I love how you hate hearing what other people have to say and yet you spend your time on a message board. What a well-adjusted person you are. |
+1. We are 3x a week and I probably go in 2. No one cares because there are bigger fish to fry. |
Well adjusted enough not to have a need to incessantly whine to strangers on the internet about how unfair it is that I have to show up to work, apparently. |
| If no one is there monitoring, why show up? Or go for some convenient time e.g. 11-2 |
This. If they aren’t enforcing it then don’t go in all day or so often. |
| I was forced back into the office by a new boss who lived less than a mile from the company and had small man syndrome - I had a three hour day round trip commute. Was one of three people who regularly came in and the other two, including the boss, spent the day with their doors closed. It sucks and happily I am out of there. The commute was killing me. |
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I dont know anyone in real life that is required to report to an empty building. I dont think thats common.
My immediate team is spread across offices, so all of my calls and meetings are on video. But there are people on other teams who work in DC, and when Im in the office I chat with them. We dont work together but we do work for the same company. I make a point to get coffee or lunch with another person. It makes me a "good firm citizen", and makes the commute seem worthwhile. We often have lunches or company wide meetings that I will attend just to show face. I do think there is value to being in person even when its not related to your specific work. |
On the one hand, sure. On the other hand, these people are talking about something that’s gone seriously wrong with the world economy. Companies are stuck in a dumb rut and will probably dump their offices. That will make the office meltdown worse. Then they’ll discover they have no good way to train young employees and will rush to bring in-person offices back. That will suddenly create an office real estate revival. |