Accountability Is Not Optional: Why Showing Up and Doing the Job Matters

Kelly Merry January 28, 2026 Employee, employers

There is a growing misconception in today’s workforce that accountability is flexible. It isn’t.

Showing up, doing the job you were hired to do, and communicating when you can’t – are baseline expectations. They are not negotiable terms. Yet across industries, employers are increasingly navigating a workforce where these fundamentals are treated as optional. Accountability used to be understood. Today, employers are increasingly confronted with employees who view attendance, communication, and responsibility as optional. I am here to remind everyone. It’s not.

These behaviors don’t just affect mangers- they disrupt teams, increase workloads, and erode trust across an entire workforce. In staffing, we see the ripple effects daily. Accountability isn’t about punishment. It’s about respect – for coworkers, employers, and the job itself.

Recently, a potential applicant in their early 20’s told me a large employer was “too strict” because they were terminated in an “at will state” after 5 consecutive No Call No Shows.

When “Understanding” Turns Into Tolerance of Poor Behavior

Flexibility and empathy have their place – but they are not substitutes for responsibility.

A job comes with basic expectations:

  • Show up when scheduled
  • Complete assigned work
  • Communicate when issues arise
  • Respect coworkers’ time and effort

When these expectations are repeatedly ignored, the issue is no longer support or training. It’s a choice.

Allowing poor behavior to continue sends a clear message to the rest of the team: accountability is optional.

This Isn’t About Perfection – It’s About Responsibility

No one expects employees to be perfect. Life Happens. Mistakes Happen. But responsibility mean:

  • Communicating proactively
  • Taking ownership of assigned work
  • Accepting consequences when expectations aren’t met

Accountability isn’t harsh – it’s fair. And fairness matter to the employees who do the right thing every day.

How Strong Employers Set and Enforce Expectations

Effective Employers:

  • Clearly define expectations upfront with an employee signature
  • Apply standards consistently
  • Address issues early – not after months of tolerance
  • Protect high performers by holding everyone accountable

This helps create and maintain a functional workplace. When expectations are clear and enforced, teams perform better, morale improves, and trust is restored.