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Boss Told Employee To Be On Time, So He Adjusted His Schedule To The Minute And Now His Boss Is Regretting It

by Leona Pham
November 21, 2025
in Social Issues

Ever been micromanaged to the point where you decided to play your boss’s rules, but with a twist? That’s exactly what happened to this employee when their boss insisted they “be on time.”

What sounds like a simple request turned into a power struggle when the employee took the boss’s directive literally, changing their work hours and causing a ripple effect that their manager didn’t quite expect. Sometimes, following the rules to the letter is the best way to turn the tables and it’s safe to say this employee got the last laugh.

A worker, frustrated with his boss’s power trip over being 1 minute late, adjusts his work schedule a little bit

Boss Told Employee To Be On Time, So He Adjusted His Schedule To The Minute And Now His Boss Is Regretting It
not the actual photo

'Boss is power hungry and told me to be "on time", so I changed my work times a bit?'

So did my appreticeship with this Company and after the 3 years i moved to a standard IT Position at a plant near my home.

The first six months went great and the communication with colleagues and boss where good until one day.

He wanted to talk to me about a few things, but one stuck out like a sore thumb.

He asked me to pull my time sheet up where all our log into work and log out of work times are saved.

He told me to be on time because i was 3 times too late in the last 2 months. He would check it regularly and would get back in touch...

The funny thing is, I was 1 !! min too late on these days because of traffic reasons (I drive 25-30 min), and I also stayed longer on these days!

So he told me to better plan for it and he wants me to be here exactly at 6.

I was furious about this. It seemed like such a useless complain and just a way of keeping me under control and to mark him as the boss.

Normally I would come in at like 5:50 (work time only starts at 6) and leave around the 13:50 mark

(work ends at 13:45 and paid overtime starts 31 min after closing time).

I would start working before 6 with easy work like mails and stuff and worked a bit overtime because I had to pack up.

Now I just drink coffee and stand around while looking at my phone until it is exactly 6:00 and I log in.

No min early no min late. He wants me to work exactly at 6 ok. I will but I will also leave when my time is done.

I also pack my things neatly so I can log out exactly at 13:45 and I don't stay longer because I need to be on time!

Overall he lost work time with useless Power tripping, he never mentioned the change because he cant do anything about it.

In many workplaces, the tension between structure and autonomy quietly shapes how people show up each day. In this story, the OP had an apprenticeship at a company, then moved into an IT role at a nearby plant. For months, things went well until the new boss called them in and pointed out the log‑in sheet: the OP was late three times in two months.

Each time by exactly one minute, due to traffic, yet they’d stayed later to compensate. The boss told them to arrive exactly at 6:00 a.m., no grace, so the OP did just that. No earlier, no traded minutes for extra effort. They showed up at 6:00, left exactly at 13:45 when paid time ended, and avoided overtime. On the surface they complied. But underneath, the relationship shifted.

What’s going on emotionally is important. The OP felt undervalued: they had been going above and beyond, coming in early, staying late, and then the boss seemed to zero in on a one‑minute lateness as though it mattered more than the effort.

To them, it wasn’t about punctuality: it felt like control, power, lack of trust. So they dialed back. They followed the rule, yes, but stopped doing anything extra. That withdrawal is a subtle form of resistance, born out of frustration and a desire to reclaim autonomy.

Rather than seeing this as simple defiance, imagine the OP was trying to realign the implicit “extra effort” contract. They had been giving more; the boss demanded strict punctuality but gave no acknowledgement or freedom.

The OP’s change in behavior, perfect punctuality, zero overtime, isn’t rebellion so much as boundary setting. It’s what people often do when they feel micromanaged: they continue to perform, but stop investing emotionally, stop going beyond minimum.

From a psychological lens, this reflects the vital role of autonomy in job design. Research shows that when employees believe they have control over aspects of how they work, their engagement, innovation, and job satisfaction rise.

A study notes how job autonomy and meaningful work drive employees to craft their jobs and invest effort.

Conversely, when control is withdrawn or when employees feel their autonomy is undermined, motivation can drop even if surface compliance remains.

So in this case, the boss demanded 100% punctuality without granting flexibility or acknowledging the OP’s earlier extra work. The OP reacted by doing the low‑risk, low‑emotional‑investment approach: clock in, clock out, nothing more. The result? The boss lost the extra time the OP used to give; the OP regained a sense of fairness but lost discretionary effort.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

This group shared stories of how small tardiness led to disproportionate reactions

algy888 − I’ve had something similar at my job.

I was three minutes late, strolled in like it was no big deal.

Grabbed my coffee and headed straight to my truck (no morning chit chat as I was late, so I left the yard first). End of day got a talking to...

Seems Main Manager saw me late and talked to my department manager who had to talk to my foreman who then had to talk to me.

“You mean that you wasted almost an hour of time talking about my 3 minutes?

How about you look at the security cameras and see that I also left the yard 10-15 minutes before anyone else?”m

Now they are mad that I pointed out that our end of day bell can’t keep its time and sometimes goes off 30-45 seconds late.

I just leave when my phone hits time and it drives the main manager insane.

Geronimo2U − This is so common. I worked with a girl who was brilliant at what she did.

She lived furthest from the office and would commute an hour and a half each day on one of the most notoriously bad(as in traffic congestion) roads around.

Always in early and leave late. One day she was 15 minutes late so they pulled her aside to speak to her.

Her response was that all those times that she worked back and they never said anything to her. The one day that she was late though....

So she said "s__ew it" no more working back.

It's incredible how stupid some are.

ThirtyMileSniper − I had a falling out with a manager over overtime which was promised and then tried to walk back after the event.

He tried to offer lesser alternatives. I didn't accept them, told him to shove it up his arse and that I would be working to a stopwatch from then on.

I then looked at the time. "Oh look I say, my forty hour are up in 10 minutes. It was Thursday afternoon.

The following week I had a three grand raise.

These commenters reflected on experiences where managers failed to recognize the hard work or unique circumstances of employees

Strange-Act7264 − I was on a remote assignment in the Air Force back in the day. We used to come in on weekends and work on equipment

since there was NOTHING else to do (no civilian community at all).

One day the base asked for volunteers for an inspection, so me and the other two technicians volunteered.

The wing commander gave us the rest of the day off afterwards.

Well, our shop boss called us in anyway. When I commented later that day that I thought a Colonel had some authority to give time off,

our shop boss said, "not in MY shop". Needless to say, we stopped coming in on down time.

Shop boss was puzzled when the backlog started climbing. No more free work for you, n__bnuts.

mikemojc − I supervise a small call center for a state government agency with 12 people.

We're open 7:30-5:00 M-F. We have some folks that start @ 7:30 and leave @ 4:30 with an hour for lunch, and some that work 8-5,

also with an hour for lunch. For the business, it's important to have folks ready for calls right at 7:30 AM,

as well as folks to take calls right up until 4:59 PM. To be able to take calls right at 7:30,

people would need to come in a few minutes before to boot up their machine and log into all the various help applications; password rest stuff,

network monitoring stuff, server monitoring stuff, call queue applications.

On a perfect day, it takes about 5-10 minutes to get everything connected and verified.

Instead of asking the Openers (folks that start taking calls at 7:30) to come in early and give their time away, I've set their hours from 7:20AM to 4:20 PM.

The Closers (folks who are on the phones until 5-ish) will often have a call come in a the last minute,

sometimes literally @ 4:59, and the Caller still expects (reasonably simple) issues to be completed right away.

Rather than ask them to stay late and give their time away, I've set their hours from 8:10AM to 5:10 PM.

Company expectations are met and it's quite rare that anyone is asked to work beyond their schedule times.

Failure to address your employees needs IS a failure to address a business need.

Ninja1us − I work for a healthcare company. One time my previous boss and our safety director cornered me and I got told to be on time daily.

( We are talking a minute or so late due to new technology for clocking in) when I tried to apologize and explain,

the safety director told me to keep my mouth shut and go about my day...so I did.

Three months later of not saying a word we have our annual inspection coming up from the state.

The state inspectors came to me and started asking a few questions as they always do with some employees.

I asked them if I'm allowed to speak, they said yes.

So I gave them three months worth of safety concerns I could have told the safety director had I been allowed to speak.

Long story short I costed my company over 6 mil in fines, 3 corporate jobs, and nobody could say anything to me about it.

I no longer work there, was not fired. I found a better job for better pay

These Redditors expressed frustration with micromanagement

Majin-Squall − Had an employee that was late all the time. Probably every day she was late.

But she was a super hard worker and she almost always came in on her scheduled days off if I needed her to

and always stayed later when needed which was probably every day as well.

So her being late was never an issue with me.

cfgregory − I done this at jobs as well. I am in IT. Normally, I would work on weekends to apply updates, or late if there are server issues.

But if you are going to micromanage me, better hope the server goes down during set office hours.

sayonaradespair − Had my boss give me HELL for logging 1 min after the scheduled time,

one day before I left work 45 minutes past log out time..not one word about it

I hate hate hate micromanagement

These users highlighted how strict policies on timekeeping or unfair treatment over minor issues

dawno64 − I worked a factory job with a time clock system for a short period.

Was stuck in the line for the clock one day and punched in a click late. They docked me 15 minutes "per their policy".

From that day on if I was running late at all, I made sure to punch in at 14 minutes and 55 seconds passed the hour.

Myte342 − I worked a job where I was promised to raise after I have worked there three months.

When the time came they cut my proposed raised in half because I was 5 mins late on one day during those three months. I didn't stay there long.

itsfish20 − Worked with an older woman who was like this! I'm 34 and she was maybe 20 years older than me when I was at this place 5 years...

She lived on the south side of the city, 30-45 minutes away depending on the time of day and traffic

but would always be at work 45-1 hour early to just help out with morning stuff.

Well one bad winter morning her bus got stuck behind gridlock traffic on the way to the city and was an hour or so late.

She was the only employee who wasn't in their 20's who did not have a car and was the only one from the south side.

When she got into work she apologized to everyone for being late and got right into working, no more than 20 minutes later,

a manager pulled her into her office to yell at her for being late.

She had zero control over it and every person there knew it yet management decided to yell at her for being late...

From then on she stopped showing up early, stopped helping out in other departments and only focused on her job.

She would be done by noon most days and then go help the E-commerce team or the sales team with something

but now she just would listed to audiobooks all afternoon while reading the news!

She would pack up at 4:55 and be the first out the door at 5pm no matter what day of the week it was!

Management started to realize a decline in other departments productivity and asked what happened,

they all said the coworker stopped helping out and only focused on her job now.

They again pulled her into a meeting to ask what was up and she told them she was yelled at for something that was totally out of her control

so she was no longer going out of her way to help others as that was not her job.

She left that meeting and continued to do this until the day I left that place and looking on LinkedIn she is now retired!

What’s your take on the situation? Have you ever had to deal with a micromanaging boss? Share your thoughts below!

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

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