It is manly because manager and CEOs beed the empowering feeling of watching people working for them.
I love these comics! (Also literaly my bosses)
I genuinely think this is one of the biggest reasons that there’s a push for people to return to office. A lot of CEOs and similar positions either feel embarrassed by how an empty office looks, or outright fear for their job. They think a bustling office simply looks better for their company, especially to outsiders.
Honestly, it probably does, but I don’t think it’s worth the cost. An utterly insane amount of time is wasted commuting. All that commuting also has environmental impact and basically means you’re paid less. How many skilled employees will those businesses lose to competitors that will allow working from home?
My office spent 3 years during the pandemic telling us that the future of work was here and we’d probably never work in an office again.
We got rid of our office leases, sold off property, and then the CEO received some stern letters from business associations and bam! Just like that, all mention of the future of work and telework were deleted off our sites and everyone was forced to show up in office “2-3 times per week”.
Anyone who was given permission to move across the country were ordered to move back home (within 30 days) or face immediate termination.
Those that weren’t fired and didn’t quit are now crammed into random offices around the country to take MS Teams calls with their teammates. The whole org is falling apart.
Our company “upgraded” our office, which is located in the same building as our parent company. We need to go there every 2 weeks. There are not even enough places to sit for all of us, let alone screens. And then we end up having meetings most of the days which could be done virtually as well.
And in some cases, the company’s
overlordCEO doesn’t even pay the rent of those fancy offices.I hope I’ll live long enough to see Space Karen choking on his own balls.
Nah, be honest with yourself, that’s not the reason.
- The simple reality is that most people aren’t self-motivated enough to maintain the level of productivity at home that they maintain in the office.
- Communication is more difficult.
- Keeping an eye on your employees is easier when they’re literally within eyesight.
- Training is easier when you have another person close by who can lead you through it.
It’s likely that, in the long-term, we’ll end up with a hybrid system, where those that prove themselves responsible enough to WFH, will get to WFH, while the rest will be back in offices, which is the exact same thing we had prior to Covid.
The companies I worked for let me WFH every day(aside from one weekly meeting) for years before Covid, but I routinely did 3x the work of other people, even as a junior developer.
The problem isn’t with the companies, the problem is human nature, we don’t want to work, so we use every opportunity to wiggle out of it, on average, at least.
We don’t want to work to make someone else rich. That doesn’t mean we don’t want to work. I’m commenting right now using an OS that’s developed by thousands who worked on it for free.
Make the work meaningful and fulfilling, and you most likely wont even have to pay someone to do it.
For example, I love to tinker with and repair electronics. I’d probably be more than happy to diagnose a broken Xbox or TV for you once in a while, because I love doing it.
Well that’s wonderful and all, but doesn’t really disprove my point, we were talking about specific jobs that people were doing prior to the pandemic, not the job you wish it was. If the job was meaningful and fulfilling, you wouldn’t mind doing it in the office.
I find my job meaningful and fulfilling. I’d rather not go back to the office.
My company killed its lease on a few floors of our main office and moved that money to employee travel for occasional office visits (~1 per quarter).