"On the Job" Story Event 2026

HeyAll

Literotica Guru
Joined
Jun 25, 2008
Posts
5,325
"On the Job" 2026

It's one of the most common fantasies in the world. You see someone sharply dressed, diligently performing a task with the utmost professionalism. Maybe it's your boss or co-worker. Or maybe it's the person serving you.

But of course, sex is always in the back of your mind.

With "On the Job," right here on Literotica, those themes will be explored in all their beautiful glory.

Because who doesn't desire sex in the workplace?

Guidelines:

- The ENTIRE story must happen at a place of employment
- At least one character must be an employee
- Doesn't have to be one scene. Make as many scenes as you want.
- Examples include; a retail business, a professor at college, an airline employee at the airport or airplane, a hotel attendant, and of course an office worker. etc...

Date:

The posting period is between April 18 - April 24

Final list to be posted on April 25, Saturday

Posting Info
:

Use "OnTheJob" in your Notes section when submitting.

Expand your creativity.
 
Last edited:
"On the Job" 2026

It's one of the most common fantasies in the world. You see someone sharply dressed, diligently performing a task with the utmost professionalism. Maybe it's your boss or co-worker. Or maybe it's the person serving you.

But of course, sex is always in the back of your mind.

With "On the Job," right here on Literotica, those themes will be explored in all their beautiful glory.

Because who doesn't desire sex in the workplace?

Guidelines:

- The ENTIRE story must happen at a place of employment
- At least one character must be an employee
- Doesn't have to be one scene. Make as many scenes as you want.
- Examples include; a retail business, a professor at college, an airline employee at the airport or airplane, a hotel attendant, and of course an office worker. etc...

Date:

The posting period is between April 18 - April 24

Final list to be posted on April 25, Saturday

Posting Info
:

Use "OnTheJob" in your Notes section when submitting.

Expand your creativity.
@HeyAll,
Count me in. I can feel my Muse stirring at the thought and in working in "middle management" for a number of years I won't say I didn't see it!
Now... to fill in the blanks...
Respectfully,
D.
 
"On the Job" 2026

Guidelines
:

- The ENTIRE story must happen at a place of employment
- At least one character must be an employee
- Doesn't have to be one scene. Make as many scenes as you want.
- Examples include; a retail business, a professor at college, an airline employee at the airport or airplane, a hotel attendant, and of course an office worker. etc...
So, as somebody who hasn't been to the actual office in five years and hasn't had a dedicated cubicle for between ten and fifteen years, I want to know, do home offices count? You know, stories like being on a Zoom call wearing only a nice shirt while your naked wife is under the desk making it difficult to focus on the presentation you're giving; that kind of stuff.
 
So, as somebody who hasn't been to the actual office in five years and hasn't had a dedicated cubicle for between ten and fifteen years, I want to know, do home offices count? You know, stories like being on a Zoom call wearing only a nice shirt while your naked wife is under the desk making it difficult to focus on the presentation you're giving; that kind of stuff.

The ENTIRE story must happen at a place of employment
 
Thank you for NOT answering my question…

For the record, my home office is listed in my employment record as my work location, so it technically is my place of employment, which is why I asked the question you didn't actually answer.
 
'Place of employment' is where you do the job(s) you're paid for. For a landscaper, that could be the seat of a lawn mower. Truckdrivers?
 
Thank you for NOT answering my question…

For the record, my home office is listed in my employment record as my work location, so it technically is my place of employment, which is why I asked the question you didn't actually answer.
When you are working, where do you do it? That is your place of employment.
 
'Place of employment' is where you do the job(s) you're paid for. For a landscaper, that could be the seat of a lawn mower. Truckdrivers?
@Five_Inch_Heels,
See this is where I knew I should have followed my boyhood dream of being an astronaut... if you believe the sci-fi authors sex in zero-g is quite amazing... *Sigh*
Respectfully, always,
D.
 
Now I have a story for this one too - "Copperhead Road"

Moonshining is a job too. LOL Lots more detail in my head but first I gotta write it

 
I had an old half finished story I thought I could bring out of purgatory for this but it's not really reworkable to make absolutely every part of it take place at the place of employment, but still keen to give this one a go. Hopefully something else comes to mind before April.
 
I have a part-finished story that would be perfect for BUT it is #3 or #4 in a future series.

The official contests have a rule about stories having to be one-offs. Does that apply in the event?
 
Dick Dickerson, Office Dick.


We all have read or done stories about the office Bimbo. What about the male version? Sort of a Chippendale's type, paid to do office stuff in a Tux style collar, cuffs and not much else. Maybe he just delivers the male ... errr ... mail.

Dick on display for whichever office chick needs it. Hand, mouth, or ... ?


Keep it up or get laid off.


Dick needs a real cocky attitude though.
 
So, as somebody who hasn't been to the actual office in five years and hasn't had a dedicated cubicle for between ten and fifteen years, I want to know, do home offices count? You know, stories like being on a Zoom call wearing only a nice shirt while your naked wife is under the desk making it difficult to focus on the presentation you're giving; that kind of stuff.
Just speaking for myself, I think this could count, IF the entirety of the story took place "at work."

If the entire story takes place in the home office, during a Zoom meeting, to me that meets the spirit of the challenge. Keep him in the meeting for the duration of the story, have his wife continually escalate things until he has to do a screen share presentation to his boss and coworkers while she's bouncing on top of him, camera off but audio on, or something 🥵

If the MC turns off the meeting, or goes to the bedroom with his wife, or otherwise gets out of "work mode," then I think it would no longer be in the spirit of the challenge.
 
I agree with that. The challenge isn't about being in the office, the challenge is about being on the job. To me, a blowie under the desk in the home office during a presentation, yep. Driving the company truck, laden with $450,000 of AV equipment, from LA to Las Vegas for your next show, and your co-driver has a remote-controlled vibrator stuffed in you? Counts; it's on the job. The key is integrating the work into the story.
 
I have a part-finished story that would be perfect for BUT it is #3 or #4 in a future series.

The official contests have a rule about stories having to be one-offs. Does that apply in the event?
They should be one-offs, but my interpretation has always been it whould be a comp;ete story, not a chapter in a story.

So if you're writing a series which is a series of stories, each of which are a standalone story, complete in itself, then it should be good. The official contests are a bit more strict, for the events, it's not a competition so I think the interpretation can be a bit more liberal. That's my take anyhow - but this isn't my event - so what does everyone else think?
 
I compare these types of question to TV series.

Cheers, Taxi, Becker, Marred With Children, Scrubs, Lois and Clark and so many others were self contained stories in each episode that contained continuing characters, environments and general story lines. Each of those should be fine in events and contests.

Serialized programs like Dallas, Dynasty and most daytime soaps where each episode is a continuation of the previous episode would not be eligible.
 
Back
Top