I Refuse to Do Three People’s Jobs for One Salary

People
3 weeks ago
I Refuse to Do Three People’s Jobs for One Salary

“Covering for coworkers can feel rewarding until it turns into months of unpaid extra work. That’s exactly what happened to me. After handling the responsibilities of two coworkers who quit, I spent six months doing three jobs without a raise. It wasn’t until I decided to speak up strategically that things finally changed,” Sophie shared.

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Hey Bright Side,

My name’s Sophie, I’m 29, and I work in an office where dedication often gets taken for granted. Six months ago, two coworkers quit unexpectedly. My boss told me and another teammate to cover their responsibilities temporarily. He promised it would “just be until replacements are found.” I agreed because I wanted to help the team, but six months later, I was still handling three roles (without any extra pay).

Finally, I decided it was time to speak up. I asked my boss for a raise, and he brushed me off, saying, “You’re lucky we trust you.” That phrase hit me hard. I realized he didn’t see my work as valuable, only convenient. The next day, I sent an email to the team, including management and HR. I explained:

Due to staff shortages, I’ve been handling three roles for six months without additional pay. Since trust seems to replace raises here, I’m happy to extend that trust by trusting HR and upper management to review this fairly.”

Within an hour, HR called me for a meeting. Two weeks later, I got my raise. My boss hasn’t called me “lucky” since. That moment was empowering: I realized that standing up professionally, even publicly, can create real change. But I don’t know. A part of me still thinks I did the wrong thing. What do you think?

— Sophie

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If you and a co-worker took on the additional tasks of the 2 people who left. How is it that you are stating you did the work of 3 people? With that said, you did the right thing. however, I feel that you finding employment somewhere else would have been more impactful to the company. Yes you go more pay, but I seriously doubt it was twice as much and now they officially stopped looking for the replacement (if they started) because now they have one person doing the work of 2 or 3 for the low low cost of 10% or whatever more in your pay.

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You can do 3 roles so why would they hire anyone else. Pretty dumb to show them your work load isn't enough.

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You got your raise didn’t you? Does it feel wrong when you deposit it into the bank?

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Yes, but the company still wins in the end. How much do you think she got? 5%, 10%, 15%. I doubt it was more than that. And now she HAS to do the work of 2 or 3 people for the cost of what really is minimal in her paycheck.

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I would of said: " since trust is the issue, I'm trusting you'll find another person to do this. I quit!"

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Good for you not hiding your light under a bushel basket. You have speak up for yourself no one else will.

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Great job they always want more done for less no take a stand if you walk how gonna get the job done 👍👍👍👍

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idk but as for me i was trusted by my boss because i was the only one who took initiative. i eventually got promoted. so i'd say skill issue

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That's only very rare companies. Most places will see someone doing it for nothing and just take advantage of them. That's not a skill issue, that's a bs company mindset issue

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You tried to go through your supervisor. he blew you off. so you went over his head. I don't think you did anything wrong

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Its amazing how society is messing with people's heads. You stand up for yourself and you feel guilty. Its sad.

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Ask the past 6 months lack of salary, also ask at least 75% of 3 person salary. Note, if it hard to be granted, try to find other job. Also get even by your boss if he ask you to stay.

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Thank you, Sophie, for sharing this story. It shows that self-advocacy isn’t rude or unprofessional. It’s necessary to be recognized fairly.

1. Track Your Work and Achievements

  • Keep a record of your extra responsibilities, hours, and accomplishments. Showing measurable evidence of your workload makes it much harder for managers to dismiss your request for fair compensation.

2. Communicate Strategically

  • Sophie didn’t attack her boss; she explained the situation professionally and transparently. Framing your request in a way that invites HR or management to review it can help create accountability without burning bridges.

3. Set Boundaries and Know Your Worth

  • Being indispensable doesn’t mean being exploited. Protect your energy and ensure your contributions are recognized. Setting clear boundaries around workload and compensation is crucial for long-term growth and mental health.
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You will now stay overworked which will impact on your quality of life for a 15-20,% increase - you are replacing a full additional function/s

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Why you think you shouldn’t do 3 people’s job. Be thankful you have a job, it requires some sacrifice. So just do your job even without a raise

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