Leo
Well-known member
will businesses ever demand everyone go back? have they permanently lost the authority? I guess the bottom line is productivity: is shit getting done.
I work with a client that for the first time since March 2020 is just now encouraging people to come back in on Wednesdays, I guess just to test the waters and possibly get the ball rolling. thing is, that client has been more productive in developing new and better offerings in the past two years than ever before, so it's clear that 100% remote worked fine...and in fact, better than when they were 100% in person, weirdly. at what point do companies cut their loses on owning or renting huge office spaces that accommodate a few hundred empty desks?
we've all just kind of accepted it, but it's really an insane turn of events, maybe the most drastic change in business operations since the internet.
I work with a client that for the first time since March 2020 is just now encouraging people to come back in on Wednesdays, I guess just to test the waters and possibly get the ball rolling. thing is, that client has been more productive in developing new and better offerings in the past two years than ever before, so it's clear that 100% remote worked fine...and in fact, better than when they were 100% in person, weirdly. at what point do companies cut their loses on owning or renting huge office spaces that accommodate a few hundred empty desks?
we've all just kind of accepted it, but it's really an insane turn of events, maybe the most drastic change in business operations since the internet.