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by badpun 1324 days ago
It's apprarently fairly common for office workers in Japan to clean toilets of their offices. They see as part of taking care of their surroundings (something they perceive as required for harmonious functioning as a human) and not at all beneath them. It starts in elementary schools, where children clean up the school themselves.
3 comments

We've adopted "everyone cleans toilets" in our company

0) It keeps me (the CEO) humble 1) It weeds out the prima-donnas 3) It develops respect, everyone leaves the toilet better than they found it

Haven't experienced exactly that but I often did non-coding tasks:

- lunch shopping and preparations, clean up

- transport from one branch to another for Factory Acceptance Testing

- at one point I worked as a consultant for a rather large Norwegian company and one thing I noted was the the most senior leader I ever saw in that company (that I was aware if at least) was also one of those I remember who would make sure to tidy the kitchen and make sure everything went into the dishwasher

Sure, different cultures, different rules.

If you interviewed at a company and got told "Every quarter, the know-nothing jerkoff CEO wants to see 50 printed pages of your code", and you accepted the job, hey, you've accepted that this is the norm in that company...

What if the "know-nothing jerkoff CEO" also printed off his 50 pages of code at the same time? Would it make it an acceptable deal at that point?