Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
The could send you spread sheets in Colorado, but they could pay less to send spreadsheet to India or even the UK or EU. WFH is not great for people who expect HCOL salaries
The time differences, language and cultural are truly problematic.
If you require any discussion or interaction about the spreadsheets then you need someone on US soil.
I didn't see anyone worried about cultural differences when it came to importing Filipinas to teach special ed kids, or to provide elder care, in a couple of recent threads. Only your cushy white collar WFH jobs require a genuine American.
Those are the opposite of WFH jobs. If imported Filipinas are just as good, they’ll come for your 5-day in-office job too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
The could send you spread sheets in Colorado, but they could pay less to send spreadsheet to India or even the UK or EU. WFH is not great for people who expect HCOL salaries
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
The could send you spread sheets in Colorado, but they could pay less to send spreadsheet to India or even the UK or EU. WFH is not great for people who expect HCOL salaries
The time differences, language and cultural are truly problematic.
If you require any discussion or interaction about the spreadsheets then you need someone on US soil.
I didn't see anyone worried about cultural differences when it came to importing Filipinas to teach special ed kids, or to provide elder care, in a couple of recent threads. Only your cushy white collar WFH jobs require a genuine American.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
The could send you spread sheets in Colorado, but they could pay less to send spreadsheet to India or even the UK or EU. WFH is not great for people who expect HCOL salaries
The time differences, language and cultural are truly problematic.
If you require any discussion or interaction about the spreadsheets then you need someone on US soil.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
The could send you spread sheets in Colorado, but they could pay less to send spreadsheet to India or even the UK or EU. WFH is not great for people who expect HCOL salaries
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
What happens when you need to go to a hospital? Who is going to want to be a doctor or nurse if that's the only job you can't do from your mountain cabin?
Pay them more? American Healthcare workers already make more money than anywhere else.
Just salty because we keep losing nurses who switch careers to work from home. We hired a 75 year old nurse and she got poached for $$ by another hospital after 3 months.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
The could send you spread sheets in Colorado, but they could pay less to send spreadsheet to India or even the UK or EU. WFH is not great for people who expect HCOL salaries
There's a reason the US has a higher COL salary than the rest of the world. You absolutely get what you pay for. I've seen projects moved to 2nd/3rd tiers and they just churn because everyone is used to scoring well at school but not actually "making work work".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
The could send you spread sheets in Colorado, but they could pay less to send spreadsheet to India or even the UK or EU. WFH is not great for people who expect HCOL salaries
Anonymous wrote:I can’t wait till fully remote becomes an optional policy for all and everybody takes it
You’ll see me send spreadsheets from my mountain cabin in Colorado and will never again step foot in DC save if the president needs me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m like the only person excited to go back to the office.
For all the hate on GenZ, they love to go to the office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m like the only person excited to go back to the office.
For all the hate on GenZ, they love to go to the office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m like the only person excited to go back to the office.
For all the hate on GenZ, they love to go to the office.
I’m a 48 year old Gen X woman and I love going into the office. It’s mostly us Gen Xers with some Zers, I’m starting to like the younger folk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That happened at my spouse's job. We think they did it on purpose to get the numbers down.
This is, in fact, a deliberate strategy. It's a good way to encourage the loafers to go on their way.
Except the people who can find other jobs and therefore leave are the high performers.
this x 1000000
Really? Our higher performers (who happen to be in their mid-50s) are not getting any bites on resumes they've submitted.