Overemployment
The term gained visibility in 2021 and 2022, driven by the anonymous online community Overemployed.com and the subreddit r/overemployed, where remote workers shared strategies for managing multiple full-time positions simultaneously without any employer's knowledge. The practice was enabled by a specific set of conditions. Remote work eliminated physical presence as a verification mechanism. Knowledge work in many organizations involved enough meeting time and enough slack that outputs could be maintained across multiple jobs.
Overemployment existed before the pandemic in limited forms, particularly among freelancers and contractors managing multiple clients. What changed was the scale and the secrecy. Workers holding two or three salaried positions with benefits, sometimes earning three hundred thousand dollars or more annually, were operating outside the assumptions of the employment system entirely. They were not negotiating for higher pay. They were not asking for permission. They were exploiting the gap between what their employers believed the job required and what it actually demanded.
The legal and ethical dimensions remain contested. Most employment contracts contain exclusivity clauses, and employers who discover the arrangement typically terminate immediately. Proponents frame overemployment as a rational response to decades of wage stagnation, at-will employment, and corporate layoffs. The community's own language reflects the framing. Their term for traditional single-job workers is "J1 only."
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2020Widespread remote work during the pandemic reveals that many knowledge-work positions require fewer hours than employers assumed.
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2021The term "overemployment" gains traction through anonymous online communities sharing strategies for holding multiple remote jobs.