Wow, you really don’t have anything of substance to add to this discussion, do you? |
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OP is peanut butter and JELLY.
I'll write more after I walk my dog. |
Lol I’m OP and I’m only jelly of the dog. I don’t even work ha ha. |
Thanks for sharing your anecdote. Mine: our work unit doubled our measurable productivity during covid and we won't be RTO. |
| I’m removing all network equipment from 58 offices in the DC metro area since nobody is going back. |
😘 |
This! OP just wants to see the young ladies in person |
Exactly. I love my two days at home but I am most certainly more productive at the office. I have a coworker who has had two children since covid and neither one of them has been in day care for 1 single day. her husband runs a dealership so he is not at home. Tell me please how productive she is watching a newborn and a toddler at home while working. |
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It's not. Full time remote is unlikely for most people, but industries that can reasonably support remote work are actually working very hard to find solutions that offer flexibility and remote options for workers.
Realistically, people are going to need to get used to the idea that being a remote worker, or even hybrid, may mean giving up certain promotional potential or even making less money in their current role than someone who is in the office daily. People may also need to wrap their heads around the idea that employers might offer remote work as an option, but leave it to you to set it up. Which means you might need to be ready to buy your own office equipment and you definitely won't be getting stipends for internet or other tech support. In some places (tech, consulting, law) sure, they might offer this stuff as a benefit. But most jobs won't and you'll need to figure it out. Also more companies may shift more jobs to contract positions with fewer benefits and stability, but make them remote. This was actually happening pre-Covid but will likely accelerate. So you get the benefit of remote work, but you are essentially different class of employee and have far less job stability. But remote work is far from "toast" and a lot of industries are seeing the benefits of being able to hire regardless of location, of using remote work to help retain workers through different life stages. Young workers with the expectation of full time remote or maximum flexibility to work from wherever, with no impact on career trajectory, and fully supported by their employer including associated costs, are being unrealistic and will be disappointed. |
On the rare occasion something like this can be backed up, it always turns out the friend is a book editor. Or manning phones that aren't ringing, clocking early/late hours around a midday pause in workflow, or something else totally benign. |
I was hired remotely and remote I shall stay. |
| OP must work for Washington REIT (or whatever its name is now). Commissions are down again, huh? |
Not PP but some jobs just have low pay, no matter how hard you work and many of those are interesting and essential. |
The real case for WFH vs RTO is that different people in different jobs should be provided flexibility appropriate to the situation. The uniform-RTO-crowd can’t wrap their heads around this, and your screed makes my case. I have adult children and a 2+hour/day commute. I am absolutely more productive at home. So are my colleagues who are mostly in the same boat (our office of feds has an average age of late 50s and we don’t live in DC). Yes, I want WFH since it’s tons more convenient for me, and I am more productive for my agency. It’s win-win if I stay remote. |
yay for you then? |