Culture Office

This is the hidden cost of being a ‘good’ worker 

The things that can get you ahead at work can end up costing you in your personal life.


Is Your Job Slowly Eating Your Life? You Might Not Even Notice

Has something happened outside of work — a missed recital, a forgotten anniversary, a friend calling you out — that made you suddenly realize: work has taken over way more than I intended?

That moment of recognition has a name: a crossover jolt. And if you've experienced one, you're not alone. More importantly, it's not a personal failing. It's the predictable result of a phenomenon that's quietly rewarded in almost every workplace.

It's called job creep. And it's worth understanding.

How Job Creep Works

Nobody sits down and decides to let work consume their evenings and weekends. It happens gradually, almost invisibly.

You start a new role focused on the basics. Then you take on a little more. Then a little more. During a crunch period, you answer emails after the kids go to bed — just this once. But in doing so, you've signaled to your colleagues that you're available at night. And now, even after the project wraps, the expectation quietly lingers.

That's job creep. Tasks that were once above and beyond slowly become the baseline. And because it happens so gradually, most people don't notice until something outside work forces the realization.

Why We Let It Happen (And Why Companies Love It)

Here's the uncomfortable truth: companies reward job creep.

Organizational psychologists call the extra effort employees voluntarily give — staying late, helping colleagues, attending optional meetings — organizational citizenship behaviors. And research is detailed that companies with high-citizenship employees outperform those without. Happy, engaged workers go above and beyond, and that translates directly to competitive advantage.

So when you stay late, reply on weekends, and quietly absorb extra responsibilities, you're not just being a team player. You're doing exactly what the system is designed to encourage.

The problem? Citizenship at work often comes at the direct expense of citizenship at home. The energy you spend going the extra mile professionally is energy that doesn't make it back to your partner, your kids, your friendships, or yourself. The research on this is unambiguous.

How to Tell If Job Creep Has Already Gotten You

Two simple checks:

The "how" of your time. Think about your ideal non-work routine — a slow morning coffee, an evening walk, a weekend hobby you actually enjoy. Now ask honestly: when did you last do those things? If they've quietly disappeared and you've been blaming yourself or chalking it up to "a busy period," job creep is probably the real culprit.

The "who" of your energy. Think about the handful of relationships that matter most to you personally. Are you showing up for those people the way you want to? Or are they — directly or indirectly — telling you that you're not? If the answer stings a little, that's the crossover jolt trying to get your attention.

What To Do About It

The goal isn't to stop being a good employee. It's to stop letting the accumulation go unchecked.

Try this: every six months, track your time closely for one week. Record how you actually spend your hours — at work, after work, on weekends. Compare it to your last check-in, or to the version of your week you'd actually want. Where has work expanded into spaces it didn't use to occupy?

Once you see it, you have options. Delegate tasks. Outsource the low-value stuff — including to AI tools that now handle a surprising amount of cognitive labor. Cut activities that create no real value for you or the company (yes, that includes being a sympathetic ear to a colleague's repetitive venting).

The rhythm to aim for: as you take on something new, let something old go. Deliberately. Proactively. Before the creep makes the decision for you.

Work expanding is not a sign that you're dedicated. Often, it's just a sign that nobody — including you — has drawn a line.

Draw the line.

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