What would you do?
- 
				megastreaker
 - Senior Member
 - Posts: 232
 - Joined: Mon Sep 03, 2007 8:36 am
 
What would you do?
Not really a gambling topic but I work for a telecoms company in sales. Anyway each month we get bonusus. This month I was told I was getting £900 and then the centre manager put her foot down and said they're earning too much so then I was told it was only going to be £600. I wasn't too gutted as it was only £300 less. Anyway imagine my surprise when I get paid and they cocked up and paid me both the original £900 and the £600. I have been overpaid by £900.
its all gone through payroll and is on my payslip. The managers can see our bonus statements but they don't see our payslips and they haven't noticed.
There is 4 of us on our team that are affected and no one wants to say a word.
Just hope they don't find out. I might spend it before the bubble bursts.
They can have £1 a month back.
			
			
									
									
						its all gone through payroll and is on my payslip. The managers can see our bonus statements but they don't see our payslips and they haven't noticed.
There is 4 of us on our team that are affected and no one wants to say a word.
Just hope they don't find out. I might spend it before the bubble bursts.
They can have £1 a month back.
- 
				Mr Bubbles
 - Senior Member
 - Posts: 225
 - Joined: Fri Apr 20, 2007 1:02 pm
 
Nice, but I expect it will get noticed in the payroll year end reconcilations (march) if not before.
A firm I use to work for simply reduced all following bonuses until the amount was reclaimed when this happened previously.
I would stick the extra in a high int savings account until they notice, if they have not said anything by the end of may then it is unlikely they will.
			
			
									
									
						A firm I use to work for simply reduced all following bonuses until the amount was reclaimed when this happened previously.
I would stick the extra in a high int savings account until they notice, if they have not said anything by the end of may then it is unlikely they will.
- 
				megastreaker
 - Senior Member
 - Posts: 232
 - Joined: Mon Sep 03, 2007 8:36 am
 
Straight away i wanted to talk to my boss about it as he is often a little underhand anyway to get things in our favour. He didn't become a manager for being honest and legit. However straight away the rest of my team wanted to keep stum. my hands are tied as i'd drop 3 other in it.
however its their mistake.
			
			
									
									
						however its their mistake.
It happend to me when i very first started work they paid me £320 too much every month for 3 months. When questioned i just said i wasnt sure what sort of money i was on as it was my first job and  wasnt getting taxed at the time. I paid £50 a month back. It was great at the time just left school went in to the job and was getting paid nearly a grand a month.  
			
			
									
									
						- 
				megastreaker
 - Senior Member
 - Posts: 232
 - Joined: Mon Sep 03, 2007 8:36 am
 
I'd have a good excuse ready for why you didn't notice/say anything, and keep quiet. 
Something along the lines of "yeah but no but yeah but no but that's what I was told I'd get by what's-her-face then it was Sharon wat sed that the £300 was comin off it but I dint know if that was the £300 on my payslip or added to the £600 because Roy had said everyone was getting the same so I asked Julie and she just said that it was wat we was getting but Dave didnt think so, anyway I didn't know if the tax had been flip reversed so yeah."
Although I'd not be surprised if it gets noticed sometime, I'd be equally unsurprised if it slipped through.
I do a lot of payroll reporting for a large company and it's rare for all the pounds and pence to add up exactly. What with rounding errors, manual adjustments and corrections it might turn out to be a drop in the ocean that gets 'adjusted' when the year-end figures are calculated.
			
			
									
									
						Something along the lines of "yeah but no but yeah but no but that's what I was told I'd get by what's-her-face then it was Sharon wat sed that the £300 was comin off it but I dint know if that was the £300 on my payslip or added to the £600 because Roy had said everyone was getting the same so I asked Julie and she just said that it was wat we was getting but Dave didnt think so, anyway I didn't know if the tax had been flip reversed so yeah."
Although I'd not be surprised if it gets noticed sometime, I'd be equally unsurprised if it slipped through.
I do a lot of payroll reporting for a large company and it's rare for all the pounds and pence to add up exactly. What with rounding errors, manual adjustments and corrections it might turn out to be a drop in the ocean that gets 'adjusted' when the year-end figures are calculated.