Introduction:
n
In every corporate team, there’s one silent truth nobody wants to say out loud:
nSome people work. Others watch.
nAnd sometimes, they even get away with passing off their work to you.
nWorse? Your boss notices it… and says nothing.
n
This is not just frustrating, it’s exhausting. And if you’ve been in this situation, this post is for you.
n
n
The Story of Ravi – A Familiar Tale
n
Ravi was the quiet, dependable guy on the team.
nAlways delivered on time. Always said yes when someone needed help.
So when a teammate, let’s call him Ankit, began handing over tasks with a casual “Can you take care of this for me?”, Ravi obliged.
At first, it felt temporary.
nBut days turned to weeks.
The pattern became clear:
n→ Ankit wasn’t just struggling.
n→ He was avoiding.
n→ And Ravi was covering.
Ravi hoped his boss would notice.
nHe didn’t.
Until one day in a review meeting, Ankit claimed credit for something Ravi had done from start to finish.
That was the moment Ravi realized:
nBeing silent was costing him his credibility.
So he decided to act, calmly and professionally.
→ He started documenting who assigned what and when.
n→ He ensured every update he gave was visible to the team.
n→ He stopped taking on unassigned work unless it was urgent.
n→ And he scheduled a one-on-one with his manager.
In that meeting, Ravi didn’t blame Ankit.
nHe simply presented the facts, timelines, deliverables, and who had worked on what.
To his surprise, the manager admitted he hadn’t realized the extent of the mismatch.
That week, tasks started being more fairly distributed.
nRavi didn’t become aggressive or political, he just became clear.
nnnnnnnnnnnn
And that made all the difference.
n
n
Why This Happens
n
This pattern is more common than we admit, and it thrives under these conditions:
n
🔸 Lack of clear ownership
n🔸 Managers who avoid conflict
n🔸 Team members who exploit the nice ones
n🔸 Unwritten team culture of ‘just get it done’
n
n
The Cost of Staying Silent
n
You might think,
n“It’s okay, I’ll manage it this time.”
n
But here’s what happens over time:
n
→ You get overworked.
n→ You feel resentful.
n→ You lose visibility.
n→ Others get credit.
n→ Your growth stalls.
n
And worst of all? You start questioning yourself.
n
n
What You Can Do: A Practical 5-Step Approach
n
1. Document everything
nKeep a record of tasks assigned, timelines, and outcomes. This becomes your invisible shield if someone tries to overwrite your contribution.
n
2. Clarify ownership early
nWhen something is being discussed, ask:
n“Just confirming — who’s taking this up?”
nMake ownership visible.
n
3. Talk to the person privately
nSometimes, people don’t realize they’re overloading others. Have a calm conversation. Try:
n“I’ve noticed a few tasks are coming my way repeatedly. Can we align on who owns what?”
n
4. Escalate smartly, not emotionally
nIf the pattern continues, bring it up with your manager using facts, not frustration.
n“I wanted to flag a recurring issue around task allocation. Here are some examples.”
n
5. Build visibility for your work
nDon’t rely only on your boss to notice. Use team meetings, status updates, and collaboration tools to highlight progress and outcomes.
n
n
If You’re a Manager, Here’s What You Must Do
n
🔸 Observe quietly, but act clearly.
n🔸 Don’t normalize freeloaders — it kills morale.
n🔸 Reward contribution, not noise.
n🔸 Encourage team members to speak up.
n
Remember: Your silence may be interpreted as favoritism. And that breaks trust.
n
n
Final Thoughts: Boundaries Are a Form of Self-Respect
n
It’s great to be a team player.
nBut it’s better to be a respected one.
n
If you’re constantly doing someone else’s job, you’re not just overworking…
nYou’re undervaluing your own worth.
n
Set the tone. Speak up with calm confidence.
nBecause in the long run, people remember not just what you did…
nbut what you tolerated.
#CorporateLife #WorkplaceTruths #CareerGrowth #ToxicWorkCulture #LeadershipMatters
If you liked the above post then you may also want to read…
Why Your Salary Hike Feels Useless?