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Software IT

Nearly 40% of Software Engineers Will Only Work Remotely (techtarget.com) 163

dcblogs writes: Despite the demand of employers like Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, AT&T and others, nearly 40% of software engineers preferred only remote roles, and if their employers mandated a return to the office, 21% indicated they would quit immediately, while another 49% said they would start looking for another job, according to Hired's 2023 State of Software Engineers. This report gathered its data from 68,500 software engineering candidates and a survey of more than 1,300 software engineers and 120 talent professionals. Employers open to remote workers "are able to get better-quality talent that's a better fit for the organization," said Josh Brenner, CEO of Hired, a job-matching platform for technology jobs.
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Nearly 40% of Software Engineers Will Only Work Remotely

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  • Such a surprise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @07:07PM (#63334147)

    Noisy office you have to drive to and where you get interrupted all the time vs. your own desk, set up exactly as you like it at home? Seems like an easy choice, really.

    • Re:Such a surprise (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @07:21PM (#63334189)

      Headline: "40% will only work remotely"

      Article: "40% prefer to work remotely"

      • Re:Such a surprise (Score:4, Interesting)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @06:09AM (#63334975) Homepage Journal

        The line between will and prefer is blurry. Depending on salary, they might not be able to afford to live within reasonable commuting distance of the office, for example. I see that a lot in the UK, companies simply not paying enough for the area their office is based in.

        It's not just commute time, it's the additional costs - fuel/wear on your car, lunch, clothing. Okay at home it costs me more electricity/gas, but typically those things are a lot less than the cost of working at the office.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          Indeed. And then there is the little fact that good developers, software engineers and IT security people can select from several jobs if they want a new one. For example, my current software security students basically all have either gotten a nice job half a year before they graduate or they are already working part time in one. That is not because they spend real effort on this. That is because they got nice offers without doing much. Guess who is getting the qualified people they direly need and guess w

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Not sure what you're trying to say. /. headline is the same as TFA headline. Digging down a bit the word 'prefer' is used, but that is followed by the statement that 21% will quit on the spot if ordered to return to the office (DAMN, that's a pretty strong preference) and 49% will start looking for another job (that's a fairly strong preference as well). 40% is a reasonable estimate of how many of your programmers you'll lose if you demand a return to the office.

        A man is sent to the Don with a proposal. The

  • by Caro Cogitatus ( 7226002 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @07:13PM (#63334163)
    On the rare occasions I drag my ass into the office these days, I still have to wave my hands to enable the motion-detect hallway lights so I'm not walking in darkness.

    With Zoom and Slack and other enabling software, I have just as many productive conversations at home as I do in the office.

    What's missing is the chit-chat about last weekend's activities, and honestly I have limited desire for that. Am I the outlier?
  • Only 40%? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by waspleg ( 316038 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @07:14PM (#63334173) Journal

    I wonder about the data source here. It should be, and likely is, far higher.

    • Re:Only 40%? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @07:33PM (#63334227)

      21% would quit on the spot, and more than half would start shopping around if forced back into office. In other words, about 3/4 of people would be actively looking for something else.

      That alone should give employers pause. 3/4 of your workforce would no longer consider working for you desirable.

      • Imagine this fantasy scenario: all those companies simultaneously decide to enforce a work at office policy again. Everyone quits. How many wfh jobs are truly available?

        I have no idea but I suspect a bunch of folks will lose that little game of musical chairs.

        • Well, sucks to be on the receiving end of "if you don't do it, the next guy will", isn't it?

          Turnabout is fair game, employees had that line hanging over their heads for most of the time. Learn to enjoy it.

    • My coworkers always said they don't want 100% WFH. Argument being it helps team work (which seems to mean interrupting anyone to share random ideas which happen to be false when people start to think about it). Also it is aligned with top managers view (that we never see at office or in the country).
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @07:16PM (#63334175)

    I don't mind occasional trips but by and large, there's no way I'd accept a job where I cannot work from elsewhere.

    The last work I did in an office (many years ago now) was when I was a contractor, for a place across town that really wanted everyone there. I did get them agree to one day or work a week at home (which sounds absurd now) but four days a week I had a 30 minute morning drive to the office, even driving off peak - and a brutal 45-60 minute drive home if I left anytime after 3pm.

    I did years of that and somehow you just get used to it, but being free of that and having options for never having to do that again - why would I?

    Also I interviewed at a few places that would let you work remote mostly but mandated that you had to be in the same city with the team. There again, you are losing all of the advantage you could have in finding people from all over, and these days who is going to be willing to re-locate to where you have a position (that's what they wanted me to do in both cases)? It's a very tough sell.

    Nope I've been full remote for a while now, I find it's very effective, and often I give a lot of commuting time I would have had to the work I am doing so the company greatly benefits as well.

    • by Jerrry ( 43027 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @08:31PM (#63334367)

      Me too. I've been working from home 100% of the time since the start of the pandemic and I have no desire to ever go back to an office.

      Not having to do a 40 mile drive twice a day has reduced my stress levels immeasurably. At the office I had a tiny desk in a tiny cube with two 24" monitors in the middle of a noisy Dilbertesque cube farm. At home my office is 360 square feet with windows on three walls, a door I can close, a big desk, three 32" 4K monitors, and absolute silence.

  • Get in the cagie.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • by godrik ( 1287354 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @08:13PM (#63334331)

    I find that most people I work with are far less productive when they are working remote than when they are working from the office.

    Any kind of meeting that involve more than 2 people is far more productive in person than on zoom or discord or whatever. Groups can easily and dynamically reconfigure in smaller groups to have more pointy discussion while remaining aware of the overall discussions in the room. No online tools can really give you that.

    Any brainstorming session is also FAR better in person than zoom/discord.

    Working with less experienced workers is a pain remotely compared to in-person. In person it is far easier to get small points across or do simple impromptu demonstrations.

    Maybe I don't understand remote working tools as much as other people. But then no one around me seems to know how to do these things well either.

    Now I agree that there are benefit to remote work. Cutting commute time is awesome for instance. Having focus time is also very helpful. (Though you can do that by just shutting your office door, but it's a bit easier from home.) If you are doing mostly "solo work"; then yes I get that going to an office is a pain.

    • by JASegler ( 2913 ) <jasegler@@@gmail...com> on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @08:52PM (#63334399)

      >Though you can do that by just shutting your office door

      I haven't been in a situation where there was an office door for decades. High Density Seating has been the norm for me for over a decade.

      As for remote tools - Screen sharing within meetings. Remote collab document writing tools.

      Personally I'm a much bigger fan of writing a document, then having a discussion over the document. record the meeting, update the document, repeat until everyone is satisfied.

      An impromptu in person meeting where no one writes anything down has far less impact long term compared to a document and meeting recording(s).

    • I find that most people I work with are far less productive when they are working remote than when they are working from the office.

      If find that it is difficult to tell whether most people I work with are working from an office or remote because their offices are not in the same state or country as my office. We don't often use video, and when we use video a lot of people use fake or blurred backgrounds.

      I was recently sitting in a conference room in a meeting where we were using video and two participants were using the same fake background. They looked like they were both in the same fake office even though I could see that one of them

    • Meetings that splinter into unrelated meetings are poorly run.

      Have an agenda. Stay on topic. Finish the meeting. If you need to talk about something else, do it after the meeting, or schedule a different meeting.

      Since working from home, I've found that my meetings are more relevant, more on topic, and finish on time.

      Half of my job is meetings and mentoring now, and it's far easier and more productive than it's ever been at the office. When I'm talking to 1 or 2 people in a slack huddle, nobody tries to interject with something irrelevant or distracting just because they're nearby. I can present my screen, then my colleagues can present theirs.

      I've been working in the games industry 20 years and I will keep banging this drum: poor productivity and lack of team cohesion because of remote work is a management issue, because management doesn't want to understand how to build teams that can work together, they just want to throw people into an office and hope for the best. Our interview process is strict, because our culture is so dependent on fun, interesting people that are willing to teach AND learn.

    • That is pretty much what my company sees. Officially we are 3 days in the office and 1.5 from home. Senior staff generally just do 1 or 2 days in the office. Plenty of people hate the commute, but on the balance seem to appreciate the foundation the office gives. Everyone seems to get that if there is any reason why you need to WFH for a few extra days it is not a problem.

      I actually prefer working from the office, but I am 100% remote now. I always lived close to work and had a private office my last 13 yea

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @09:45PM (#63334489)

    If you can be hired to work from Bangor, Maine for $200k, someone else can be hired from Bangalore, India for $20k. And btw you can live like a top 10%er in India for $20k.

    • I've heard it's closer to a two for one ratio, but be realistic, coming into the office doesn't keep the offshoring away, and not going into the office doesn't cause it to happen.

  • by Mazzachre ( 8854047 ) on Wednesday March 01, 2023 @10:24PM (#63334543)
    Spending an hour or two each day in traffic or public transport seems like such an archaic thing now... Hell, I'm surprised we put up with it for as long as we did.
    • by geek ( 5680 )

      I've been ahead of the curve on this for over a decade. I used to just stay home and work, pissing off people I worked with who traveled every day. They would literally scream and yell at me about it and I'd just...... stay home. My work got done so bosses didnt care too much. I was more productive then they were because they sat in a cubicle farm pissing their life away while I didnt have a drive.

      I remember talking to one of them and asking why he came in at all when he sat in meetings on Skype for Busines

  • In my experience over nearly 50 years programming, I would estimate that only 15$ of developers work correctly (no matter where or how they are sitting).

    So, no problem I guess.

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      In my experience over nearly 50 years programming, I would estimate that only 15$ of developers work correctly (no matter where or how they are sitting).

      So, no problem I guess.

      ...and you'll notice I made a typo there (s/$/%) and didn't check before hitting SUBMIT.

      So of those 15%, maybe they only work correctly 85% of the time. Maybe. :)

  • There are also many work visa problems that favour remote work. In Canada, once you are in, you can live and work anywhere. In Europe, a citizen can work in any EU country, but a non-citizen has to get permanent residence in the state that he wants to work in. So to change jobs across the border in a different country, you have to rent an apartment there and apply all over again, while EU citizens can commute across the border. EU countries also have different legal document requirements. For me, living an
  • by forgotten_my_nick ( 802929 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @03:01AM (#63334845)

    I wonder how many of the 60% would change their mind if they had better living conditions.

  • by freedom_surfer ( 203272 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @04:06AM (#63334899) Homepage

    What's it matter? Their days are numbered anyway. I for one love our new forthcoming Skynet overloards. :P

  • by GeekWithAKnife ( 2717871 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @12:47PM (#63335809)
    There are very large financial entities that would like to sell us on every single advantage of working in an office...because you pay rent on offices. This "better engagement" myth is to keep the money flowing. They couldn't give a shit if you were losing your health and time for 2 hours commuting every day. Personally I find it nice speaking to people in the office once in a while. I also noticed I get a lot less done being social and "catching up"...

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