China's Tech Work Culture Is So Intense People Sleep and Bathe In Their Offices (techinsider.io)
An anonymous reader writes: China's technology sector is booming at an intensely fast pace. Many startups are seeing their business grow faster than they can hire, placing a heavy burden on those already working within the industry. "The pace of Chinese internet company growth is extremely fast," Cui Meng, general manager and cofounder of data startup Goopal, told Reuters. "I've been to the US and the competitive environment there isn't as intense as in China." This has led many workers to put in overtime, sleeping at their desks, on cots, or even in provided bunk beds. Many employees are encouraged to live at the office during the workweek. Lunchtime naps are generally allowed, and those who end up staying past midnight usually pass out in the office.Reuters has amazing photographs of such offices and employees.
When I think of China the first thing that comes to mind is technical innovation.
Startups here would do this if they could get away with it, perhaps some already do...
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
So the guys who were denouncing that France wants to forbid companies to email/text their employees after office hours (seven articles past this one) will be cheering here or ...?
They're norhing more than modern slaves.
Things may have changed but I had heard once that a lot of the workforce comes from rural China into the city to work and leave when their job is over. It would make sense for companies to provide temporary lodging if these people are just there to work the job. It doesn't sound much different than when farms setup living quarters for migrant workers.
They bathe? Cowards.
I remember basically living at work for a few years, slaving away for no good reason (other than ship-ship-ship). I had a friend of mine who worked for a fairly well-known maker of tax software, half their year was basically crunch time complete with in-office cots. They were treated well outside crunch time but I swear to god it aged him prematurely.
I don't think I'd ever work like that again, at the end of the day the code quality was poor and it burnt out all the talent. I didn't think it would be possible to be sick of pizza, but you learn these things.
Sure made the bastard CEO a hell of lot of money...
crazy dynamite monkey
Bathe, that is.
Thank you, and good evening Detroit!
"God rewards the diligent."
Is that Chinese for "Arbeit macht frei"?
-Styopa
Looks like a bunch of people sleeping on the job to me.
d-_-b
Most of my coworkers do "Seattle Hundreds" which is sixteen hours a day Monday through Thursday and twelve hours a day Friday through Sunday. Fortunately I have a health problem I can use as an excuse to get out of the office every day before 8pm. With the long commutes to get to affordable housing, it saves a lot of time to sleep at the office and shower in the building's gym.
Maybe there are some cases of this, but from what I saw: they started at 9:00, had a nap directly after lunch, and they went home at 18:00. There were thousands of workers at this location in the tech sector.
In the 22 years I was an engineer I got to take a week off two or three times, otherwise vacation time was used by extending weekends to 3 days. The only time I was able to take more than a week off was when I was between jobs.
I pity those poor Chinese engineers!
After working full time as a dentist (4 days a week), for a few years, and finding the same sort of problem getting time off, I realized that I needed more between-jobs time. So now I do locum tenens work. It doesn't pay nearly as well as full time work in a clinic, but it sure makes life more pleasant. There seems to be plenty of locum tenens work available.
Depressing is. China is working hard to out America America.
They don't have to destroy unions where there never were any.
These pictures just look like cleaner more expensive sweat shops to me. I wouldn't be surprised if they were carefully staged too, like their empty apartment buildings and whatnot.
This is what happens when capitalism is unrestrained. In every country undergoing an industrial revolution there's a mix of outdated feudalistic modes of thought and inefficiency matching worker to task that allows this sort of thing -- whether it's mining camps, heavy industry, or middle commerce. Scrooge's shop in A Christmas Carol wasn't at all far from the common, nor Song of the Shirt unrealistic. Only government reigning in corporate interests for the common man can stop these travesties. So here's my hope for the Chinese people to say, "enough" and make their government fix this.
If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
Those are the exact same photographs that were used in the techinsider site, just in a different order. What is the purpose of convincing us that there are "amazing" photos at another site when your main link already showed them to us? Are you just trying to wean more clicks out of us? Are you being paid to do this?
Back in the 1980's, the FBI would raid Silicon Valley companies to free Chinese workers who brought over to the U.S. illegally, work long hours for little or no pay, and locked up each night inside the buildings.
A couple years ago I got tired of rents going up so much in Silicon Valley so I ditched my apartment, bought a van, and lived at the office. I worked for a large tech company. There were showers there. I slept in my van in the parking lot. Turns out there's actually thousands of tech workers doing this in Silicon Valley, but there's a stigma surrounding it. (There's a reason I'm posting this anonymously.)
Part of me was doing it in protest of Agile and Scrum. There was no reason I had to physically be in the office day in and day out other than to service daily standup meetings. (Dialing into them was considered taboo.) Eventually I got a job at less a regressive company that sees Scrum as the micromanagement fad that it is and is fine with remote work so I moved far, far away.
Now I live in a low cost of living paradise filled with natural beauty. No more crowded city with insane rents. Don't have to be surrounded by crushing poverty and homelessness anymore. I wish more people recognized the absurdity of taking all the good paying jobs and cramming them into overpopulated cities. It serves no purpose. But at least I got out.
Either
a) they are being paid hourly
b) they have equity in the company and expect to get rich
c) the employer has some sort of leverage over them
So which is it? I know when I was very young I was much more willing to work 120 hour weeks. I did it because of (b). Then the startup I worked for failed and I got nothing. Then the next one. Then the next one. Those companies didn't fail because of any failings on my part. I delivered good code as fast as humanly possible again and again. And it was for naught. Bad business models, bad stock market, bad sales etc can all torpedo great engineering, no matter how superhuman an effort you put in.
I still work in a startup but now I work 50-60 hours a week and have a personal life. I eventually just realized that most of the work you put in past about 50 hours is wasted effort that just burns you out faster. That they have engineers working at a ridiculous pace like that tells me that management doesn't know what it is doing so it just tells everyone to pedal harder.
I think it's hard for a lot of folks to see both sides of the picture. I've worked both "crappy" jobs at a call center all the way up to a programmer for a telecom. There are times I wonder if I get paid way too much for doing so little work as a programmer compared to the crazy non-stop work as a call center agent. And while the call center job was a lot of work it always impressed me how some folks could handle that job happily and make thing seem a lot better. While sometimes my very well paid co-workers in telecom would complain about ridiculous things. I think some of those folks despite that crazy life style are having fun. They're pushing their abilities to the limits and accomplishing more than a lot of folks are. It's sometimes nice to be able to focus on one thing and to give it your all in life. Also letting your workers nap is a good thing. They've shown a 15 minute nap can double productivity. If I was the boss I'd encourage it. Life is a lot of things to different people for some it's anything but work but for some it is work. So either way, I wouldn't see it as bad necessarily.
Programmer Xiang Shiyang, 28, works until 3 or 4 a.m. at least twice a week at Renren Credit Management, which uses big data to help firms manage financial risk, leaving little room to socialize outside of work.
"I don't have that many opportunities or much time to find a girlfriend," he said.
The company provides cots for workers like Xiang to sleep on during late nights.
"Actually working overtime is a very casual thing," he said. "Because I've invested the whole of my being into this company."
These Chinese companies should step up and provide some high end "entertainment" for these single young guys that live at the office.
They could have one office as the dedicated "Happy Boy" room.
""My kid misses me, I get home and he lunges at me like a small wolf," Liu said, speaking about his three-year-old son who he only sees on weekends. "That makes me feel a bit guilty."
Er.. No. That makes you a fucking crap parent who should never even have had kids.
welcome our new Chinese overlords! [couldn't resist]
chinese companies are run by individuals, not the state
unlike the US communist state where corporations need state support to survive
Anybody working from home bathes and sleeps there too, you don't have to be Chinese for that.
You can't handle the truth.
.....wtf is going on in the US?
Up here in Canada I work as a sys admin/it manager for a school. Now I do not make the big bucks as when I was a consultant, however I make a better than average salary and usually put in 35-38/ hours a week.I've of course had 100+ hour weeks but that happens maaaaybe 1-2 times a year. After that a loaded week will be 45-50 hours, and that happens maybe 5-6 times a year tops....The rest is 35-38 hours/week. Oh and those weeks I work above 38 hours, I end up banking the time and take them back eventually.
Oh and I STARTED out with 6 weeks paid vacation/year. And every holiday I am off....Rarely every get called past 3 PM, never on week-ends....
I will never get rich at my current job, that's for sure, but I will have a comfortable life and retirement too with a government pension plan.
Does this person not know chinese culture? Lunch naps are there because everyone goes and drinks at lunch.
not in hong kong. can get my team to go to the office in central. they bathe at home
Because living at your workplace for 3 weeks straight is standard practice in China. It usually means they get a 3 or 4 day week-end, which is important when the rest of the family lives in the neighbouring town.
I went through the same experience pre-2000, I would sleep at the office and work 100+ hour weeks at time.
The thing is I don't actually regret it because it was just at the start of my career and I learned a lot of stuff extremely rapidly that has served me well though the years.
It's not like I'd do it again but I don't see anything wrong with other people working like that if they desire to.
Unlike you, I have not yet found the amount of pizza that would make me sick of pizza...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/05/13...
Seriously, and lame jokes aside about 'nerds and sex' it can't be healthy not to have a social life, and if you can only have a social life in the office because you have to eat, sleep, shower and work in the office then where is somone supposed to have a fuck? And if you do want to make a lame joke about 'nerds and sex', then where are they self masturbating?
It's happening people.
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
So the guys who were denouncing that France wants to forbid companies to email/text their employees after office hours (seven articles past this one) will be cheering here or ...?
Yikes, hopefully you don't need your doctor or hospital attendant after hours in France...
What is this "bathing"? Sounds like a complete waste time.
Either they are creating a bubble or they aren't investing enough in education. They have over a billion people and socialized education. How can they not be able to hire fast enough? The average citizen is still totally poor.. it's not like China is some posh low population density area where you might reasonably have such problems.
Where I work we have this system called an open-plan office. While it is still difficult to deter people from eating while working, it does limit the sleeping in the office thing. I also haven't seen anybody bathing in the office yet (thank goodness, but on the other hand it might be sorely needed for some). I'd say we have made lots of productivity gains by limiting the non-work behavior like that.
(For the usual humor-impaired /. crowd: yes, the above is meant in an ironical way.)
Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
I'm genuinely interested. Do Chinese start-ups give stock to employees? Or is it all cash and bonuses? I've worked for multiple US companies and stock is one of the big drivers to pay over and above the base salary. Sure, there's employees at start-ups all over the world who work night and day, but they're doing it because they have a stake in the company usually.
When I started work I was required to sleep in the stock room for tobacco so as to be available 24/7. UK early 1950s. Main London stores (e.g. Harrods) had staff sleep on premises until war years. P R China now at same stage.
Regards Eion MacDonald
These are the faces of those stealing from the US.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
Chinese society is different to western society in that the local gender ratio plays a very important role in people's work patterns. Because there are so many more men than women, ordinary men are forced to work all hours of the day so that they can eventually afford a car and a house. Without either of these they will not be able to find a wife. In some parts of the country e.g. Haikou, the ratio is up to 140/100. While this does not apply to 'fuerdai' (second generation new wealth), it does still mean that men from poorer backgrounds are open to far more exploitation and abuse.
In China if a women is not married by 23 and a man by 25, their peers and family start asking all kinds of awkward questions.
In turn, Chinese women are becoming increasingly more materialistic. As the female dating show contestant, Ma Nuo famously said " I would rather be crying in a BMW that laughing on the back of a bicycle." ()
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_would_rather_cry_in_a_BMW