BBC Dad! His name's Robert E Kelly and he's a Poli Sci professor in S. Korea. He's an interesting follow on Twitter, too.
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God that was the most hilarious damn thing
BBC Dad! His name's Robert E Kelly and he's a Poli Sci professor in S. Korea. He's an interesting follow on Twitter, too.
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I'm interested in this topic, guessing you all will hate me, but here's how I see it:
When it comes to remote work, I think its important to acknowledge that every company (and each person) is different. Remote work may work well for some, and not well for others. I say this from working with 75 organizations across the country for the last 20 years.
I will say this, the organizations I see asking people to come back aren't doing so because they are evil, horrible, old man boomer types. They are doing so because the data shows a drop in productivity from remote workers and a drop in profits. Ask any individual person, and they will say " I am more productive at home", but the data from the companies I work with (including my own), doesn't show that. In our business, remote workers work less hours, and are less productive in those hours.
Here's the real issue facing remote workers in my industry, if you turn yourself into a commodity (I'll work X hours / X tasks for X pay), you are going to be replaced by someone in India or El Salvador who are some of the brightest, hardest working and ambitious people I work with.
Are you willing/able to share some of the "data" that your company (or companies you know of) are using to capture/measure/compare/assess productivity?I'm interested in this topic, guessing you all will hate me, but here's how I see it:
When it comes to remote work, I think its important to acknowledge that every company (and each person) is different. Remote work may work well for some, and not well for others. I say this from working with 75 organizations across the country for the last 20 years.
I will say this, the organizations I see asking people to come back aren't doing so because they are evil, horrible, old man boomer types. They are doing so because the data shows a drop in productivity from remote workers and a drop in profits. Ask any individual person, and they will say " I am more productive at home", but the data from the companies I work with (including my own), doesn't show that. In our business, remote workers work less hours, and are less productive in those hours.
Here's the real issue facing remote workers in my industry, if you turn yourself into a commodity (I'll work X hours / X tasks for X pay), you are going to be replaced by someone in India or El Salvador who are some of the brightest, hardest working and ambitious people I work with.
I'm in the office 100% by choice because I personally am more efficient at work. I have many coworkers who are 100% remote (some live even closer to work than I do). We support fully remote, hybrid, and in office options, and I doubt that will change. Many of the people I directly work with are living near other office locations, and I'd be using Teams to chat with them regardless of whether they were in the office or at home.How many of us are hybrid or fully remote still?
We went 100% remote until April 2022. And now we are 1 day in office and 4 days remote. Maybe 3 times per year, we might have to go in more than 1 day per week.
IME, most companies don't have **** for data in that space. Time in seat and time on screen is not a 1:1 with productivity but I've yet to see one of these with data-informed focus. It's always vague **** like "culture" and "collaboration". Most of the time, it's a passive aggressive layoff.
I'm in the office 100% by choice because I personally am more efficient at work. I have many coworkers who are 100% remote (some live even closer to work than I do). We support fully remote, hybrid, and in office options, and I doubt that will change. Many of the people I work with live near other locations and I'd be using Teams to chat with them regardless of whether the were in the office or at home.
How many of us are hybrid or fully remote still?
We went 100% remote until April 2022. And now we are 1 day in office and 4 days remote. Maybe 3 times per year, we might have to go in more than 1 day per week.
I'm in the office 100% by choice because I personally am more efficient at work. I have many coworkers who are 100% remote (some live even closer to work than I do). We support fully remote, hybrid, and in office options, and I doubt that will change. Many of the people I directly work with are living near other office locations, and I'd be using Teams to chat with them regardless of whether they were in the office or at home.
I've got some friends who feel similarly - more productive in the office. And that's great - employees should be given autonomy to know what works best for themselves. And then leaders should make across the board office time intentional and focused rather than arbitrary.
Technically hybrid with no mandatory in office time other than various meetings which are mostly trips to our facility in the DFW area. Other than that I am fully remote but willing to and do go into the office in CR when it makes sense 1-3 times a month.
I find I'm more productive when I do a mix. Somehow, working mostly from home but going into the office a day or two each week makes it feel more special? I'm not sure that makes sense, but on that day in office I feel like a get a lot done because it's a new environment.
I don't get a lot done my day in the office. But I have a fun time. I talk with my co-workers that I like. I go get coffee and eat lunch out. It's a nice change. I'd be OK going in one more day per week, but I'd be pretty mad if I had to go into the office 3 days. Prior to COVID, we were already 2 days of work from home.
I'm also curious how people's companies are working at on-boarding new employees, especially college grads. I don't think having new people in the office is necessary for every job. But I do think it is helpful for a lot of jobs to have an in-office portion for new people. We haven't had a lot of new people since COVID, so it hasn't been an issue for me. But they've talked about new people maybe having to come in 3 days per week for the first couple of months. But then that would require someone to be in the office with them those 3 days to actually make it worthwhile. It makes sense in theory, but I wouldn't like doing it.
I am glad I have never had an office job. Couldnt do it, I might make less but I get to be outside everyday and choose what I want to do.