Can they distinguish between different floors, same building, as far as badge swipes?
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My understanding is if you’re not at your location more than 60% of the time each month you will be flagged.
@gb if you are sitting in a different building routinely your boss sees it on their own reporting... whether your boss says something to you or not is up to them. Whether properties group sends nastygrams depends on how tight capacity is in the building.
If the building has tight capacity they do come down on you pretty quickly whether it's that you don't belong on the floor or you don't belong in the building. So you must be sitting in a place that doesn't have a capacity issue. I know for sure that ppl in Charlotte, NY, and SF have gotten these warnings/admonishments routinely and people are spoken to individually. YMMV
This may be true in some cases, but not all. I have spent probably 4-5 days in the building I was assigned to in the last 3 years. I sit in other buildings. Never got a whining email about it.
Yes they can - the facilities folks look at those reports to make sure ppl stay on their assigned floors. Both you and your manager will get a nasty-gram if you are regularly sitting on another floor.
No one cares what spot you sit or building you work as long as you are in the office at your designated site.
@OP
Yes. Stop trying to game the system and be a good worker bee.
Yes , I had some co workers get in trouble for doing that they got an angry email for going to wrong floor intentionally.
The info is there if someone needed or wanted to look for it. However, it's not used for RTO purposes
rto reporting cares about physical address, not what floor your on
There are individual reader designations, so if they drill down in the reporting, yes, that info is all there. That said, there is also high level reporting that is used by management much more often (including for RTO) that groups readers, so whomever is looking into your activity may not get down the the reader level, it all depends on their access rights and how far they choose to, or can, drill down. If you look at your own RTO reporting, you probably just see a building listed, it doesn't break it down by specific doors or floors. Doesn't mean the data doesn't exist though, it absolutely does.
@OP I don't see why they shouldn't be able to capture that.