Companies Finding Resistance To Returning To Office

It seems we are passed the point of no return on this one.

Remote work is with us to stay.

This appears to be proven out with each case that is put to the test. Companies have seen the entire employee-employer relationship change a great deal during the last 2.5 years. Because of that, adaption is required. It seems this is slow for some to realize.

Elon Musk made news (no surprise there) by claiming that all Tesla workers had to return to the office. There was going to be no remote work according to him. This is something that we see in much of the technology world.

It also seems to be commonplace within the automotive industry.

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General Motors Cancels Plans

Mary Barra, the CEO of General Motors, decided that it is time for all employees to return to the office. There is no reason for them to stay home anymore. After all, President Biden just announced the pandemic is over.

In a Friday afternoon message, the company informed employees that it was moving things back to the office. The plan was for corporate employees returning to the office at least 3 days per week.

According to CNBC, the company is now in damage control and having to backtrack its plans. This came as a result of the response it received from the workers.

On Tuesday, a second message walked back that timing and clarified the company won’t be mandating specific in-office days, instead leaving that decision to individual teams.

This is a large difference from the previous decision.

“Our plan was always, and still is, collaboratively design the solution that best balances the needs of the enterprise with the needs of each of you,” read the memo, which was signed by CEO Mary Barra and other executives, a copy of which was viewed by CNBC.

Of course, this is a radical change from the flexible approach that the company was taking.

During the COVID crisis, we were told that "we are all in this together". Employees were tasked with figuring out how to work remotely, which the companies benefited from.

Naturally, as things "returned to normal", the being in things together went out the window. Now it is the goal to get everyone back to the way they were before.

The difference is that employees aren't having it.

A New Era?

Many are now questioning whether we are entering a new era of employer-employee relations. This is something that we see being played out throughout the world.

One major factor is something we discussed in depth on here: demographics.

The fact that many countries are seeing an aging population is having a profound impact already. As more enter the retirement years, we start alter the make up of the existing workforce.

It appears many companies are feeling this already. As they are trying to insert their will on employees, they are finding that people are exercising options. The "Great Resignation" is a major warning sign of a seismic shift. While we can debate the reasons for this all day long, the bottom line is we are seeing it happen. Employees, regardless of the source, feel empowered to say "no".

Will this continue? With the demographics playing out as they are, it likely will. Some companies, driven by aggressive and motivated leaders, will start to tap into the extended pool of talent that comes from focusing on knowledge workers from around the country (and even world).

This is going to put more pressure on the others to be able to match it. It is a situation where people have options, especially from outside their geographic areas, the power shifts immediately.

Those that do not get on board are going to find they miss out on the top talent. GM was smart to back track on their proclamation of requiring all to return to the office.

Unfortunately, the fact they went this direction shows there might be a massive shift required in their thinking.

It is what happens during paradigm shifts.


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Bang, I did it again... I just rehived your post!
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Frankly, I'm used to working remotely, I don't go to the office every day like I used to. It is more efficient for me that way. Frankly, I think that many people who do their work with computers think the same as me. No matter how much companies insist, I don't think it will be the same as before.

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The challenge is we are creatures of habit. Get us out of the habit of the office, and we do not want to change back.

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I work for a power company in central California. Remote work is definitely here to stay. There was a massive backlash when the company stated people would be returning to work on site. Given two years in COVID workers found that they were just as, if not more, efficient working from home. Oh, and they saved more money without commuting all the time.

Yeah, if companies thought they could just flip the switch, they were dead wrong.

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Good luck to you in that field. Being part of the power company in CA has to be very challenging.

My hats off to you.

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(Edited)

Thanks. It’s just a job. The power plant pays the workers well. It’s hard work that sometimes requires 14-16 hours per day, 6-7 days a week, but that’s only about 1.5 months out of the year.

California definitely makes the job challenging as the state legislature doesn’t seem to understand the laws they are passing.

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It is true. This wave of work from home is here to stay. And I am its supporter because It is convenient for many people now to work in more personalized working conditions. Thanks for sharing

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If there are no longer any risks with COVID 19, it is time to return to the offices, but you still have to take care of yourself

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The shift to remote work isn't going to change now that people have gotten used to it. It makes me wonder though if GM or other companies will lay off those that do want to work remotely as it cuts down it's workforce due to the recession.

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There is that theory out there. I tend to think it is in play. Those who refuse, will lose their jobs. But they werent fired since they just didnt show up, hence quit.

I bet that is what Tesla does.

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One of my friends complained to me after the company called them to work at the office. Considering the Istanbul traffic jam, it is hard for a white collar to go to the office. In a few weeks, he got used to the new situation.

On the other hand, working at home is not perceived as serious work. In the past, housewives and writers were victims of this situation. Now, when white-collar workers start working at home, the prestige of working at home may increase.

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When highly paid knowledge workers pass on jobs from companies that force them into the office, we will see a change.

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I get these not willing to go back to office although a friend of mine was desperate to do that cuz he was missing human interraction.

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Its only a matter of time before everyone is back to grinding from the company's brick and mortar location. Its only a matter of how long can workers prolong that action.

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it takes time and for some, they just think that all this remote work is just for the season. but the only way I see this working is if employees are driven to make this to stay, and for some companies that allow their team head members to onboard new ones themselves and get paid by them. I think this will be a shift in the way people find employment, but as you said employees are pushing on this role, the foundation is been laid out already and I think is shift will happen quicker, not going to be up to a decade.

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