OpenAI
The case for in-office work has never been stronger. This may seem surprising, given that many businesses have operated remotely or in hybrid models for more than five years. The initial excitement about remote work stemmed largely from its immediate conveniences and the individual flexibility it offered employees. Over time, however, its long-term challenges for businesses—such as diminished collaboration, weaker organizational culture, and barriers to innovation—have become increasingly evident. Even employees are expressing their concerns.
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But to truly understand how remote work has evolved, and assess what has worked and what hasn’t, we need to start by telling a story of profound disruption and eventual reinvention. Consider the experiences of Silicon Valley companies such as Apple, Google, and Meta, the leading pioneers in the tech industry and, in turn, a model of sorts for companies elsewhere.
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Comments
This article is one sided…
This article is one sided for sure. Its because of manager needing to feel like managers, the cost of leases on buildings.
Definitely one-sided
Ignoring employee satisfaction/retention in the article is...a choice.
It depends
The people who believe that there's more collaboration and productivity in the office are the same people that believe that AI is always correct
If you actually Try to work in an office, you will be surrounded by people on the same zoom call, people on the phone, and people interrupting you. For myself, I work with suppliers, customers, and our plants. I don't work with the other people in my group on a day-to-day basis. . Having said that people learning and or training do need to be in an office environment.
Which real estate or tech company paid for this article?
The case for remote work has never been stronger. Who wants to be stuck in a soul sucking commute every day, or have their micro manager boss breathing down their neck? Remote work allows you to eat better food at home, plan childcare better, save on gas, sleep more, spend less on clothing. The list goes on and on. This article makes an extremely poor, laughable and unconvincing argument, citing the tech companies currently laying off thousands of employees as golden examples of how to treat employees in the office, when all they do is abuse their employees with long hours, inflexible schedules, and lackluster perks that are poor substitutes for actual work life balance.
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