rgp
Well-known Member
- Location
- Milford,OH
I was retiring anyway, but when the company I was working for told us we had to return to the office or "there would be [unnamed] consequences" one of my teammates found a different job (that would allow remote) and quit. I dragged my feet for a couple months then made one token appearance at the office, really just to get my stuff and see one of my coworkers in person for a last time. And another teammate found someone to rent her house's upstairs rooms (so she would have enough income to retire) and announced she would be retiring in a few weeks (they talked her into working for several more months - allowing her to work from home entirely).
The manager of the programmers knew he'd lose his team if they were forced back to the office and he very cleverly modified their home locations to indicate they were beyond the range of people expected to commute to an office so that their names would not show up on "the list" -- some bigwig manager had discovered a way to get a list of everyone who had not badged into an office since the date of the order to return - and then was all unhappy because a huge percentage of people had never come back, so then "the list" was used to harass our managers to harass us.
It is a pity about the unused office space, but considering that they decades ago took away our real offices and have ever since continued to shrink the size of the cubicles, it isn't nearly as much space as it should have been.
Also, they continually expect employees to work extra hours (all unpaid due to us being exempt), weekends, holidays, and both scheduled and random long overnights to support problems on the system (as well as calling us at all hours to login for an emergency). So considering how much extra they bleed out of us, to make us waste hours of our day shaving/putting on makeup and commuting to sit in tiny cubicles where we are immediately in headsets communicating with teammates in other cities - it just is a pointless power play of the managers to expect that.
My team was left with one set of functionality and one entire system that have NO ONE who knows them, and several which now have only one person who can support them (and she's tired of all the extra work that has fallen on her and is actively looking for another job). It takes about 5 years for a new employee to know the systems and how they work together.
Also, it took them until last month to find a couple people to hire. There are lots of jobs now that advertise remote as a benefit, so it is harder to find people who will take a job in an office.
Your entire post matches my point.
In reality I suppose it just means ..... times truly are changing . When the dust settles it will interesting to see how the "new" works.