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20 answers

Are you kidding? NO, even your boss will know your brown-nosing.

2007-03-08 09:34:19 · answer #1 · answered by LoneStarLou 5 · 1 0

Depends on whos paying for the ticket. If its from your own pocket you are fully entitled to your seat. If both are on company travel and the bookings turned out this way, then it might be polite to offer a switch since its the company thats finally picking up the bill and two first class may not have been available at the time your boss got the ticket.

2007-03-08 09:38:34 · answer #2 · answered by David M 3 · 0 0

Only if you are a fool. Your boss had the same opportunity as you to get first class and chose not to do it. If she did not have the same opportunity, who cares? It is not going to get you any extra benefits to change seats with the boss.

However, if the boss says, "Change seats with me" - and the company paid for the first class seat, you will have to comply.

2007-03-08 14:35:42 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Offer the seat if you get a 7% raise; otherwise let the boss sweat it out with the masses.

2007-03-08 09:34:55 · answer #4 · answered by zaphodsclone 7 · 0 0

He grew to become into 894 on the naval academy, no longer flight college. He went to the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, which isn't in the ivy league, and has no longer something to do with Harvard. final, yet no longer least, it wasn't his flying means that made him a hero, yet staying, jointly as injured, in a POW camp for 4 better years to earnings the war reason and the yankee human beings. Vote for Obama and bash McCain all you want, yet once you attack his war checklist, it in user-friendly terms makes you, and your reason, appear as if finished wastes of area. to respond to your question, no they might desire to no longer end it. If his father and grandfather have been sturdy adequate to grow to be Admirals, then there grew to become right into a extraordinarily sturdy probability that McCain grew to become into going to be a competent sailor, which, in the tip, he grew to become out to be. Coltrane, in case you think of spending an added 4 years in a POW camp, just to save face, is taking it gently, you'll be able to desire to be a protection stress ranger, army seal AND Marine.

2016-09-30 09:58:50 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If the company paid for it, then yes, you should at least offer it. Maybe explain your dilemma at check-in and see if they can upgrade both of you. Or, you fly it one-way, and boss flies FC on the return.

2007-03-08 18:39:38 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I wouldn't do it, haha.

Although it depends on how you managed to get the first class ticket. My company only pays for coach travel not first class, so whenever I go first class it is because I have booked a coach ticket and used my own miles to upgrade to first class. I have enough frequent flier miles to get upgraded to first class somewhat frequently.

2007-03-08 12:03:14 · answer #7 · answered by Mike R 6 · 0 0

If this is a business trip you are both on, the better question is how do you explain why you are spending extra company money to fly first class?

2007-03-08 09:40:52 · answer #8 · answered by St N 7 · 0 0

Yup. Brown nosing is alwasy a good thing when it comes to the boss.

2007-03-08 09:35:28 · answer #9 · answered by bodinibold 7 · 0 0

don't be an *** kisser! if your boss wanted first class, she makes more money and has more rank than you and could have made it happen. enjoy your seat and have a safe trip.

2007-03-08 09:39:34 · answer #10 · answered by d. w 3 · 0 0

Only if you really want to.
If you decide to, your good deed will come back to you, as long as you are truly giving from the heart and not just because you're trying to earn Brownie points.

2007-03-08 09:37:02 · answer #11 · answered by lubinmt 2 · 0 0

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