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Workers are Resisting Calls to Return to Offices (msn.com) 248

America's return-to-office has been a "lagging return," reports the Washington Post: Even with millions of workers across the country being asked to return to their cubicles, office occupancy has been relatively static for the past year. The country's top 10 metropolitan areas averaged 47.2 percent of pre-pandemic levels last week, according to data from Kastle Systems. This time last year, the average was around 44 percent....

About 52 percent of remote-capable U.S. workers are operating under hybrid arrangements, according to data from Gallup, while 29 percent are exclusively remote. And though executives like Meta's Mark Zuckerberg have argued that the rise of flexible work has had a deleterious effect on productivity, data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that labor productivity rose 3.7 percent in the second quarter of 2023 and is up 1.3 percent compared to this time last year.

While employers cite the collaborative benefits of spending time together in person, the majority of hybrid arrangements aren't fostering the connections bosses want to see, according to Rob Cross, associate professor of management at Babson College who studies collaboration across various companies through surveys, email and meeting data. He's found that mandates for a certain number of days in office are missing the mark, "because you're not getting the right people who need to collaborate... What we're seeing that's more successful is when companies are using some form of analytics" to determine which workers need to come in on the same days, Cross said. He estimates that only about 5 percent of organizations are taking this approach. "Leaders are just saying, 'We need water-cooler moments,' " Cross said. "They're not looking and saying, 'These are the interactions we need to stimulate.' "

But the article argues that "After more than two years of trying to coax workers back into offices, bosses are losing their patience... Even tech companies that were once champions of remote work are changing their tune." The article cites return-to-office policies at Zoom, Meta, and Amazon, arguing that "Employers have new leverage as the labor market has cooled, leaving workers less room to be choosy..." The days of enticing employees with free food, laundry services and yoga classes are largely over. Now, executives are resorting to threats — and it's forcing some workers to decide whether they're willing to give up the flexibility they've gotten used to... "The pendulum has shifted from employees having all the power," said Matt Cohen, founder and managing partner of Ripple Ventures, a venture fund in Toronto that works with early stage companies across North America. The bulk of start-up founders he works with are requiring employees to be in offices a few days a week, although there's pushback. "During the pandemic, a lot of salespeople were taking calls from the top of mountains on hiking trips," Cohen said. "That's not working anymore...."

[R]emote work is becoming harder to find. Roughly 8 percent of all job postings now advertise remote or hybrid work, according to Nick Bunker, director of North American economic research at Indeed Hiring Lab. That's down from 9.7 percent last year, he said, but still up significantly over pre-pandemic levels.

The workplace software company HqO's chief executive says workers are after "elevated experiences they can't get at home". Their data shows workers attracted by free food, high-quality tools, and attractive workspaces — but "The number one thing people want out of a workplace is concentration space..You're not going to get them into a place just built for social interaction. You've got to be able to concentrate...."

But the CEO of PR software company Muck Rack says going fully remote benefited their workers — both their well-being and their productivity. "I hope more people see the potential here and don't just go along with the return-to-office narrative.
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Workers are Resisting Calls to Return to Offices

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  • by fabriciom ( 916565 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @07:39AM (#63821540)
    The ego wars that you find in offices is what ppl are not willing to return to. Without ego wars management is useless.
    • by Miles_O'Toole ( 5152533 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @07:51AM (#63821558)

      In my experience, there have been times when you could delete "without ego wars" from your last sentence and not hurt the accuracy of it one little bit.

    • I guess we just saw a LOT of savings opportunities for companies... wonder why they fail to execute that one.

    • a blanket statement of "management is useless" is pretty far-fetched.
      • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @08:07AM (#63821606)

        Well, yes, but it's closer to reality than "management is useful".

      • A blanket statement of "employees must be in the office"is better?

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. Of course the management has known all along it was useless, but now their camouflage-strategy is failing. Same for those workers that so far just coasted along on the results by others.

      For knowledge-workers, not being willing to work fully remotely is going to be a big red flag in the future. The time of expensive office-buildings and time-intensive commutes is over. There are, as always, just quite a few losers of this change and hence they resist it. But they have no chance, the numbers are clear

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      It reminds me of something a young colleague once said to me: Business would be great if it weren't for the customers.

      It goes without saying that goes double for colleagues and triple for bosses. The problem people in general. Dealing with them is a pain. In a world where the nail that sticks up gets hammered down, you might as well have AI producing all that mediocrity.

  • For me return to office is:

    1. 2h more needed for preparation and travel to and from office
    2. more time wasted on office chit-chats

    Will employer pay for the 1st? Will it accept loss of productivity due to to the 2nd?

    • by Okind ( 556066 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @08:04AM (#63821600) Homepage

      For me return to office is:

      1. 2h more needed for preparation and travel to and from office 2. more time wasted on office chit-chats

      Will employer pay for the 1st? Will it accept loss of productivity due to to the 2nd?

      Not all employers will see 2. as lost productivity. Idle chit-chat builds personal relationships that make working together work more smoothly. Also, the better employees also use office chit-chat for various minor adjustments and minor innovations that improve your process. Even IT is ultimately about people doing work.

      On 1.: one way or another, employers will pay at least part of it. Less in a cool job market, sadly, but even then employers still face costs. More commute time reduces the labor pool, and a less friendly/flexible work environment (than your competitors) increases churn. Both increase the cost of doing business.

      The nasty bit (for employees) is that these costs are not directly attributed to an employer being an asshole.

      • Re 2. Depends on your job.

        I am doing work requested by my employer's customer...

        I am not sure how my going to the office of my employer would make my work smoother if I do the work for people at customer's office in different location...

        • Re 2. Depends on your job.

          I am doing work requested by my employer's customer...

          I am not sure how my going to the office of my employer would make my work smoother if I do the work for people at customer's office in different location...

          Exactly.

          Turns out the web servers (development, staging, and production) are still remote, lol

      • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @09:01AM (#63821756) Journal

        Not all employers will see 2. as lost productivity. Idle chit-chat builds personal relationships that make working together work more smoothly. Also, the better employees also use office chit-chat for various minor adjustments and minor innovations that improve your process.

        We've honestly found that both of those also happen on Teams quite effectively. Especially when you have an idle chitchat channel, and various channels devoted to work topics.

        Also a weekly (mostly) fun all staff remote meeting, for the audio/visual part.

        For me honestly it happens better remotely. I can crack a better joke or tell a better story over chat than I can in person, despite the famous reputation of us programmers for being smooth talking party animals, lol

      • by bteeter ( 25807 )
        LOL. Reading this makes me wonder where you've been working the past decade. What you describe as idle chit chat happens now on Slack, Teams or . Need to bounce an idea off someone or request a fix? 5 seconds on chat. Boom done. That's collaboration and that's how efficient it can be. Companies are claiming that random chance interactions by the coffee pot or water cooler are going to be better than chat somehow are delusional. Let me ask another way - when you need to tell/ask someone something qui
    • How did it work before the pandemic. There is your answer. BTW they were being nice to allow you to work from home and not drop your salary to match the situation. Now you want more when in fact working from home you should be getting less?
      • How did it work before the pandemic.

        Badly.

        Now you want more when in fact working from home you should be getting less?

        It's called "negotiation" and it's a two-way street. How much I should get paid is primarily a function of supply-and-demand in the labor market, and my skill set. The employer is free to propose a reduced salary in return for remote work, and I am free to propose that I work for someone else instead (who will give me the deal I want).

        There is nothing intrinsically wrong or selfish with wa

  • "because you're not getting the right people who need to collaborate... What we're seeing that's more successful is when companies are using some form of analytics" to determine which workers need to come in on the same days, Cross said."

    Or... and I know this is just crazy talk but maybe, just maybe, you aren't seeing this benefit because there isn't one. Maybe the only one who wants this 'benefit' is the lonely workaholic middle manager. I was already remote before the pandemic and don't see it changing an

    • Say it like it is, the useless middle manager who realizes he's utterly and completely useless as soon as he can't walk around the hall and pretend to offer his "sage wisdom" to his workers, because at home, they just don't accept his calls, knowing that the bullshit he spouts only distracts them from getting their work done.

      And they are afraid that the upper echelons notice their utter and total uselessness.

      • Re:Or... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @09:03AM (#63821766)

        Say it like it is, the useless middle manager who realizes he's utterly and completely useless

        Without middle management, you'd have to deal directly with upper management [bbc.com] who doesn't have the tolerance for your bullshit.

        • Upper management is where I go when another middle manager tries to get me fired and I need to get him fired. I'm on first name terms with my CISO, not only for that reason.

        • This just in - middle managers report that middle managers are the most important employees a company has!

          Film at 11.

        • Without middle management, you'd have to deal directly with upper management who doesn't have the tolerance for your bullshit.

          It's vice versa, actually.

  • by felixrising ( 1135205 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @07:54AM (#63821570)
    Full time WFH (because the office is 900km away) since before the pandemic. The pandemic saved the role for me as I found it untenable before everyone started taking webex/teams more seriously. I was a contractor for 2 years and was offered a management role full time also during WFH towards the end of covid, there is zero chance I'll give up WFH and I don't want my teams to either. *However* there is additional effort required to bridge the gap, especially for those that already don't work well in groups. Being online, saying "good morning", "going to drop kids at school", "I'm off for lunch", "back from lunch" and at least a little idle chatter... That is much harder for some. I seriously want this to work, having the extra few hours I'd otherwise waste commuting before and at end of each day would be a huge cost to my family life and time with kids. Here is to hoping more employers can see it's worth the risks.
  • by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @07:57AM (#63821582)

    When the tech companies say they can't find workers it is always the same thing. They are just setting it up for a claim they can't find workers who meet the office requirements so they can import more on VISAs and further dilute the market.

    The cost of groceries has doubled in about 2 years. Since salaries have not there is no reason to allow immigration to fill positions until they've caught up.

    • But we need cheap, foreign workers so that managers can get their cheap, organic apps or some similar nonsense.
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Opportunist ( 166417 )

        Why can't we replace the CEOs with cheap immigrant labors? I mean, we could replace most of them with magic-8-balls, can't be that much worse if using some immigrants who don't speak the language.

    • Just add "work 100% office" to "10 years of experience with a technology that only existed for 5 years" and "10 years experience, not older than 25" to the list of impossible demands and call it a day.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @11:13AM (#63822096)
      Unions. Unions create voting blocks and voting blocks get results.

      Rail workers wanted sick leave. They threatened a strike. Biden couldn't let them strike, because it would wreck the economy. So him & Congress used the deals they had with the Rail workers (the gov't guarantees their pensions in return for say in when they strike) to halt the strike.

      But it didn't end there. Biden kept fighting for the rail workers and got them their sick leave. Why? Well, partly because Biden is, for all his faults, a Union man, but also because it's a well organized group of voters!

      Divided we beg, united we bargain.
  • by ThumpBzztZoom ( 6976422 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @07:59AM (#63821584)

    At this point, if you are still working from home, you can safely ignore these threats. They've been issuing them for years now, if they haven't fired you already, then they need you and won't.

    Companies bluffed, employees called it. I'm not sure why they keep bluffing, or why yet another attempt doomed to failure is news, but here we are.

    • Because it's the only thing they know. They only know threatening to fire you as a means to whip you back into obedience.

      I have no idea how long it will take them to realize that everyone knows their threats are empty, but hey, at least they're entertaining when they pretend they wear clothes, when everyone sees their naked ass.

  • ...any more than you care about me.

    I believe your "collaborative effects" the second YOU spend a month in open plan hell and then we'll talk about how wonderful it is. If you still think it's great, perfect, I'll take your office and you work from there now.

    Deal?

    If not, fuck off!

  • Yep, we sure are :) (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @08:10AM (#63821614) Journal

    One of the benefits of working for a small(er) company ... so far the boss has just said he'd very much "like" us to be more in the office.

    I nod my head sagely ... and then don't go in.

    • Ever asked him why?

      I'd SO love to finally hear a really good reason for RTO. So far, nothing.

      • Ever asked him why?

        I'd SO love to finally hear a really good reason for RTO. So far, nothing.

        No, I don't want to help him hone his arguments, lol

        He's only given the vague generalities about synergy, etc. He's a very smart guy, but like so many, seems to turn that off when it comes to this subject.

        • He's only given the vague generalities about synergy

          Next time he does that, send him this link [youtube.com].

          It sounds like he is dishonest about his actual motivations. I don't want to put you into any uncomfortable situations, and I don't know your situation, but I would have said "cut the bullshit and call a spade a spade, what's your fucking reason?"

          Then again, I know that they don't want to fire me for whatever reason, so... you might not want to do that. Or word it more diplomatically.

      • For us it is 100% about needing to mentor and train junior engineers. We have a demographic shift that will force junior staff to step up significantly and faster compared to their predecessors. It is not happening with WFH, and it is less effective with hybrid schedules.

        Sure the senior engineers can WFH and fill all their core responsibilities... but that has limited efficacy if they are retiring in 10 years and their replacements need 10 years to step up to their level-- faster than the senior engineers e

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @08:20AM (#63821646) Homepage

    There's a lot of vehemence on both sides. That said, I read a thoughtful article - backed up with data from the guy's company - that pointed out what maybe should be obvious. Employees fall into three categories: (a) Those who are unproductive, no matter where they are, (b) Those who are productive, no matter where they are, and (c) those who are productive, but only if someone is prodding them.

    That last category is bigger than WFH fans want to admit.

    • That last category doesn't really exist, even. You'll find that most of them are in category a, and in an office environment, they just pretend harder to be useful.

    • Re:In reality... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by khchung ( 462899 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @09:13AM (#63821794) Journal

      Employees fall into three categories: (a) Those who are unproductive, no matter where they are, (b) Those who are productive, no matter where they are, and (c) those who are productive, but only if someone is prodding them.

      The last category mainly exists in the minds of micromanagers, who would insist that their micromanaging has a positive effect on their team. But it has little to do with reality.

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      There's a lot of vehemence on both sides. That said, I read a thoughtful article - backed up with data from the guy's company - that pointed out what maybe should be obvious. Employees fall into three categories: (a) Those who are unproductive, no matter where they are, (b) Those who are productive, no matter where they are, and (c) those who are productive, but only if someone is prodding them.

      That last category is bigger than WFH fans want to admit.

      But in tech, that last category is completely lost in the noise compared with the fourth category, which you conveniently omitted: people who are productive, but only if they aren't constantly being distracted by things going on around them. That fourth group includes everyone with any sort of ADHD and people on the autism spectrum — two groups that are significantly overrepresented in the tech workforce compared with the general population.

  • You don't have to read the whole article to understand the problem, just this one paragraph:

    A year later, Targos said she’s found it tough caring for three toddlers even with the help of her husband and a nanny, but she relishes that she’s always nearby when her babies need her. With President Biden calling for federal workers to return to offices this fall, she may soon have to brave a two-hour commute through Chicago rush hour and rework her child-care plan — or consider a more drastic change.

    Today's American families want to have everything: a house in the suburbs, two cars in the garage, children, and well-paying jobs to afford it all. But today in 2023, it's practically impossible to have all of this. Suburban homes are too expensive. Cars are too expensive. Children are expensive. And jobs (that pay enough) are too far a drive away from suburbia. Typically, the only way to make this all work is with daycare. But daycare is expensive, and there's more demand than there is supply.

    (Not to mention the fact that the economics of daycare are practically impossible in America. When I was a child, daycare was neighborhood mothers grouping together and organizing a schedule to watch each others kids. Today's daycare is an organized service that either has to be so expensive that it's unaffordable to middle-class America, or that the workers don't get paid enough money to also live middle class lifestyles. Not to mention that one mistake in handling how you care for a child can lead to the state shutting the whole place down.)

    But if one can work from home, that lets you have your job and get paid for it too. And you can watch your kids. Which makes that $500,000 home in the suburbs just a little bit more affordable.

    Honestly, I don't think we'd be having this conversation if homes and cars weren't so damn expensive.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 )

      That's not even the case.

      Two cars in the garage? What garage? What house? The average GenZ cannot BUY a house because he just can't get a mortgage to buy one. So why should he care about your job? You fire him? He doesn't give a fuck. He'll crash on his buddy's couch. The same buddy that crashed on his couch 6 months ago when it was the other way around. His belongings fit into a few boxes, because he doesn't own anything, and he never will. And he fucking KNOWS that.

      You cannot blackmail them. "Put your nos

      • The oldest of GenZ is 24. Of course they don't own anything of substance... YET! At 24 how much loot had you acquired? It takes time. Kids today expect to start out in a house just like they had growing up. They expect it to be in the hot metro area they grew up in. In CA, they expect it to be near the beach, too. Well, you gotta start at the bottom and work your way up. Room up with a few friends, then get a condo, then a house. It might take 10 years but you can get there. All this fatalistic stuff

      • It's not being free of possessions that grants you freedom, it's being free of obligations. You may be able to tell your boss to suck it when your partner still has something of a job, you're renting so not worried about mortgage payments, so you'll be able to scrape by until another job comes along... but that freedom ends when you start your family. Then "the man" is once more able to hold something over your head.
  • Grow the Fuck Up. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @08:22AM (#63821656)

    And though executives like Meta's Mark Zuckerberg have argued that the rise of flexible work has had a deleterious effect on productivity, data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that labor productivity rose 3.7 percent in the second quarter of 2023 and is up 1.3 percent compared to this time last year.

    When even one of the largest employers on the planet cannot prove that "productivity" has fallen, then you already know what they're protecting.; Middle-Earth cube farmers who's "job" is to police grown-ass adults and represent themselves as necessary components of "management" that has otherwise proven themselves to be cannon fodder after a pandemic validated what Microsoft RDP proved 20 fucking years ago.

    That grown-ass employee, doesn't need a cube farmer. If "management" thinks you do, you don't hire employees. You hire children.

    Grow the fuck up. All of you.

    • And even if, why would any worker give more of a fuck about their "productivity" than they give about their workers? We have been shown time and again that we're just replaceable pieces in their machine.

      Well, your machine is just as replaceable for us. If your productivity plummets and your company crashes, who gives a fuck? NEXT!

      We have arrived at the point where more companies are vying for qualified labor. I don't care any more about your survival than you cared about mine when it was the other way aroun

      • You bring fair points, but we as a nation should also be respectful of history. The last time our country was this polarized about the abuse of resources, a Civil War broke out as a result.

        (I really don't know how that would even be executed today, since the most popular exercise routine of the day consists of thumbs, thumbs, and thumbs. Maybe if we PPV battlebots so we can fund a drone program for food delive, er I mean attack the enemy...)

        • I'm sitting an ocean away from that country, mind you, the last time I was in the US was almost 2 decades ago. And I can't really say I miss it.

          But reading your comment again... are you sure you're replying to the correct post? I don't quite get the connection...

    • by Entrope ( 68843 )

      You're demanding that Zuckerberg prove something about productivity in his specific company and citing a macroeconomic number as evidence that he's wrong. That would not be a valid argument even if the trend was going the way you want. Total productivity is summed across the entire economy, and Facebook could have a very different number, or even different direction, than the whole economy.

      Can you prove that the productivity growth is not because people are returning to their offices?

      The group I work with

  • by jonbryce ( 703250 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @08:33AM (#63821670) Homepage

    Going into the office costs me £60 in train fairs, or about £25 in petrol + parking if I drive in.
    The food that I eat during daytime hours costs about £6 - £7.

    • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @08:49AM (#63821720)

      Free food does not buy my time.

      An hour of time in my department costs about 250 bucks. Internally. We charge very different rates to customers, but let's not be greedy.

      The average worker here spends about 5-6 hours a week commuting. Let's be generous and say that that's about 300 hours a year.

      If the company is willing to pay everyone 75,000 more per year (after tax, of course), I'm sure we can work something out.

  • If work from home is workable and efficient, why won't companies gradually shift to hiring workers from countries with much lower wages? I'm surprised that WFH workers in high wage countries like the US and Europe are not very concerned about their long term job futures. Time zones and language are an impediment, but not a huge one, and many large companies already have a lot of remote workers in other countries.
    • If work from home is workable and efficient, why won't companies gradually shift to hiring workers from countries with much lower wages?

      They already are doing that. They are outsourcing everything they can while simultaneously claiming they can't get good work from their employees out of the office. HTH, HAND.

      • What you're dealing with here is a time shift problem and a cultural problem. A lot of companies realized that yes, that's a reason not to do that.

        Outsourcing your jobs to a country that may or may not be hostile to your country, and hence their workers not giving half a shit about you, if not outright feeling like their patriotic duty is to screw you over, may not be in your interest.

    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      Been there, done that.

      1/3 of my team is 1000 miles away in a different country, the other 1/3 is 200 miles away in another country, and management is concerned about collaboration among that remaining third who are within 50 miles but not coming into office. Sane minds would conclude the management is spewing BS.

      • Same here.

        A considerable portion of our security team is sitting one country away, for financial reasons (read: They're much cheaper). Trying to get the rest of us to come to the office is an exercise in futility because we DO expect to hear a good reason why we should if the people we work with aren't there either way.

        So far, no explanation was offered. And so far, nobody RTO for exactly that reason.

  • We have 1/10 the people going into the office. So they are moving to a smaller office space. They save rent, heat, cooling, electricity, internet capacity.

    When you don't own the building and engineer types run the business, you see logical solutions

  • This isn't news anymore. People who won't come to the office are self-selecting themselves from promotions. After a few more years in their dead end jobs, they'll either still be happy -- in which case you put them on maintaining and bug fixing -- or they'll be wanting to get back on track -- in which case they'll be back in the office.

    The market knows how to sort this kind of thing. Give it a rest.

    • by dskoll ( 99328 )

      That's not always how it works. I recently retired, but my last three jobs were fully remote: Third-last one because of COVID and the following two because I specifically selected remote jobs.

      I had 33+ years of experience, 19 of them running my own company, and am extremely skilled at what I do. Any employer who wanted me in the office would simply have missed out on that expertise. I wasn't looking for career advancement because I was already at the top of my career. If you don't mind missing out on

    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      This isn't news anymore. People who won't come to the office are self-selecting themselves from promotions.

      And the companies that insists on RTO are self-selecting themselves to going out of business cuz their competition allows remote working saves on both rent and salary, they can hire better people at lower cost.

      After a few more years, RTO companies can have their great time laying off remote workers as they are losing business had to cut cost (oh, but not office rent, not that!), and those workers just hop right to their competition (if they had not done that earlier).

    • Re:Old news (Score:5, Interesting)

      by hey! ( 33014 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @11:02AM (#63822052) Homepage Journal

      David Brooks recently wrote a piece advising young people to pay less attention to careers and more to having a family. It's funny because he and I are exactly the same age, but he doesn't seem to have noticed the transformation in working that has occurred over our lifetime. People don't go straight from high school to the mill, or college to the firm, and spend a lifetime working for the same company, or at most two or three companies. Everything is a gig, and if a Gen Z doesn't carve out a career for himself he's got no stability in his future economic prospects at all. Stability is what encourages people to take the plunge and have kids.

      Brooks isn't alone; the people who have *wrought* this change still expect the kind of loyalty from employees they got in the 1970s, while offering none of the things employees got in enchage for that loyalty. Many workers don't even know how many hours they'll get next week, if any.

      The unintended consequence is that firms don't have the leverage over labor they used to. You can't make someone return to the office if they dont' want to, because they're probably *already* looking for another job.

  • Remote work is an existential threat for those in the management layers whose jobs depend on having somebody in the office so that said managers can appear to be doing something. Remote work makes it evident that they are little more than dead weight.
    • What do you think makes managing people who are working remotely different from managing people in the office? Why should the number of managers change? Are you talking about administrative line managers, project managers, or technical leads?
  • The solution is simple, if an employer wants office workers to come in to the office, they pay for the employee's time, maybe time and a half (hazard pay) for the time spent commuting. Commute time to work is work time. Remote work might start to look better to them then.

    • The salary covered all that pre-pandemic, maybe it's time to drop wages for work from home to recognize the reduced commute risk and expense to the worker.

      -It goes both ways.
  • What is the point in forcing people to commute when most of the time working from home/anywhere is good enough?

    It is as if the company needed traffic jams and wasted (unpaid) hours in their human plaintiff coming and going everyday (and the added stress). Especially with American suburbia...

    I happen to work from home because I'm in a country with a broken economy, which makes me a cheaper hire. In turn, i earn much more there than i could in any local company.

    To me not having to commute to the workplace add

    • by RedK ( 112790 )

      > What is the point in forcing people to commute when most of the time working from home/anywhere is good enough?

      Because their buddies in the chamber of commerce that own the real estate, shops and restaurants in the downtown area asked them to bring back foot traffic.

  • by dsanfte ( 443781 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @10:46AM (#63822004) Journal

    I don't mind my workplace, it's nice enough. It's the 1.5hr commute that's a hard no.

  • "data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that labor productivity rose 3.7 percent in the second quarter of 2023 and is up 1.3 percent compared to this time last year."

    Bad statistic. First, that 3.7 percent is entirely meaningless; it's only put there to confuse you. You HAVE to compare the same times of year. 1.3 percent is the better number.

    And that 1.3 percent isn't from workers being more productive at home... it is the labor shortage. [newsweek.com] If there are only two cashiers in a grocery store and a sig

Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"

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