Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The second part of it is a bit disjointed.
However, she is on point saying you can be a contractor if you don't want to come in.
She is essentially right and what companies want is responsible employees.
Why are rental cars all double the price from a year ago? Why are all Airbnbs rented, also for double or triple price now?
The reason people need to be in the office is accountability. That you are working.
Let's be honest, productivity at home is not even close to productivy in office.
She knows it, you know it, we all know it.
Enough BS people. Show up for work or expect to be fired, in not too far of a future.
Awww. You're so cute with your outdated dinosaur Big Boomer Energy.![]()
She's right. I own a company and so much is slipping through the cracks. Communications that took 20 seconds of face to face conversations are now long email chains. Client calls/emails are taking way to long. Productivity is no where near what it was 2 months into closing to in-person work.
A memo is going out in June requiring in person attendance no later than September 1 or they will be fired.
can happen almost instantly on Teams/zoom. in person? definitely takes longer unless you're sitting in adjacent cubicles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just can’t get over the fact that a CEO threatens to switch people to contractor status without realizing there’s a legal definition for that, and it’s not something the boss gets to decide on a whim.
+1 what a disaster
Which means they can't fire her and won't even try. What she says - goes. Regardless of what her underpaid roster of employees want.Anonymous wrote:I just can’t get over the fact that a CEO threatens to switch people to contractor status without realizing there’s a legal definition for that, and it’s not something the boss gets to decide on a whim.
Anonymous wrote:We just got the dreaded email from our ceo today. Basically they said they think people are taking advantage of working from home and expects us all back in the office by x date, vaccinated or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The second part of it is a bit disjointed.
However, she is on point saying you can be a contractor if you don't want to come in.
She is essentially right and what companies want is responsible employees.
Why are rental cars all double the price from a year ago? Why are all Airbnbs rented, also for double or triple price now?
The reason people need to be in the office is accountability. That you are working.
Let's be honest, productivity at home is not even close to productivy in office.
She knows it, you know it, we all know it.
Enough BS people. Show up for work or expect to be fired, in not too far of a future.
Awww. You're so cute with your outdated dinosaur Big Boomer Energy.![]()
She's right. I own a company and so much is slipping through the cracks. Communications that took 20 seconds of face to face conversations are now long email chains. Client calls/emails are taking way to long. Productivity is no where near what it was 2 months into closing to in-person work.
A memo is going out in June requiring in person attendance no later than September 1 or they will be fired.