Ann Elkin, who works for Brill Co., has been sent out to conduct two customer evaluations, which have gone much more quickly than Ann anticipated. Her supervisor does not expect Ann back until after lunch. It is now 10:30 A.M., and Ann would like to run some personal errands and then go to lunch before returning to work at 1:00 P.M. Should Ann take the time? Would you? Why or why not? Is this any different than if Ann was sitting at her office desk using a work computer to access her personal email, surf the internet, check social media or make personal phone calls on her work phone?
No Ann does not take much time he has done so many personal works within the time expected for customer evaluations, he was finished the official work in less time so he is able to do other work. Yes, I can since it depends on our capability for customer evaluations. So a good cognitive ability person can perform the task efficiently.
It is different than doing personal work in the office as a negative effect on other employees. Personal errands outside the company is different from check social media or make personal phone calls on her work phone inside the office. It is not allowed generally to do inside the office, so he is supposed to do office work though they have completed the task of half-day up to the lunch. The survivor will be angry for such personal work inside office premises, So it is different from doing personal errand outside.
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