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The original was posted on /r/maliciouscompliance by /u/Enteprise-srl on 2025-01-27 15:45:47+00:00.
A few years ago, I worked at a mid-sized company where the atmosphere was… let’s say, not ideal. The manager had this ever-growing suspicion that people were just waiting for the right time to leave. He believed that morale was low, and that the team was barely holding it together. And while I’m not sure where he got this idea, he started imposing more and more controls on us to “monitor” productivity.
One day, he introduced a new rule: “Every task, every email, every conversation must be logged. No exceptions.” The justification? “I need to know exactly what you’re doing, and I need to be sure nothing’s falling through the cracks.”
Now, here's the problem—my team was already working at full capacity, dealing with multiple tasks every single day. But suddenly, we were being told to log everything. If you were sending a simple email, you had to log it. Writing a report? Log it. Setting up a meeting? Log it. Every little action had to be documented.
I tried explaining how ridiculous this was. But the response was always the same: “I need to make sure you’re on task.” He didn’t trust us to do our jobs, so he created a system where every move had to be tracked and validated by someone else.
I didn’t see any way out of it, so I decided to comply. But I wasn’t going to make it easy. I started logging everything—and I mean everything—down to the smallest tasks. Simple emails? Logged. A quick 10-minute meeting to touch base? Logged. I even started logging the amount of time I spent thinking about the best way to word my emails—because, hey, it was part of the task, right?
To top it off, I made sure my logs were detailed as hell. I meticulously logged every action, no matter how insignificant.
The result? It was chaos. The logs were piling up, but all they did was waste more of my time. The manager was reviewing everything and asking questions about tasks that had no bearing on the big picture. Meanwhile, I could barely get through a day without constantly being interrupted by the need to document my every move.
And then, it happened: the manager finally asked, “Why is everything taking so long?” I gave him a simple reply: “You asked for everything to be logged.”
He didn’t like hearing that. But the best part was when he finally realized that the whole system was making us less productive. His solution? We were told to “just log what’s necessary.” The policy was quietly dropped, and things slowly started to return to normal. But by then, I had already built something of my own.
After all the frustration of logging every single action, I realized there had to be a better way. So, I started building a tool that could automatically track everything—without the annoying back-and-forth or wasted time. I wasn’t looking to change the whole company—I just wanted a way to do my job without all the micromanagement.
What started as a workaround eventually grew into a full-fledged solution, and I realized that this frustration had pushed me to create something far more effective than the system we were using.
Funny how the lack of trust can sometimes spark the most innovative ideas.