Direito Do Trabalho Guide
Clara was thrilled. After months of sending out resumes, she landed a job as a marketing assistant at Siqueira Criativa. The salary was R$ 2,500 (approximately $500 USD) plus transportation vouchers. The contract was signed on a standard form, with a clause stating her work hours were 9 AM to 6 PM, Monday through Friday, with a one-hour lunch break. It seemed perfect.
Then came the "urgent project."
A major client wanted a complete brand overhaul in 10 days. On a Tuesday at 5:45 PM, Mr. Siqueira gathered the team. "I know it's late, but this is what separates the good from the great. We need to stay tonight. Who's with me?" Direito do Trabalho
Everyone stayed. Clara worked until 10 PM. She didn't ask about overtime. She was too eager to please. Clara was thrilled
He also stopped signing their timecards. The physical book where they used to record entry and exit times remained blank. "We trust you," he said. The contract was signed on a standard form,
One Friday, after a 65-hour week (25 hours of unpaid overtime), Clara felt dizzy and exhausted. She made a minor mistake: she posted a client's draft instead of the final version on Instagram. The client was furious. The next Monday, Mr. Siqueira called her into his office.
Over the next three months, the late nights became routine. "Just this once," Mr. Siqueira would say, but "just this once" happened four or five times a week. Clara arrived at 9 AM and often left at 9 PM or 10 PM. Her lunch break shrank to 20 minutes, eaten in front of her screen.