The Wrong Arguments Around Remote Work
The debates around remote work are just so ridiculous. None of these debates asks the right questions, but they go down the route of emotions; "culture" and "team spirit." Let's be honest here: Nobody cares, and none of us are paid for that. If companies were so worried about culture and team spirit, they would fire poor leaders and managers. But they don't because nobody cares. They only pretend to care when it is convenient for them.
We should be asking two questions:
If the answer to the first question is "yes," the debate on remote work becomes irrelevant. Here is why: We have created millions of jobs that can be done from anywhere, and now we have the technology to accommodate that.
There are two categories of work: work that cannot be done remotely and work that can be done remotely. Office jobs can be done remotely because this is what the job looks like:
The shift is over. Office work requires no office time, and employees know that's why they ask for it. They are not unreasonable, but you know that. You also noticed that workers whose presence is mandatory to get the job done, i.e., labourers, nurses, drivers, cleaners, shop assistants, drivers, teachers, etc., don't ever talk about working from home. This is your sign that people are not unreasonable, so you should listen. The nature of their job justifies their argument.
The problem is manyfold. We want people back in the offices because:
So yes, we have the wrong argument about remote work, which also has a reason. As long as both parties' arguments differ, there is no solution. Employers know they don't have a case when we ask those two questions because productivity and engagement data refute their arguments, so they come with the culture and team spirit narrative. They are convenient because they cannot be measured.
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