KEY POINTS

  • Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, whom President-elect Donald Trump appointed to lead a new government efficiency team, said they intend to call federal employees back to the office five days a week.
  • Companies such as Amazon and The Washington Post are adopting a similar policy in 2025.
  • But many companies will keep remote or hybrid work arrangements, largely because they boost profits, economists said.
  • Some view return-to-office mandates as a stealthy way to reduce employee head count.
  • @Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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    1533 months ago

    Neither of these assholes have ever had a real job. Not even a high paying real job.

    Billionaires are a problem.

    • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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      883 months ago

      Clearly you’re living a life of luxury and privilege unlike ordinary hard-working folk like… (tries to keep straight face)… Elon Musk.

    • Curious Canid
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      283 months ago

      Me too. Musk can’t actually manage people, but he can pretend more convincingly if he can see them in person and yell at them. There are a lot of managers like that and there are far more executives.

      My company looked at the actual business results from the period of COVID remote work. Productivity went up, so they decided to keep things that way. It also allowed them to get rid of all their office space, except for a sparsely populated headquarters building, which is saving them a lot of money.

      Most studies have shown that workers were more efficient when working remotely. Why would any executive want to reduce efficiency and increase infrastructure costs? The Return-To-Office push is not rational. It represents an inability to adapt to changing conditions. If boards were doing their jobs, they would be quietly showing those executives the door and looking for better people to run their companies.

      • @krashmo@lemmy.world
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        83 months ago

        It’s not irrational it just has more to do with corporate real estate and control than productivity or employee satisfaction. Large companies don’t do anything solely for the benefit of their employees.

        • @Mirshe@lemmy.world
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          43 months ago

          Especially with land prices trending upwards. You don’t want to be the exec who has to explain that yes, productivity is up 15%, but you’re sitting on a skyscraper that nobody wants to buy because it’s worth $60mil or whatever.

        • Curious Canid
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          13 months ago

          I think it is irrational, in the sense that executives’ sole legal responsibility, at least in the US, is to make as much money as possible for their shareholders. Favoring control over productivity is a violation of that. They are gratifying their egos instead of doing their jobs.

          Of course, in a sane world, how they treat their employees would be an issue, not just profitability.

      • @bitchkat@lemmy.world
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        13 months ago

        The owner of a previous company is a lot like that. He is way more comfortable walking around and seeing people toiling away. I told him I’m perfectly capable of sitting in the office and looking busy for 8 hours.

        He treats the place like a convenience store and assumes everyone is stealing from the till.

    • Cousin Mose
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      93 months ago

      Me too (exact same year)! It weirds me out when people are like “you never went back to the office?” Back? Why would I go in the first place? 🤣

  • macniel
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    3 months ago

    stupid control freaks. Because controlling of their employees is what RTO is about, control and paranoia.

    They are stupid paranoid control freaks who fear that their neat buildings stand empty and they cant just throw work at their wage slaves. So this is actually about control, paranoia, and vanity.

      • @foggy@lemmy.world
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        233 months ago

        Almost all desk work should be ad hoc.

        Get your shit done. Then do what ever until there’s more work to do.

      • @corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        203 months ago

        I actively do less work in the office.

        This is known. It’s been proven; for introverts and/or ADHD especially, since the interaction is stressful and/or completely disturbing. The difference is stark.

        But, for extroverts, the office can be where they thrive, and it’s the environment that lures them in. So unless they adapt (what? Them? But adapting is for the introverts who run the shit) quickly, they’re gonna be fish outta water in short order.

        There’s absolutely no automatic tangible benefit to RTO for those jobs that are remote capable (ie anything at a desk with no customer interface). Only a subset works marginally better with people to disturb, and I’ll question even that number or the benefit. The only reason they want you back in is this lie about being unable to manage your ass unless they can see your ass – which is the creepiest way to cover for “sunk cost fallacy” for the space lease.

        But yeah, keep some space for extroverts who can’t cope. It’s us being the better people about it.

      • Flying Squid
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        143 months ago

        Many people do for the sole reason that you’re more productive when you’re comfortable and you’re probably going to be more comfortable at home.

      • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        One of the benefits of working from home has been that my manager can no longer use standing staring at me as his main means of judging whether I’m doing work. The whole business of needing to see people working just smacks of shitty management.

      • macniel
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        113 months ago

        So their reasons is control, paranoia, vanity, incompetence when it comes to remote management and their undivided devotion to the American Dollar.

        something something spanish inquisition

          • @corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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            43 months ago

            My new Aeron arrived two weeks ago. It replaced my 18 year old … Aeron. It has served me well, and needs just 200 in repairs (new pads, new struts, cylinder) so I may give it to my cousin.

            Yeah. Comfy chair, cool lifty desk, sweet river view, floofy cats. I dearly hope we can keep WFBest in our next union contract too.

      • Prox
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        113 months ago

        That and they don’t understand how to manage people remotely.

        FTFY

        • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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          63 months ago

          Largely also true. In my office, my manager is remote anyway, so it doesn’t matter if I’m in my local office or home office.

    • @pezhore@infosec.pub
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      83 months ago

      Don’t forget sweetheart tax breaks from local municipalities on real estate!

      Sure you can have this huge complex company, because we know the 1500 people who work from the office will frequent the local Subway for lunch and that’s sales tax!

  • synae[he/him]
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    693 months ago

    Ok, let’s say it is a covid-era privilege. Why does that mean it has to go away? Why can’t it be a modern day innovation? Isn’t it a curb on vehicle emissions? More spending money in people’s wallets if they’re not paying for gas or coffee or meals on the go due to commuting? What’s the fuckin downside?? We stumbled upon a good thing

    Oh fuck, I forgot the real estate prices. My bad. Yea let’s cancel this whole thing

    • @theneverfox@pawb.social
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      473 months ago

      You forgot, it saves people 30 mins - 2 hours every day. What are they going to do with that time? Enjoy themselves? Advocate for their own interests?

      No, clearly this cannot stand

      • @rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        13 months ago

        If someone still has secret guilt of this looking like a conspiracy thing - it isn’t, there’s buying and there’s buying out on markets, these are different.

        Also a pretty normal thing for authoritarian governments to make honey pots for intelligent people, so that they’d work in some kinda useful, but more importantly well-paid positions different from where they could make a difference.

        I still think there are 3 other components, all of which can be considered good to some degree - 1) feeling of belonging and, ahem, of hierarchy, people all seeing each other and their employer, 2) less disruption in case of connectivity problems, 3) better understanding of processes and dynamics when in one location. To be clear, 1 is bs, 2 is factual, but can be negotiated for some skeleton group, 3 is bs. But some people make think this way without malice.

        Makes me wonder, though, when they say Musk has ASD, how in hell would he be against remote work. Other than commute being hard, actually being present among all those people, boss or not (even worse when boss), should be exhausting. There is that pop culture idea that ASD is connected to being very intelligent (actually no, just caring about interests above social needs), so perhaps it’s a PR thing and he really doesn’t have it.

        • @fluxion@lemmy.world
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          63 months ago

          Musk didn’t say he was against remote work for himself. This is for peons like the American worker class, not for the ruling oligarchy.

          But I also wouldn’t be surprised if ASD is just PR to help explain away some truly disturbing behavior throughout Musk’s career.

        • @theneverfox@pawb.social
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          63 months ago

          No, you don’t understand… This isn’t a “the government is doing this to control people” kind of conspiracy

          This is a “consulting firms like McKinsey have been quietly but openly pushing the idea of exploiting workers to keep them too busy to advocate for their interests for the last 50 years, using concepts such as corporate culture, surpressing wages, and most recently return to office” thing

          It’s the investigative journalism kind of conspiracy

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      173 months ago

      Isn’t it a curb on vehicle emissions?

      Welllll, Elon owns a large share of a company that makes vehicles. So the more people drive, the better for him.

    • @evilcultist@sh.itjust.works
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      123 months ago

      It’s also incredibly fucked up that they’re worried about real estate prices falling in an economy where so many are having a problem paying rent or owning a house.

    • @fluxion@lemmy.world
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      63 months ago

      They thank us by directly using their endless wealth to fuck us out of our last bit of political/economic power

      • @Lodespawn@aussie.zone
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        73 months ago

        Didnt you hear he personally unlocked the Trump hotel bomb for law enforcement and sent them the surveillance footage of it being charged?

  • FuglyDuck
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    273 months ago

    He needs us more than we need him.

    he should probably let that sink in.

  • @apfelwoiSchoppen@lemmy.world
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    253 months ago

    I worked at a national company of some fame for nearly 20 years. They have two main offices, one in the midwest and one in New England. Before COVID, it was common for folks to work from home, spread across the United States. We even had some fringe cases where people lived in England or Japan and worked from there. I don’t work there anymore, but I hear post covid they are forcing people to move and work from the office. It really is leadership brain rot, everywhere, regardless of industry.

  • @mint_tamas@lemmy.world
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    233 months ago

    I’ve been working remotely long before the pandemic and I will continue to do so - I’m far from being alone in that. Also, we are still in the “covid-era”, we just collectively decided to pretend we aren’t.

  • @edgemaster72@lemmy.world
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    173 months ago

    First remote job I had was in 2010 making barely more than minimum wage for tier 1 phone support. These guys are off their rockers.

  • FundMECFS
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    173 months ago

    Rip Disabled people I guess.

    And this is coming from the same peoppe saying “just get a job”.

    You gotta provide accomodations my guy.

    • @leisesprecher@feddit.org
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      33 months ago

      I mean, I wouldn’t be surprised if they re-invent Aktion T4 and kill all the undesirables. It’s just much more efficient, you know?