The Unwritten Rules Everyone Feels
Some things at work don’t make it into the handbook, yet everyone senses them. At least, that's how it used to be. When employees ignore the unwritten rules, it ends up on HR's desk, and they're begging young employees to take these common sense hints.
Using Offensive Language In The Workplace
Off-color jokes or slurs to your colleagues or just generally don’t “lighten the mood”; they stain it. A single ill-chosen phrase can follow you longer than a typo, and everyone who hears it will probably never forget it. Whenever you speak, choose speech that builds bridges, not burns them.
Using Company Resources For Side Projects
That printer, laptop, software license, and even the office messenger aren’t your personal use kit. Using them for side hustles might seem smart, but it is essentially stealing. When discovered, it raises questions about integrity, and those questions rarely fade quietly.
Disregarding Safety Protocols
Shortcuts might save seconds, but can cost lives (and jobs). Skipping protective gear or bypassing procedures turns small risks into major accidents. Protocols exist because someone once got hurt. This means you should learn from history before it repeats itself with you (or someone else) as a statistic.
Ignoring Instructions From Supervisors
Guidance from leadership is strategically placed there to offer you much-needed direction. By brushing off instructions, you undermine trust and derail projects. Even if you disagree, follow through first, then discuss. Respecting the chain of command keeps operations smooth.
Being Disrespectful To Clients Or Customers
Every interaction with a client is a reflection on the whole company. A sharp tone or dismissive gesture, even if not intentional, can undo months of goodwill. Courtesy costs nothing, but its return value is often immeasurable. The best course of action is to study clients and act accordingly.
Leaving Workstations Messy Or Unsafe
You just finished printing a few documents. But when someone walks in after you, the paper has run out, staples and paper clips are all over the floor, and the printer's power cable is unplugged. Treat shared workspaces like shared property, as leaving things scattered is inconsiderate.
Publicly Criticizing Company Decisions
The company went with plan B, despite plan A seeming to be the best. Instead of airing this in the proper forum, you took it online. The right way? Direct concerns through appropriate channels. This way, you’ll speak to the ones involved and get to the whys, rather than speculate.
Skipping Required Training Sessions
Training is a shield. And each missed session leaves a gap; gaps that show up in performance. Skills fade faster than you think, and sharpening them is part of staying relevant. Those who feel there is nothing new to learn will find that this arrogance comes back to bite them.
Posting Inappropriate Content About Work Online
Vile comments left online (even after deletion) last forever, especially when screenshots were taken. You’d think an impulsive rant on social media would be harmless, but boy, are you wrong. These can outlive your tenure and even be the reason you lose your current job and struggle to find another.
Discussing Salaries In A Confrontational Way
Pay conversations can be constructive if they stay respectful. But turning them into public grievances breeds tension that sticks. Colleagues may begin to choose sides, disrupting cooperation. It’s the sort of workplace friction that can be felt for days after the conversation.
Ignoring The Dress Code
You dress how you want to be addressed, right? Clothing sends messages before you speak. A formal meeting in flip-flops? That’s broadcasting “unprepared”. Dress codes signal respect, and breaking them often, your professionalism frays quicker than a bargain tie left in the wash.
Taking Excessive Personal Calls
That ringtone blaring during a client presentation is a sign you’re elsewhere. Aim to limit personal calls to emergencies and step outside when you must answer. The workplace is a stage; avoid letting your script get hijacked by a chatty friend.
Arriving Late Without Notice
Punctuality tells others their time matters, but repeated tardiness whispers the opposite. A single delay can derail a team’s rhythm, and these are the kinds of things management rarely takes lightly. If you are running late, notify someone. Better a brief heads-up than an awkward entrance.
Missing Deadlines Repeatedly
Deadlines are trust contracts in disguise. Break them enough, and reliability disappears. Consistently delivering late forces colleagues to pick up slack, breeding silent resentment. Protect your reputation by managing workload honestly, not heroically at the eleventh hour.
Sharing Confidential Company Information
Loose lips sink more than ships—they can sink deals that are life-changing. For instance, a casual mention at a dinner party could leak strategy to competitors. Your role as a trusted company member is to safeguard sensitive data like a prized family recipe; once out, it can’t be taken back.
Gossiping About Colleagues
Office rumor mills churn faster than espresso machines, yet they leave a bitter aftertaste. When whispers replace facts, trust leaves the room. And one careless comment can ignite conflicts that smolder for months. Also, if someone can speak about another to you, what makes you sure you aren’t tomorrow’s topic?
Refusing To Work As Part Of A Team
Solo acts rarely win in an ensemble official setting. Declining collaboration signals you are being resistant rather than independent. Teams remember who pulled together and who pulled away. So, show up for group efforts because unity often delivers results no single star can claim.
Taking Extended Breaks Without Approval
It's lunch hour, and you take your 1-hour break, that’s fine. However, when you stretch a fifteen-minute pause into thirty steals time from someone else’s schedule, that’s wrong. And unfair. Break policies keep workflow balanced, and whenever you sneak extra minutes, your reliability shrinks fast.
Neglecting To Document Important Work
One thing we all need to realize is that unrecorded work is invisible work. When details vanish, so does accountability. Documentation keeps projects moving even if someone leaves midstream. A clear paper trail can rescue you when questions arise months later.
Withholding Information Needed By Others
Whenever you decide to keep key details to yourself that are meant to be shared, it slows progress and sows frustration. Information hoarding might feel strategic, but it weakens the entire team. Share what’s necessary because success often depends on how freely knowledge flows.
Using Company Funds For Personal Purchases
That “just this once” coffee on the company card leaves a lasting mark in the books. Auditors don’t account for harmless intentions, so even small purchases can raise red flags. From there, suspicion can snowball, and trust is lost.
Using Company Email For Personal Matters
A forwarded joke to your cousin could land in the CEO’s inbox. Do you want that? Company servers keep logs far longer than you imagine. You need to treat your work email like a glass window, not a locked drawer. Transparency saves careers, and sometimes dignity.
Taking Office Supplies Home Without Permission
Pens, paper, printer ink; small items seem insignificant. But this repeated “borrowing” is noticed, and it erodes the trust employers place in staff. Inventory shortages raise questions no one wants to answer. Those missing staplers? They didn’t just walk away on their own; they were stolen. By you!
Photo By: Kaboompics.com, Pexels
Engaging In Office Politics To Undermine Others
Whisper campaigns and backroom alliances poison the atmosphere. Short-term wins from political games often carry long-term consequences, and those discussions do not belong in offices. Build influence through merit, not maneuvering and driving agendas that are outright offensive to others.