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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

That ship has sailed

453 replies

Grooveisintheheartbaby · 31/10/2024 21:23

My company want us back to the office 5 days a week. As far as I and colleagues are concerned that ship has sailed and we will not be coming back we will leave. AIBU to think that businesses need to accept that things changed in covid forever and they can't reverse it without massive disrest and unhappiness?

OP posts:
shehasglasses48 · 01/11/2024 21:43

Sorry but don’t think they’ll care. Hybrid working will, over time, become a thing of the past.

anon666 · 01/11/2024 22:18

I found productivity plummeted at some point during the wfh era. It very much depends on the job, but my team honestly seemed to be doing the school run half the day.

People might feel they are more productive in their solo introvert work, but it's a disaster for anything that requires frequent, smooth communication.

One day for "introvert work" per week is adequate in most jobs.

However, if you have a job that's essentially a solo enterprise, rather than a team job, I agree you can probably do it from home, as long as you genuinely stay motivated and productive. Just not in my field, not as productively.

Donsyb · 01/11/2024 22:19

AnneLovesGilbert · 31/10/2024 21:39

I do find it odd that companies are doing this now. What’s changed in the last couple of years? Plenty returned to the office once lockdowns were over and others were fine with wfh or hybrid. So why change things now?

In my company they realised people had become too detached from the core of what we do, and that they didn’t understand the implications their decisions had on the operation because they didn’t see it. So they started mandating people come in more often. No one has left because of it.

And they were right, by the way.

GeraniumLeaves · 01/11/2024 22:19

These threads always bring out the posters who see all office workers as identikit inveterate slackers who’ll do anything but work unless they are sitting under the overseer’s watchful eye all day. Usually these comments are accompanied by a dollop of schadenfreude that something people value is being taken away and there’s nothing they can do about it.

What a depressing way to look at other people.

I don’t doubt there are slackers, btw, but my experience is that in decent jobs they are a minority.

Donsyb · 01/11/2024 22:22

Twilightstarbright · 01/11/2024 16:04

I want to defend water cooler moments- I’ve been in my role 7 months and there’s no way I would have settled in and made the progress I have without the casual chats in the office, knowing who did what etc.

We say 2 days a week in the office and we have been enforcing it more strictly. In general it’s been well received and people appreciate the balance.

We have some piss takers though. A more junior member of staff refused to get a meeting pack together for the deadline today as her kids are at home and she wants to spend time with them. Fine- that’s what annual leave is for. Not WFH using the whole afternoon. If she’s working she needs to be working and not with her kids. My kids were at holiday club today because I was working! HR are aware and going through performance review with my colleague- I don’t manage her.

Totally agree with this

Donsyb · 01/11/2024 22:28

BooBooDoodle · 01/11/2024 19:05

WFH should be considered more than it is. Everyone saw over Covid that it is achievable and has great results. The work life balance in this country is so needed and long overdue. They’d have more people in employment due to less stress related long term sick issues. WFH has been invaluable for my DH and us as a family. I don’t blame you for wanting to leave. It’s a whole new world and should be promoted more. We save a lot of money on fuel and more importantly, we have the extra time.

It saw great results temporarily. A lot of that increased productivity has slipped away over time.

Younger, more inexperienced people largely benefit from more time in the office (not all, but most of the ones I have worked with), as it’s easier to learn - both the business and general work skills. Ditto for people starting new jobs.

Treesandsheepeverywhere · 01/11/2024 22:46

Jumpers4goalposts · 01/11/2024 21:08

What I don’t understand on threads like these is why so many people are angry that others get to WFH?

People are frustrated at subpar services.

Many have explained about hearing kids/dogs/postman etc in the background of some calls. Waiting forever for emails response etc..

No one is saying all wfh people are bad, but it's the bad apples that spoil it for everyone else.

If productivity was on the up overall, companies wouldn't need to call people back.

InWalksBarberalla · 01/11/2024 22:56

shehasglasses48 · 01/11/2024 21:43

Sorry but don’t think they’ll care. Hybrid working will, over time, become a thing of the past.

Completely disagree. All statistics say it is on the rise and with an aging population and the need for more workforce participation that will continue.

Ladymuck2022 · 01/11/2024 23:04

I think when my 12-month contract is up early next year I am going to be donating my own brought office chair to charity.

I just am struggling to imagine a work from home job. Never called in sick but the two colleagues I started with who aren’t strangers to going getting signed off whilst on our FTC will be thoroughly looked after I imagine.

Please don’t get me started on people who started a month later after us who sit there 30 mins for a call to come in, wildly unfair. Thanks for in office day for opening my ears to that one.

mumatlast14 · 01/11/2024 23:13

Pre covid many companies were encouraging staff to WFH and to attend mtgs virtually instead of in person to reduce costs, environmental impact. The push to return to in person is a reaction to covid. And lets be honest much of the reduction seen in productivity during covid wasn't due to WFH itself - but due to it happening in areas where the structure wasn't already up and running - IT, management or simply novelty of WFH. Plus, let's not forget the simple fact of it being carried out against the backdrop of covid made it an unnatural process. Plenty of workplaces had successful WFH as the norm previously as a plus for work/life balance and a reduction in their operating costs.

honestasever · 02/11/2024 05:59

RatMouseVole · 01/11/2024 12:12

I used to commute to the office, every day, because I had to. Conservatively, 2 hours commuting time per day.

That's 10 hours per week.

450 hours (18.75 days) in a typical year.

In a forty year career, that's 18,000 hours, or 750 days, over 2 years.

Fuck that if there is an alternative.

This is not your employers fault.
You are the cause.
You have options.
Move nearer your job or get a job nearer your home.

LordEmsworth · 02/11/2024 06:21

I am sorry that you've got confused, I am not the employer, just observing my employer and colleagues.

The employer decided in advance that they were willing to trade-off some (unspecified number of) people leaving, for having most in the office 2 days a week. Many people are loudly bitching, whining, moaning, arguing, and threatening to leave. In our department of c.85, that has translated to one actual leaver, who made the decision quickly and acted. Didn't spend the last 12 months making lots of noise in the hope of getting the employer's decision changed - just did what she needed to, good for her.

But it's hardly a massive exodus. I am not sure why you think this is terrible?

If the OP were truly motivated, she'd be sorting out her CV instead of posting on Mumsnet about how she plans a campaign of non violent resistance, surely?

SoiledMyselfDuringSomeTurbulence · 02/11/2024 07:09

InWalksBarberalla · 01/11/2024 22:56

Completely disagree. All statistics say it is on the rise and with an aging population and the need for more workforce participation that will continue.

It's like an article of faith for some posters on here. They believe everyone will be back in the office because that's the natural order of things.

Feelingathomenow · 02/11/2024 07:24

LordEmsworth · 02/11/2024 06:21

I am sorry that you've got confused, I am not the employer, just observing my employer and colleagues.

The employer decided in advance that they were willing to trade-off some (unspecified number of) people leaving, for having most in the office 2 days a week. Many people are loudly bitching, whining, moaning, arguing, and threatening to leave. In our department of c.85, that has translated to one actual leaver, who made the decision quickly and acted. Didn't spend the last 12 months making lots of noise in the hope of getting the employer's decision changed - just did what she needed to, good for her.

But it's hardly a massive exodus. I am not sure why you think this is terrible?

If the OP were truly motivated, she'd be sorting out her CV instead of posting on Mumsnet about how she plans a campaign of non violent resistance, surely?

Well, if the workforce are disengaged they’re not going to be very productive or willing to go the extra mile. I think the phrase is silent quitting,

LordEmsworth · 02/11/2024 10:00

Feelingathomenow · 02/11/2024 07:24

Well, if the workforce are disengaged they’re not going to be very productive or willing to go the extra mile. I think the phrase is silent quitting,

😂 I have completely lost sight of what your argument is. Are you saying that the employees hold all the power? Employers will give in to any demand because their workforce is unhappy? You must not have worked in corporate environments 🤣🤣🤣

2Sensitive · 02/11/2024 10:02

Your only a payroll number, they will replace you.
Good luck

Halfemptyhalfling · 02/11/2024 10:05

Problem is house prices closed to many locations are now prohibitive so hard to find enough staff who live close

Gonnagetgoingreturnsagain · 02/11/2024 10:13

JollyPinkFox · 31/10/2024 22:30

I’m definitely more productive from home. Nobody to chat to in the kitchen, nobody distracting me at my desk with a ‘quick question’. Nobody leaving at 5, prompting me to think ah I should go now too - instead, regularly working later at home. Working through lunch because people put meetings in last minute when it’s the only slot free, when they couldn’t do that if you’d nipped out for lunch. The people constantly on orange should be managed properly…IT can generally produce Teams activity reports, managers choosing not to manage those who take the piss isn’t a good reason to stop sensible people working from home IMO

That’s it. The people who are constantly on orange aren’t being managed properly so those who do wfh effectively are lumped into the same category as them.

I’ve worked with a few people who wfh and then are gone after normal school pick up time and say they “make up the time in
the evening”, some do this, some don’t. Often the children are of an age where they can be left if the worker was to log back on again. I see it in my street though which is round the corner from a primary school, people either on Teams calls or work phone calls or just sat waiting for kids to come out of school so they go back to work or not.

A neighbour and friend works for Barclays Bank and hates wfh because she says they’re really harshly policed if she does this. She prefers to be in the office as there’s not so much managers breathing down their necks there. I get that employers need to monitor what staff do when WFH but it shouldn’t be a Big Brother technique.

Miyagi99 · 02/11/2024 10:24

honestasever · 02/11/2024 05:59

This is not your employers fault.
You are the cause.
You have options.
Move nearer your job or get a job nearer your home.

But it works both ways, employers have the choice of talented employees from all four corners of the UK with remote working, they are not limited to the local area where they are competing with similar businesses for a small staff pool.

Feelingathomenow · 02/11/2024 10:39

LordEmsworth · 02/11/2024 10:00

😂 I have completely lost sight of what your argument is. Are you saying that the employees hold all the power? Employers will give in to any demand because their workforce is unhappy? You must not have worked in corporate environments 🤣🤣🤣

Oh I’ve worked and still work in such environments- no the work force don’t have all the power, but neither do the bosses. Successful business relies on the cooperation between workers and bosses. To be effective work has to be a mutually reciprocal arrangement. At the moment there is a stand off where employees aren’t as productive as they could be.

I’m surprised, if you work in a corporate environment that you haven’t had experience of this, or struggle to understand a widely understood concept in that environment

Grammarnut · 02/11/2024 13:28

Well, some will leave, but jobs are not exactly growing on trees these days so many will stay. Not unreasonable to have people back in the office. DS does 2 days a week and DD probably one or two, but sometimes has to go to offices several hours drive away and an overnight stay for meetings. I suspect that companies will get most of their way on this one, and also that small businesses, cafes, shops etc that rely on employees working locally will be on board with the idea. Only office workers are affected by this; generally not possible to assemble a Rolls Royce plane engine in your home office, nor can you carry out open heart surgery there. A middle-class office worker problem, I feel.

Rosejasmine · 02/11/2024 14:00

Unfortunately some people are not working very effectively from home - they are awol or not getting on very well which is more difficult to get away with in the office.
Young people new to the workplace are not getting the benefit of observing experienced colleagues, it’s more difficult to bounce and share ideas and these employees are not progressing or as happy as they were when 5 days a week was the norm.
I understand both sides and I think a compromise if flexible working can be found.
For those who say people will vote with their feet - I always remember what a boss told me when I was young. Nobody is irreplaceable.

SoiledMyselfDuringSomeTurbulence · 02/11/2024 14:10

Grammarnut · 02/11/2024 13:28

Well, some will leave, but jobs are not exactly growing on trees these days so many will stay. Not unreasonable to have people back in the office. DS does 2 days a week and DD probably one or two, but sometimes has to go to offices several hours drive away and an overnight stay for meetings. I suspect that companies will get most of their way on this one, and also that small businesses, cafes, shops etc that rely on employees working locally will be on board with the idea. Only office workers are affected by this; generally not possible to assemble a Rolls Royce plane engine in your home office, nor can you carry out open heart surgery there. A middle-class office worker problem, I feel.

Nope, remote working very much a thing in low paid customer service and call centre work. It's the subject of frequent complaints on this disproportionately middle class website!

LordEmsworth · 02/11/2024 15:11

Feelingathomenow · 02/11/2024 10:39

Oh I’ve worked and still work in such environments- no the work force don’t have all the power, but neither do the bosses. Successful business relies on the cooperation between workers and bosses. To be effective work has to be a mutually reciprocal arrangement. At the moment there is a stand off where employees aren’t as productive as they could be.

I’m surprised, if you work in a corporate environment that you haven’t had experience of this, or struggle to understand a widely understood concept in that environment

Your claim is really not borne out by reality. Many employers are not backing down in their requirement for office workers to be in the office a certain amount. By all means, encourage the OP to go on strike / moan and whinge / do a poor job / threaten to leave (without really meaning it), but that is unlikely to be helpful to her. At best, it makes her and those around her miserable; at worst, she ends up being taken down a disciplinary process, as is happening in other companies where employees are refusing to fulfil the contracts they signed pre-2020.

The employer will presumably have engaged Legal, HR, unions etc before starting the push; most corporate employers don't roll something out to find out how the workforce thinks, they find out beforehand and decide how to deal with it. So the idea that the employer is there going "oh I wasn't expecting this, maybe we should change our minds" - I don't really know why anyone would think that.

Employment is a limited two-way street, sure; but it's not equal by any means. Employees are free to take their labour elsewhere, but they're unlikely to win a battle of wills that the employer has knowingly started!

Feelingathomenow · 02/11/2024 15:56

LordEmsworth · 02/11/2024 15:11

Your claim is really not borne out by reality. Many employers are not backing down in their requirement for office workers to be in the office a certain amount. By all means, encourage the OP to go on strike / moan and whinge / do a poor job / threaten to leave (without really meaning it), but that is unlikely to be helpful to her. At best, it makes her and those around her miserable; at worst, she ends up being taken down a disciplinary process, as is happening in other companies where employees are refusing to fulfil the contracts they signed pre-2020.

The employer will presumably have engaged Legal, HR, unions etc before starting the push; most corporate employers don't roll something out to find out how the workforce thinks, they find out beforehand and decide how to deal with it. So the idea that the employer is there going "oh I wasn't expecting this, maybe we should change our minds" - I don't really know why anyone would think that.

Employment is a limited two-way street, sure; but it's not equal by any means. Employees are free to take their labour elsewhere, but they're unlikely to win a battle of wills that the employer has knowingly started!

Well the reality is a happy workforce is a more productive workforce, numerous studies back this up. Surely you know this?

The question is why do employers deliberately want to do something they know will make their employees unhappy and therefore less productive. There’s usually some power tripping management involved who think everyone prioritises work as much as they do. They often don’t understand the reality of many of their employees’ mindsets. They are extremely poor managers.