Data: Kastle Systems. Chart: Axios Visuals This graphic, similar to some confidential polling we've seen, sends an unmistakable message — one many bosses don't want to hear: - Never again will most office workers spend five-day, 40-hour weeks in physical buildings, jammed with humans.
Why it matters: COVID will fade. But its legacy of habituating tens of millions to work from anywhere isn't going anywhere. Welcome to the working world's Virtual Reality Era: - This new habit of convenience and comfort will be impossible to break for any company that relies on hard-to-find workers.
- A slew of big companies — Nationwide Insurance, Pinterest, Coinbase, Dropbox — have already permanently switched to remote-first, shuttering most or all of their offices.
Case in point: Meta execs (including Mark Zuckerberg) are scattering far from Silicon Valley — to Israel, the U.K., Hawaii — to push the limits of remote leadership, The Wall Street Journal reports. What to watch: Some CEOs are in denial, believing things will revert to normal. The data says: Fat chance, boss. - People bolted: 17% of office workers say they're working remotely because they moved away, a Pew study found. Just look at the soaring population and housing prices in America's new boomtowns and tech hubs: Murfreesboro, Tennessee — a suburb of Nashville — has grown 20% during the pandemic, The New York Times notes.
- They demand flexibility: 75% of executives want to come back to the office three or more days a week — compared with just 37% of rank-and-file employees, according to a new Slack Future Forum report.
- They'll quit: 11 million jobs are open in America. If a company forces people to come in, they'll go look for a job at companies offering remote work. Half of workers would rather quit than be told to return full-time, a survey from the HR consultancy Robert Half found.
🔮 Your future foretold: At Axios, we are fully remote. Tomorrow, we're doing what will soon be commonplace: We're holding a partial staff retreat in a rising tech and job hub — Charlotte, North Carolina. |
No comments:
Post a Comment