech, you know that “urgent” doesn’t always mean urgent. One developer recently found himself racing through the city after his boss demanded he get to the office ASAP for a last-minute fix only to learn that the supposed emergency presentation wasn’t until hours later.
The story, which spread quickly across Reddit, is a masterclass in corporate panic, misplaced priorities, and how poor communication can turn a ten-minute walk into a half-hour ride straight into irony.
A stressed developer rushes to the office on a company-paid ride after being told a CEO needs urgent changes



















Workplace urgency often leads to knee-jerk decisions and this story perfectly captures how misplaced priorities can waste everyone’s time.
The developer was already on their way to the office when their tech lead began frantically messaging on Slack. The CEO apparently needed an urgent fix to the company platform before a major presentation.
The developer, still ten minutes away on foot, calmly offered to walk and start the update upon arrival, estimating the task would only take fifteen minutes.
But panic overrode logic. The tech lead insisted they take a rideshare using the company account to “get there ASAP.”
Despite explaining that the ride would take longer than walking due to traffic, the lead doubled down. The developer waited five minutes for the car, sat through twenty minutes of gridlock, and finally reached the office nearly half an hour later.
Once there, they completed the changes in under twenty minutes only to learn that the CEO’s presentation wasn’t scheduled for another five to six hours.
Organizational behavior experts often note that “urgency culture” in workplaces where everything feels like an emergency—can lead to poor decision-making and employee burnout.
According to Harvard Business Review, false urgency often stems from fear and lack of planning rather than genuine necessity. This story is a textbook example of how micromanagement and emotional overreaction waste time, money, and morale.
Ironically, if the team had simply let the developer walk, the job would’ve been done in half the time with far less stress and a smaller rideshare bill.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
This group vented about poor management and workplace inefficiency, mocking bosses who panic or create unnecessary urgency









These commenters joked about corporate chaos and the irony of being rushed only to wait, using humor to capture shared frustration





This group discussed work technology, offering advice or humor about Slack, Wi-Fi, and the balance between accessibility and burnout






These users leaned into cynicism, describing absurd corporate culture where overreactions, poor systems, and misplaced priorities define modern workplaces






![Boss Demanded He Hurry To The Office, He Still Got There Late… And For Nothing [Reddit User] − I was in the EXACT situation at my last job. I was on the train, about 20 minutes away from work.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762526208241-5.webp)



![Boss Demanded He Hurry To The Office, He Still Got There Late… And For Nothing [Reddit User] − So you're saying that you have a notification service that](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762526227268-22.webp)


Would you have taken the walk or the ride? And how do you handle “emergencies” that clearly aren’t?









