| Let’s be honest: Work has gotten really weird.
The workplace has been in a constant state of change since the onset of the pandemic. There was the great resignation and quiet quitting. Super commuters and the overemployed.
But now the workplace has reached its most (or least) evolved form: People paying others to do their job for them.
The use of “shadow stand-ins” — someone you outsource parts or all of your job to, unbeknownst to your employer — is on the rise, writes Business Insider’s Rob Price.
Remote work, global social networks, and ubiquitous software tools mean workers can easily find low-paid helpers, often in India and Pakistan, to do their grunt work. Facebook and Telegram are home to thriving marketplaces for hiring this hidden labor.
Workers hiring shadow stand-ins can be unqualified for their jobs, overwhelmed, greedy, or just lazy. And they often have, shall we say, less-than-ideal views of their employers.
“For-profit corporations are government-sanctioned psychopaths, existing only to predatorily and parasitically earn profit,” one disciple told Rob. “Corporations are owed no moral obligation whatsoever.”
The irony is the shadow stand-in ecosystem operates similarly to the companies these outsourcers so despise. Shadow stand-ins are typically paid a fraction of the salary earned by the actual employee. One employee also described to Rob struggling to deal with a shadow stand-in’s sub-par work and eventually “firing” them. |