Money Rehab with Nicole Lapin - "Should I Follow My Boss On Instagram?" and Other New Workplace Etiquette Conundrums
Episode Date: December 20, 2024Between remote jobs, social media and new vocabulary to describe burnout, work looks different in 2024 than it did just a few years ago. Today, as a sneak-preview of the guest host for next week, you'...ll hear an episode of Help Wanted, the show Nicole cohosts with Jason Feifer. In this episode, Nicole and Jason answer questions on FAQs on new work norms, like: should you follow your boss on Instagram? And, when is it okay to turn off your camera on a Zoom meeting?
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I love hosting on Airbnb.
It's a great way to bring in some extra cash,
but I totally get it that it might sound overwhelming to start, or even too complicated
if, say, you want to put your summer home in Maine on Airbnb, but you live full-time in San
Francisco and you can't go to Maine every time you need to change sheets for your guests or
something like that. If thoughts like these have been holding you back, I have great news for you.
Airbnb has launched a co-host network, which is a network of high quality local co-hosts
with Airbnb experience that can take care of your home
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Co-hosts can do what you don't have time for,
like managing your reservations, messaging your guests,
giving support at the property,
or even create your listing for you.
I always wanna line up a reservation for my house
when I'm traveling for work,
but sometimes I just don't get around to it
because getting ready to travel always feels like a scramble so
I don't end up making time to make my house look guest-friendly, I guess that's the best way to put
it. But I'm matching with a co-host so I can still make that extra cash while also making it
easy on myself. Find a co-host at airbnb.com slash host. I'm Nicole Lapin, the only financial expert
you don't need a dictionary to understand.
It's time for some money rehab.
Hey money rehabbers, it's Morgan, who's been filling in for Nicole this week while Nicole
is out on mat leave. And it has been so much fun guest hosting.
Thank you so much for hanging out with me this week.
And maybe I'll see you again soon.
Next week, the guest host is going to be Nicole, kind of.
Next week, you're going to hear Nicole's favorite episodes
of Help Wanted, the podcast that she co-hosts with Jason
Pfeiffer, editor-in-chief of Entrepreneur Magazine.
Help Wanted is like money rehab, but instead of answering all of your burning questions
on money and personal finance, Help Wanted answers all of your burning questions on career
and business, starting a company, excelling in a company, and everything in between.
And so to close my week and start the next, I wanted to share an episode of Help Wanted that I was on.
Enjoy and see you soon.
This is Help Wanted, the show that
makes your work work for you.
I'm Jason Pfeiffer, editor in chief of Entrepreneur Magazine.
And I'm money expert Nicole Lapin.
On Tuesdays, Jason and I answer the helpline and help callers solve their work problems.
And on Thursdays, I give you one way to improve your work and build a career or company you
love.
And it starts now.
Hello Morgan.
Hello.
Nicole and Jason, Jason and Nicole.
It's Nicole and Jason.
You know that.
Actually, it's Jason and Nicole on the cover art
because Jason has more airtime on Help Wanted.
So I'm like the sidekick.
Oh, I didn't even notice that.
I will take it.
What a big deal I am on this show.
That's exciting.
Morgan, welcome to my show
where Nicole occasionally appears too.
Perfect, happy to be here.
Well, let's just start out by saying, you guys, it's 2024.
It is a new era for a whole lot of things in our life.
There's AI, people are wearing baggy pants now, like it's the 90s.
My wife is very obsessed with that.
Yes.
Yeah.
There's a whole lot of newness going on and that has also translated into the workplace.
And so today, what I'm going to do with both of you
is take you through some workplace etiquette
that people have some questions about.
And I'd like for you both to weigh in
and share what your thoughts are
around these etiquette questions.
Are you ready to rock?
All right, I like it.
It's like the digital age Emily post.
Exactly. Great. All right. Here's the first question for you both. Should you follow your
boss on Instagram? Do you follow your boss on Instagram?
Here's a question back to you. Has your boss followed you on Instagram?
Let me paint this scenario. Your boss has a private Instagram account.
Ah.
He or she has not followed you,
should you hit that follow button?
I feel like it depends on like
what kind of vibe you have at work.
Like if it's a small company, yeah.
If it's a big company, probably not.
But also then it becomes,
you just open yourself up to more drama
because like what if then he or she
doesn't accept you and then you're like spinning about it and then they have to decide and
it's just like I don't know if it's a big gigando company then I say no.
I think that it depends upon the kind of relationship that you have with your boss. I my boss's
name is Bill at entrepreneur. I thought,
I did not follow him, but I just checked Instagram and actually I do and he follows me. So maybe it's
not so bad because I didn't even notice. But I think that the real, the real issue here is how
much should you be thinking about people that you know professionally when you are posting on social
media? And I think the answer to that is all the time, because even if your boss doesn't follow you thinking about people that you know professionally when you are posting on social media.
And I think the answer to that is all the time,
because even if your boss doesn't follow you,
they could see something that you post.
So you should probably act like your boss follows you
regardless of what you do.
This is a funny offshoot of this.
My boyfriend runs a company and they have about 50 employees
and they had an executive off
site recently and one of his employees said like, oh, I'm doing more running on this.
I think it's like a running app or like the Apple watch.
Clearly I'm not a runner.
So I don't know where you can like follow everybody.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you can follow.
Right.
There's like a whole ton of them.
Okay.
You can follow your when you're working out and like if you've reached these benchmarks
and he made a big deal about like, oh my god, I'm so excited. I'm on this thing. We can
connect on it or like follow each other. And he's like, cool, man, whatever. And so then he accepted
him as part of it. But then the guy blocked him. What? What? Maybe he thought, oh, well, like if
I'm like working out in the middle of work, like, is
gonna be annoyed or like, is he gonna see this now? And so he probably marinated on it and was like,
no, better not. That's fair. I think that the the blocking is an aggressive move.
So you'd want to be careful about that. I mean, it was aggressive. It was like our pillow talk discussion of the other night. So if you do follow your boss on Instagram, don't block them. Well, I don't know if somebody's
going to know if they block if you blocked them if it's like a smaller little sort of community or
something. Yeah, don't be weird. It just it opens up a whole hand or his box of issues. So like, I would say default to no,
I would say default to no two, I would also say it shouldn't matter. Because the things that you're posting on social media are so work safe that anyone can see it. And this is why you should just create group chats with friends where you can really do all your shit talking.
Excellent. Okay, now, as bosses, say one of your employees has a
public Instagram and has not followed you. Do you follow this
employee on their public Instagram account?
No, no, I actually make a very specific point of this. I do not follow colleagues unless
we have like hung out and that colleague relationship has turned like friend-like.
Otherwise, I leave it alone. I do not follow them. I don't want them thinking
about me when they're posting stuff. That is an intentional
decision that I make. So I didn't even realize this, but it came up in our group dinner when we were all in New York,
that Morgan was like, Nicole followed me after our first call. And I was like,
I don't remember that, but cool. I didn't know that that was like a big deal or something notable.
And I also don't really use Instagram, as you guys know, for like a lot of personal stuff. It's
really work focused. And so like, I have really close friends that I don't follow and I
don't I just like kind of don't care yeah you know it means more to some
people than it does to others and it can create like a bunch of drama and issues
around did they like your thing back and that yeah, here's a non digital scenario that I expand into all of this
stuff. When I became the boss, I realized that my presence at a
after work happy hour took on a different meeting. I think that
people might want to talk about me and they might want to talk
about some annoying thing that I did. And that's the right they should. And when I was there, now they all have to
defer to me in some way because his highness. But that that's how like I always feel like
if anybody is is above me in a hierarchy. I just I add this level of deferentialness
to just general conversation just because I don't
ever want them to be annoyed at me because that's the thing is like, even if it's a social setting,
an annoyance in a social setting can now translate to the work setting where that person now has some
they can lord over me something. So anyway, so I just thought, I now don't belong here
So I just thought I now don't belong here after a certain amount of time. So maybe if everybody
From the office goes to the bar. I don't belong here after the first drink and then I should leave and I
Take that mentality and I apply it to everything with social media if my presence
Makes you think twice about anything because I am no longer just a neutral party in your...
You're not a wallflower.
...life, yeah, then I should remove myself.
So that's why I don't follow people.
That's why I don't like going like like their stuff or whatever.
I remove myself because I understand that everything that I do or don't do
is gonna be perceived differently.
And I just wanna leave you alone and let you do your thing.
Thank you, your highness.
You are welcome.
All right, moving on to Zoom, everybody's new office.
Got a lot of etiquette questions about Zoom.
Great.
First, can you eat during a Zoom meeting?
Say it's in all hands.
How much are you eating? Is it a whole tortilla fajitas situation? Is it a power bar? I eat
power bars a lot, but I'm not going to bring out tiki masala and tandoori bread.
I've done that. I've brought out Indian food on work Zooms.
Here's my rule.
I have a very specific rule for this.
The rule is, so first of all,
it depends on the kind of, depends on the Zoom, right?
If it's a client call or some important call, no,
obviously not.
You just said it was all hands.
Oh, all hands.
Well, sorry, I'm exploring all the options, so.
I'm hungry, the options. So
I'm hungry. Can you tell?
Eat on this call. That is fine. We give you permission. So if it's if I need to be presenting totally professionally,
obviously, there's no food. If it is just internal, and it's
casual enough, then my rule is very specific.
The rule is no food goes into my mouth on camera.
I will lean off camera and take a bite
and then come back on camera.
That's so weird.
Why?
Why, because I find it unpleasant to see,
and this is, you know, like whatever,
you go out to dinner, it doesn't matter.
But like, I don't like watching cooking,
like TV, like the food network or whatever.
I don't like seeing people eat.
Why do you want to see people take food
and put it in their mouth?
That's not a pleasant thing to see.
It's not like what I'm going to choose if I'm like, you know,
looking on YouTube to like watch people masticating.
But that's what people do.
Like you watch Guy Fieri and it's just like him
shoveling food into his mouth.
I don't understand.
But I don't mind it.
I'm not averse to it so much that I want to see you go off camera like a weirdo and like,
what are you doing over there?
Are you vaping?
The food is, and I just lean out of frame and I take a bite and then I come back in
frame.
This is what I've been doing for years now.
I guess if we've never noticed it, Nicole, maybe it's not that big of a deal.
Yeah, see, I've probably done it with you guys.
It's not. I mean, but also I get it from Jason's perspective,
because it's always a topic of discussion when Jason eats. So
that is true.
It's like, he wants to avoid the I can't taste discussion. Like,
inevitably, I'd be like, so what does it taste like?
Right? Nothing. For context for people who don, inevitably, I'd be like, So what does it taste like? Right? Nothing. Does it taste like anything? For
context for people who don't know, I literally genuinely do
not have a sense of taste. I cannot taste food. So people who
know this, ask me a lot of questions. Regular listeners
know.
Stick around help wanted will be right back. Welcome back to help wanted. Let's get to it. When is it appropriate to come to a zoom meeting
with your camera turned off? Oh, I have strong feelings about this too. When you're naked. Yes,
or or when yeah, or when like somebody else's name like my like, I used to work from my bedroom and my wife would come in after the shower
and she would always be like, is the zoom off?
And I would, I'd have to, I'd have to turn it off.
So I feel like companies, I feel like I'm going to
deputize everyone listening to slowly, slowly
try to drive your company culture towards camera off.
What?
Yes, camera off.
We don't need this.
We don't need to be on camera all day to see each other.
What if we have a nice sign and a mic flag?
Well, that's wonderful for filming,
for making podcasts and stuff.
But like, you know, if you were just talking
to colleagues all day,
I just don't think that you need to see their faces.
And whenever I have a meeting and I tell people, you know, we don't need another zoom meeting in your
life, I am sure we can do camera off. They always say, do you know what they say to me?
They say the same thing every time. When I say, I'm sure you don't need another zoom
meeting in your life, we can keep the cameras off. What do they say? Thank you. Thank you.
They always say thank you. Thank you. Because they don't want it. Nobody wants it.
I have found that at Entrepreneur,
there were a couple colleagues who just started showing up
with their camera off.
Shout out, Deepa.
Deepa's camera's off and off.
And it inspired others.
It created permission for other people
to keep their cameras off.
And now, in a lot of meeting settings at Entrepreneur, cameras are all off. I think that is wonderful. Cameras off. That is so surprising to
me and the complete opposite of what I thought you were going to say because okay, so imagine a
scenario in which you have somebody on your team who has kind of been slacking. Everybody's working
remote. You have your suspicions that they don't work at all. They are actually a very prominent member
of a bowling league and they're bowling professionally and not doing their work.
If they come to a meeting with their camera turned off, are you thinking that they're distracted,
they're not focused, they're not actually engaged? Oh, I think it's entirely dependent upon the
existing set of expectations. If this person works well and shows up
and there's just never a question about whether they're working,
Deepa is a great example of which,
it's just a colleague of mine, Deepa.
Deepa is the Swiss army knife of entrepreneur.
She does everything.
And there is never a question of whether or not Deepa is on it.
Deepa is always on it.
And as a result, nobody cares if Deepa's camera is off
because she's there, everything will get done.
There's just no worry.
So in a way, you almost have to earn the camera off.
It's like Morgan is the Swiss army knife of M&M.
Keep your camera off, sister.
We know you're on it.
Keep your camera off, you earned it.
Wow.
But generally I will not put my camera on it.
If I'm naked, nobody needs to see that.
Although I have seen your children naked a lot, Jason.
Yeah, I'm so learning that.
You're too little for those.
It's fine.
Or if I'm driving, you guys know I'm a terrible driver, and so I keep my camera on.
Yeah.
Safety first.
Safety first.
Okay.
Next, is it annoying to type during a Zoom call and therefore should you not do it? If you have to take notes for
a Zoom call, should you instead record the meeting or take notes in a notebook so that
you're not clackity clacking?
I have thoughts on this too. Oh, I didn't know I have strong feelings on all these subjects.
I think Morgan does a nice job too on our Zames where she announces that she's taking
notes.
Yeah, that's a nice thing to do is to be clear about it. And if you're taking notes, and people know you're taking notes because you care about what is being discussed, then I don't
know, it's like, whatever, there's a little clacking, and that's fine. But a couple things
to say number one, you can always mute. I do that often if someone's gonna be talking for a few
minutes, and I'm typing, I will just mute myself and then type away
But also shout out we are not getting any money for this though. We probably should I have been using Fathom
Fathom is an AI note-taker it joins my meetings and it is just good
I think it's fathom.video is the website and
It is awesome. Like it's just it's just there in the background.
It transcribes all your calls,
but it also does this great job of organizing
all the main points using AI.
And it's really impressive.
So now I have it in all my calls
and now I don't need to take as many notes.
That's cool.
I mean, I guess like I will generally take notes
or notes adjacent if something's being said in a meeting and
it's like, oh, the follow-up is you have to email or forward something.
I'll do that, but who knows?
I could be sexting.
Could be.
I don't know.
So maybe it's worth announcing what I'm doing on my telephone.
But also sometimes I'm not taking notes and I'm not sexting, but I'm like dealing with
the dog walker right now or
You know multitasking. I actually think that this is a really good move for anybody which is to think about how other people
Perceive seeing you on the phone
So if you're in a meeting and you pick up your phone and you're taking notes
It's worth saying. I'm sorry. I'm just taking notes and
That way people don't think that you're sexting or texting the dog walker. What do you think of my phone usage? When like when
you do it when we're recording or whatever? Yeah, I always assume you're dealing with some something.
And it's fine. Because you you also again, it comes back to like, what have you earned? And what's the
set expectations? I know that you're not gonna pick up your phone
and disappear into it in the middle of a conversation.
And therefore, if you pick up the phone,
it's not like a problem.
But when my eight-year-old son, Finn,
picks up his iPad in the middle of a conversation,
I know we have fully lost him to Roblox
and therefore we gotta pull him back.
But when I go and I give a talk,
like a keynote somewhere, oftentimes I'll see people on their phones and then they will come up
to me afterwards and they will show me the notes and they'll be like, I'm sorry
if it looked rude that I was on the phone, I was taking notes. Like they want
they want to show that and I think that that's a good instinct. That's cool. So
that they're like, I wasn't on Roblox with Fenn. Yeah, exactly. Right. I hope not. We are really hoping that the other people that Fenn is wasn't on Roblox with them. Yeah, exactly. Right. I hope not.
We are really hoping that the other people
that Fenn is interacting with on Roblox are also eight,
but it's possible that they're 50 and at a convention
listening to me give a keynote talk.
All right, this next one, I'm gonna start with you, Nicole,
because I know this is a topic, Nicole,
that you are very passionate about, which is small talk.
On Zoom, it's particularly terrible.
There's always those first couple of minutes in a Zoom meeting where there's like fumbly small talk. On Zoom, it's particularly terrible. There's always those first couple of minutes
in a Zoom meeting where there's like fumbly small talk where someone asks like, where
in the world are you based or how's the weather where you are?
Do anything fun this weekend?
Yeah, I hate it.
Hate it.
I don't like anything about it. I would rather be silent. So say you're on a Zoom call that
has five attendees, you're waiting for the last two people, you sit in silence.
Just really awkwardly, just glaring at each other?
No, because inevitably they're going to fucking ask me, where are you in the world? And like,
oh my God, you're in LA, is it a raiding? Yes. Are you a meteorologist? Like, got it.
So I will not sit in silence because someone will say some stupid small talk Zoom thing. But honestly,
we had a recording earlier today and Jason was late and we were waiting for him and I just sat
silent. And I fumbled through some small talks and I asked where they lived. Morgan did the small talk.
Oh man, I'm sorry about that. Yeah, I was just like, I'm done. I'm good.
I'm comfortable with myself and the silence.
I don't feel like I need to build a void.
Morgan's face right now.
Because you had to do all the small talk Morgan.
What was your question?
I'm sorry.
Do anything good this weekend?
I did the exact cliche thing that I was like, so do you guys live in New York?
And they're like, nope, just outside of it in Jersey. And I was like, oh, okay you guys live in New York? And they're like, nope, just outside of it in
Jersey. And I was like, oh, okay. Morgan's terrific at the small talk. And truly, I just want no part
of it. I like big talk, but I don't know what that big talk is because there's a balance between like
super big talk. You don't want to be like, hey, so tell me about your childhood trauma. We're
just waiting on the summer person.
Like let's get deep. Like there has to be a middle ground.
All right, I'm going to give it to you. Here's the here's the solution. This is the solution.
The solution is this. Tell a story. So this is what I always do is if if I'm on a call,
I share whatever the latest amusing or random thing is, I just start telling that
to people. And the reason I do it is because I know that everyone on this call hates Zoom
small talk, but also will feel obliged to do it unless somebody just fills the void.
Somebody needs to fill the void. And I, you know, I know that I, for better or for worse,
a thing I can do is fill a void.
And so I'll just start talking.
I'll just tell some random story until everyone's there,
and then I will exit the story and we'll get on.
And it's like, look, as long as you know that you're not,
like you didn't just launch your own private version
of the moth and people aren't there for your stories. So they don't want it
any longer than necessary. But like, you know, if you tell a
story, then as soon as the last person shows up, and the meeting
is supposed to begin, like wrap your story up and move into the
thing, everyone will love you for it.
Yeah, no, I like that. I like a random story the other day. I
don't know if you were on the call, Morgan, but I got this
little baby Mike flag that I'm very excited about for social
videos. And it had
just arrived and I was like, Oh my god, I got this like baby
Mike. I'm so excited about it. And it was like an interesting
show and tell. So maybe now I'm just gonna keep it here and like
pretend like I just got it all the time. Just as my go to
story, because it's interesting. It's cute. It's not the
weather.
Yeah, you know, I mean, another way you could you could solve
this for people is put interesting things in your background. And then people will ask about them. Oh, like a
money roll. Yeah, let's do that. Like a money roll. Yes. Nicole's got a giant money roll in behind
her like a physical statue of money. And but then you need you need something amusing to say about
it. I found this to be the case often when I go call somebody and I was like oh I like
your wall of hats and then they'll be like oh thank you and then they'll start
telling me about the hats and it it fills whatever time is necessary. I usually
have depending on the angle that I'm in my room I either have a large old-timey
typewriter behind me which was my grandma, I either have a large old timey typewriter behind me, which was
my grandma's. So I have a whole couple things to say about that. Or there are some guitars
hanging on the wall that people ask me about. And then I say some things about that. So
have something that starts a conversation, people will ask about it. But now it is your
duty to have some at least mildly engaging thing to say about it that can last 60 to
120 seconds.
Yeah, I like it. Lean on the props, not the
weather. I like it. We have one more that we can probably squeeze in and it's do you
treat zoom as a mirror, which I'm doing right now because I fucked up my hair color. So
I actually that's a pet peeve of mine when people do that. Can you tell though, because
I move my screen around like all around here. So you don't really know where my where my
screen is, is it a mirror is it not?
It's not about where you're looking on the thing. It's about
how you're behaving in the thing. And so if you're like
adjusting your hair, like I know that wherever you're looking,
that's where your video is. It's not a pet peeve when you do it
because nothing that you could do could ever bother me. But
when I'm on like, when I'm on a bigger meeting, and I just I
see people do it, it is a pet peeve of mine.
What percentage of time when you are on a Zoom call, for example, you listening at home,
what you don't see is that we are recording.
We're all in a Zoom together right now.
I'm looking at myself in horror.
Nicole's looking at herself and has checked her phone a couple of times.
And we're also recording locally,
which is why the audio quality is better.
Anyway, point is on this call or on regular calls,
what percentage of the time
have you spent looking at yourself?
Morgan, how much time have you spent looking at yourself
instead of me and Nicole on this call?
I'd say 25%.
I was gonna go a little higher for myself,
like maybe a third.
Like 95%.
I'm just kidding.
My hair is really fucked up right now
and it is bothering me.
And I know what you guys look like,
but it's not 95%, but it's more than 25%.
Nicole has her video pinned and ours aren't even visible.
The small ones.
Wait, Morgan.
I don't care if the guest is in the waiting room. What the fuck is shrimping?
Oh yeah, that's it. This is at the end. Right. So there's a there is a guy just for context.
There is a we're going to take another episode after this one. There is a guest for that
episode. That person is in the waiting room waiting for us. But also Morgan had created
a list of questions for this episode and the shrimping was at the end.
What the hell is shrimping?
Okay, shrimping is the is the word for when somebody joins a zoom interview like this.
All right, what are you doing?
I explain.
Yeah, describe that.
I am sitting so low in my chair that only my head is visible like I'm the Wizard of
Oz. my chair that only my head is visible like I'm the wizard of us.
So this is it is 95% background. It's just like your head at a terrible angle, which
is what it always is. And just like as a little nub in the bottom middle of the everybody
has seen that.
Everybody has seen that. And I think the question is, how much does your composition on Zoom really matter and make an
impact on people? Like, do people really care? And does it actually make a difference? Nicole says,
yes. Yes. 100%. Yes, 100%. This is why I'm like, Jason, change your fucking cord to make it the
white cord that we got you, like every little thing. Oh, really? I forgot about the white cord.
Where's your sign?
Where's your money roll?
Right, yes.
Nicole is policing what is happening in my Zoom.
But yes, that is completely.
If you want to appear better to people in meetings
and probably even be taken more seriously, two things.
Improve the video and improve the audio and both are very,
very easy. I will tell you what I have again. I'm not getting paid anything for this. I have a
Logitech Brio. It is a 4k camera. It's just, it just attaches to sort of sits on top of my laptop.
You plug it in instant giant improvement in video quality. It also handles lighting better. So like, even if I'm in a semi dark room, it
looks better. And then I have for like, for like important
meetings that I take, I have a love and it which is just the
kind of little microphone that clips to your clothing. And it
plugs directly into my MacBook. It's called a clip to clip to something and and it is great it's so easy and it makes my
audio much better and you get taken more seriously so I think that's very
important sorry I wasn't listening I was checking out my what the crazy thing
about all these questions is that they wouldn't have even been questions
four years ago.
And so the new normal, the way that we work is changing so much with technology and in
a post pandemic world.
And so as listeners have questions about new work etiquette that they want to ask DM Nicole
or Jason on Instagram, you can follow them just Just maybe don't follow your boss.
Help Wanted is a production of Money News Network. Help Wanted is hosted by me, Jason Pfeiffer.
And me, Nicole Lapin.
Our executive producer is Morgan Lavoie.
Do you want some help?
Email our helpline at helpwanted at moneynewsnetwork.com
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and to see our beautiful faces.
Maybe a little dance?
Oh, I didn't sign up for that.
All right, well, talk to you soon.