There was no hybrid or remote work pre-COVID? On what planet was that?
I respect the desire to have an in-office company. He’s right, there’s nothing wrong with that. I have much less respect for hiring hundreds of people and then suddenly changing the rules, or for implying remote workers won’t “go the full mile” (whatever that is).
jinushaun 27 days ago [-]
Pre-Covid, a quarter of my team was phoning in via zoom everyday. There was always someone that was sick, kid was sick, waiting for a plumber, didn’t want to deal with commute etc. There was always something. No one batted an eye.
Post-Covid, people act like remote work is some strange new thing.
Only thing that really brought people into the office was the free food. But I know that has been scaled back dramatically post Covid.
27 days ago [-]
kcplate 27 days ago [-]
Companies have always picked the venue where their employees work. It’s really only in the last couple of years that certain employees have adopted the attitude that their company cannot tell them where to work for their company. You can certainly exercise your right to quit (at least in the US which is at will…even in Montana for the employees)
At the start of my career nearly 4 decades ago, I worked for a company that was 10 mins from my home. A year in they moved the location to a building almost 50 mins away. They literally asked no one in the company if this was ok by them…they basically said “The office is here now” and expected you to show up there. Reality is for some it was probably closer, but for others like me it was a worse commute.
rand846633 27 days ago [-]
“Companies have always had this and that power therefore it’s justified” is a poor argument and has absolutely no justification power for the present.
Picture this, a bit further in the past, during feudalism, workers aka serfs were bound to the land owned by a lord. They were required to work the land, pay rents, and provide other services to their lord. Serfs needed permission to marry, could not leave the land without consent, and had to submit to the lord’s court for any legal disputes.
So why arbitrarily draw the line 20 years in the past and not 400 years? Only. Because something used to be in a certainty way gives us no guidance if it should be in such a way.
kcplate 26 days ago [-]
Who arbitrarily drew the line at 20 years?
dividedcomet 26 days ago [-]
That’s plain false. For the last 10 years of my dads career he was remote full time because the technology was finally available. Your experience wasn’t universal and some people have grown up where it’s normal and expected for a parents office to be at home.
notyourwork 26 days ago [-]
I’d disagree and tell you that you fall into a minority. I’m fully supportive of remote but to suggest it’s normal implies some majority, or close to. That’s not been the case.
AlotOfReading 26 days ago [-]
According to this pre-covid article, up to 25% of US workers did "some or all" of their work from home [1]. That matches with my memories.
“Some or all” in that article is really “at least 1 day a week”. I would offer that in 2024, people would not consider 1 day a week at home (or even 2-3 days a week) a “remote work” position. We call that hybrid work nowadays.
So while this article says remote work was increasing, and I am sure it was incrementally in certain tech, marketing, and sales positions, I don’t think its a good example of remote work (as it is defined today) becoming a norm then.
Pre-covid, I worked around 1 day a week remote, but was in the office the other 4 or traveling for work. I believe I knew maybe 2 people in my social and business circles back then that I would define as having a “remote work” job (by our present definition).
notyourwork 26 days ago [-]
And that doesn't indicate its normal, it just suggests that at times people have lives outside of work.
kcplate 26 days ago [-]
Plain false? You are thinking that it might be normalizing for a certain class/type of work, but “plain false”, please.
27 days ago [-]
eVeechu7 27 days ago [-]
No. For me, since 2010 at least, it's been a negotiation in practice, if not in the written contract terms.
mass_and_energy 26 days ago [-]
This reeks of "I went through struggle xyz so your generation should have to as well."
What if WFH is the best way for a company to operate?
kcplate 26 days ago [-]
> What if WFH is the best way for a company to operate?
ok. What if the company’s leadership disagrees?
Also, this has nothing to do with any struggle. It’s about who gets to make the decision.
If you don’t want to work in an office, but the company leadership does…quit.
kermatt 27 days ago [-]
> allowing the company to do more with fewer resources
The "Do more with less" thing is usually an indicator a company is on track to become Nothing.
srockets 27 days ago [-]
"Do more with less" is an admission that the current costs aren't sustained by the income generated, and that the executives have no idea how to fix that.
I wish that this simple truth would be mentioned more often, so less executives would make fools of themselves by saying such nonsense in public.
mysterydip 26 days ago [-]
Reminds me of an old quote:
We have done so much with so little for so long, that now we can do anything with nothing.
johntopia 27 days ago [-]
Completely disagree. There have been plenty of orgs achieving things looking somewhat impossible, and they're called startups.
xingped 27 days ago [-]
The difference being startups start that way. The parent appears to be talking about established companies downsizing and expecting the remaining employees to shoulder extra work. The stock market may tend to temporarily love it, but more realistically it's usually an indicator of bad leadership or a downward turn or both for a company.
theamk 27 days ago [-]
> Nothing was effectively remote when the company started operations
> It’s also unknown how many of Nothing’s 450 employees live close to the office. Many professional workers bought homes outside London during the pandemic.
Wow, harsh. I hope they pay well enough to compensate for that crazy policy.
sunaookami 26 days ago [-]
It's a way to do layoffs without announcing you are doing it.
SebFender 26 days ago [-]
100%
guywithahat 27 days ago [-]
Do you mean you hope Nothing compensates the employees being let go for houses they bought?
If so, that’s not how any job has ever worked; they don’t pay for your house if you get let go
wkat4242 27 days ago [-]
Well in a way yes. In most countries in Europe you're entitled to a significant lump sum when let go unless it's your fault e.g. negligence. Based on years worked.
artiscode 27 days ago [-]
The significant lump sump is often expressed in months of salary per years worked, which is not that much, compared to how much a house costs.
Yeul 26 days ago [-]
It's actually worse if you moved to the middle of nowhere for your job.
But if you live in a city there are plenty of employment opportunities. Its what enabled them to become economic hubs.
The government in my country once tried to get companies to move to undeveloped regions. It was an unmitigated disaster. No homes, no infrastructure and if your employer goes bankrupt you're stuck in the boonies.
wkat4242 26 days ago [-]
Well if one has worked there for 10 years or so, a year's salary in one go certainly helps a lot with a downpayment on a house!
Where I live in Spain we have to downpay 30% and a mortgage would generally be granted to about 3x the annual salary. So to get a third of that would be quite significant.
27 days ago [-]
jesterson 27 days ago [-]
Time to short Nothing. If company starts to be fussy about where it's employees do the job it means there are much more important issues lacking attention.
26 days ago [-]
bunbun69 26 days ago [-]
Didn't know they were a public company
flappyeagle 26 days ago [-]
My guy you have never shorted a company in your life
jesterson 25 days ago [-]
I don't think you know what are you talking about, but I'll leave you at that.
As a hiring manager as a remote first company, it really helps fill the talent pipeline.
ToxicMegacolon 27 days ago [-]
You hiring? :P
sitkack 27 days ago [-]
:)
wkat4242 27 days ago [-]
Probably a /s. Or one of those people that just love sitting in the office to have people to chat to and that everyone avoids because they have actual work to do :)
mooxie 26 days ago [-]
I love (read: hate) the concept that people are inherently busier in an office. When I was full-time in office, lots of people spent a good portion of their day wandering about, having convos (one thing that I do miss), browsing snacks, playing ping-pong, browsing snacks again, going out to long lunches, etc. I 100% spend more time in front of a screen when wfh, and when I do step away it's to get other "life" things done instead of killing time in-office until the clock hits 5PM. I am also far more likely to work early or late, as I no longer feel that I have to clearly delineate my time between work and home.
This is definitely an issue with lots of subjective and anecdotal evidence on all sides, but I know for a fact that a lot of my coworkers were killing 3-4h/day in the office just doing...whatever.
Lord_Zero 27 days ago [-]
He's a troll
rocketvole 27 days ago [-]
almost certainly. Return to office mandates are used typically to cull workforce without having to explain "layoffs" to stock holders and potentially reduce stock price. Turnover for "talent" is hilarious.
sitkack 26 days ago [-]
I assume you are talking about Carl Pei, you can't possibly know my pronoun or my species.
There was no hybrid or remote work pre-COVID? On what planet was that?
I respect the desire to have an in-office company. He’s right, there’s nothing wrong with that. I have much less respect for hiring hundreds of people and then suddenly changing the rules, or for implying remote workers won’t “go the full mile” (whatever that is).
Post-Covid, people act like remote work is some strange new thing.
Only thing that really brought people into the office was the free food. But I know that has been scaled back dramatically post Covid.
At the start of my career nearly 4 decades ago, I worked for a company that was 10 mins from my home. A year in they moved the location to a building almost 50 mins away. They literally asked no one in the company if this was ok by them…they basically said “The office is here now” and expected you to show up there. Reality is for some it was probably closer, but for others like me it was a worse commute.
So why arbitrarily draw the line 20 years in the past and not 400 years? Only. Because something used to be in a certainty way gives us no guidance if it should be in such a way.
[1] https://doi.org/10.1111/ntwe.12097
So while this article says remote work was increasing, and I am sure it was incrementally in certain tech, marketing, and sales positions, I don’t think its a good example of remote work (as it is defined today) becoming a norm then.
Pre-covid, I worked around 1 day a week remote, but was in the office the other 4 or traveling for work. I believe I knew maybe 2 people in my social and business circles back then that I would define as having a “remote work” job (by our present definition).
What if WFH is the best way for a company to operate?
ok. What if the company’s leadership disagrees?
Also, this has nothing to do with any struggle. It’s about who gets to make the decision.
If you don’t want to work in an office, but the company leadership does…quit.
The "Do more with less" thing is usually an indicator a company is on track to become Nothing.
I wish that this simple truth would be mentioned more often, so less executives would make fools of themselves by saying such nonsense in public.
We have done so much with so little for so long, that now we can do anything with nothing.
> It’s also unknown how many of Nothing’s 450 employees live close to the office. Many professional workers bought homes outside London during the pandemic.
Wow, harsh. I hope they pay well enough to compensate for that crazy policy.
If so, that’s not how any job has ever worked; they don’t pay for your house if you get let go
The government in my country once tried to get companies to move to undeveloped regions. It was an unmitigated disaster. No homes, no infrastructure and if your employer goes bankrupt you're stuck in the boonies.
Where I live in Spain we have to downpay 30% and a mortgage would generally be granted to about 3x the annual salary. So to get a third of that would be quite significant.
This is definitely an issue with lots of subjective and anecdotal evidence on all sides, but I know for a fact that a lot of my coworkers were killing 3-4h/day in the office just doing...whatever.