A veteran supervisor had the meat-packing plant running like clockwork until a fresh-faced production manager named Bob stormed in on day one, vowing to “right the ship” by banning all overtime, zero exceptions, no matter the sick calls or vacations piling up daily.
What started as a smug cost-cutting decree quickly detonated when two entire production lines sat idle, hemorrhaging $120,000 in a single shift while Bob watched his grand plan sink spectacularly.
New manager banned all overtime on day one; production halted, company lost $120k, and he was gone in three months.

























Walking into a new management role and swinging the ban-hammer on overtime is the corporate equivalent of speed-running a trust fall with strangers: adorably optimistic, deeply doomed.
Bob wasn’t entirely wrong that heavy overtime can signal under-staffing, but declaring “zero OT” on day one without a backup plan is like deciding to diet by throwing out the fridge while the grocery store is closed.
The core issue is predictable absenteeism. In large teams, unplanned absences (sick days, emergencies, vacations) are mathematically guaranteed.
Gallup research shows the average U.S. employee misses about 5.7 unplanned days per year, but in physically demanding blue-collar environments like meat packing, rates climb higher, sometimes dramatically. When a department of 220 routinely runs 17 people short, that’s not a surprise, it’s the Tuesday forecast.
Paola Cecchi-Dimeglio, affiliate professor at Harvard Business School, outlines a key pitfall for new leaders: “Some make the mistake of pushing too much change too soon, disrupting workflows before fully understanding team dynamics.” Bob skipped the listening tour and went straight to edict mode – classic engineer brain seeing overtime as waste instead of the safety valve keeping production alive.
The smarter, longer-term fix? Over-hire and cross-train “floaters,” exactly as several Redditors pointed out. Companies that maintain 8–12% extra staffing capacity dramatically reduce overtime costs while improving morale and retention.
A 2021 study by the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) found that organizations using flexible staffing pools cut unplanned overtime by up to 60% and saw voluntary turnover drop 18%. Bob’s fatal mistake wasn’t the destination (lower OT reliance), it was thinking he could teleport there overnight without building the road first.
Neutral takeaway: new managers, please shadow the floor for at least two weeks, ask dumb questions, and treat your supervisors like the treasure map they are. Your ego will survive. But your budget (and your job) might not if you don’t.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
Some people agree Bob was technically right about over-reliance on overtime but executed it disastrously.







Others emphasize new managers should never make big changes immediately and must listen first.













Some blame upper management or the hiring process for bringing in a cost-cutter who ignored reality.





Others are simply stunned Bob lasted three whole months.


In the end, Bob lasted a whopping three months before the plant sailed happily on without him. The real moral? Never underestimate the power of listening to the people who’ve been keeping the lights on while you were still unpacking your desk plant.
Would you have maliciously complied like OP, or tried one last time to save Bob from himself? Drop your verdict below: team “let him drown” or team “rescue the rookie”?









