Huh? At best it’s stagnant in a hybrid world…but being able to work from your remote mountain cabin is not trending. |
Millennials created the "Catch 22". I say that as in Boomer times once you hit management companies very rigid, in office every day in suit working 10-12 hours a day and productivity was king like a sweat shop. Did not care you had a kid, sick mom, kid in school play, snowstorm, Mom died etc. You just pumped out work. To do this Men need a SAHM wife to keep things running. And people had 3-4 kids back in the 1970s and 1980s. They had to pay enough on a single salary a person could support a stay at home spouse and a mortgage and pay for everything. And my job the women if dual income either had a stay at home husband or with two high incomes could live near office, have nannies and maids run everything easy. Dual income couples were fabulously wealthy in 1994. My SVP Boss made 350K in 1994 and his SVP wife made 350K a year in 1994. They had two nannies, maid, lawn service, vacation home, pied a tier NYC. Today you need two incomes to equal one income. |
How did millennials “create” this situation? |
My Boomer and Silent Generation bosses were very strict. In office every day in a suit and work 10-12 hours do your time and by 40 your will have that big corner office and a big house. Millennials entered workforce around 2002 and over last 22 years were successful in changing the workplace to what it is today. Ironically, if made life easier for Boomers and Gen X but harder from Millennials as they older bosses are hanging on forever so hard to move up. |
No. Your fantasy is all wrong. |
Where have you been? In tech, it's been happening for years overseas. If it can be done from home here, it can be done there for much less. Now, it's HR, accounting & back office type jobs. |
It's Boomers. The Boomera didn't leave my company until I turned 50. They have 50% pensions and still wouldn't leave. I have only a 401K and can't be considered a young, high-potential employee anymore. I'd much rather be 35 than 55 right now. |
| If I could choose which 50% of my employees would leave I would be willing to RTO 5 days and 40+ hours per week. Im so sick of hearing people complain about this, and the complainers are usually the ones I’d most like to lose. |
+1 There are a lot of layoffs occurring after RTO initiatives. RTO is announced, a set of employees refuse, and the company lays off 12,000 employees. Those employees look for new jobs with remote options and find that most companies don’t offer full remote anymore. Companies care about control, not productivity, and there is no future where most employees work full remote. |
I’m a fed, we were instructed to come into the office one day a week at the beginning of the year. People are not complying so they are starting to track badge swipes with time cards and disciplining employees who aren’t in when they reported they were. There aren’t a ton of ways to fire a fed but time card fraud is pretty straightforward and they’ve gotten a number of people out so far. |
How do you live off a 50 percent pension. I had several uncles who work for govt and at the time you got 50 percent after 20 years, 75% after 30 years and 100 percent after 40 years. Most worked the full 40. How do you stop working after 20 years at 45 with a mortgage, kids at home and bills. They stayed till 65. |
uh, you "retire", get your pension and then take a consulting gig if you don't want to see the wife and kids |
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the whole rto argument is stupid for this reason; rto runs counter to the reality of life and creates a cognitive dissonance based on the tension between 'do this unnecessarily performative thing' and 'we are all going to die - who knows when'.
Ie: - people know it's not necessary - people know it's not desirable/ makes their life worse - people know they are going to die. So anyone with a relatively high IQ is going to struggle and have that cognitive dissonance (unless they love seeing coworkers). Those high iq people will be the ones who search for greater flexibility or fully remote AND they're also more likely to (though not certain to) find the type of jobs they seek. |
But they also wanted the 100 percent penson in retirement. Garbage Men, Cops, Firemen, Transit Workers dont consult. Most Govt employees in the United States are not Lawyers who work in DC. |
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Here is issue in a nutshell.
I worked a job in a high cost area where (pre-Covid) really wanted people in the office everyday and wanted people living near the office as we worked some late nights, last minute meeting etc. Given such a high cost of living area paid very well. Post Covid went 100 percent remote. Around 80 percent of senior management since 2020 who lived in the high cost area were laid off in last four years at the now fully remote company. Based on the 5-10 people I stay in touch all took a large pay cut to find a new job. Everyone wants remote when it is apples to apples. But not always the case. |