- Aug 24, 2020
- 7,134
There's no one size fits all. We're all different.
We can all quote studies supporting our own particular agenda.
But anyone who claims that WFH reduces productivity (or the opposite), is entrenched in their own beliefs.
I've been retired for 9 years. Before I retired, WFH was beginning to be a thing. Some people took the piss; others didn't. Personally, I found it didn't really work for me, as I knew I had any number of distractions and reasons not to do work. But there were times when I WFH and I did indeed get down to the task.
There may be a danger on this thread, of contributors judging others by their own (low, or imagined / projected) high standards. Just a suggestion.
Edit: keep an eye out for the virtue signallers. Who are they trying to convince? The OP is equally blinkered.
We can all quote studies supporting our own particular agenda.
But anyone who claims that WFH reduces productivity (or the opposite), is entrenched in their own beliefs.
I've been retired for 9 years. Before I retired, WFH was beginning to be a thing. Some people took the piss; others didn't. Personally, I found it didn't really work for me, as I knew I had any number of distractions and reasons not to do work. But there were times when I WFH and I did indeed get down to the task.
There may be a danger on this thread, of contributors judging others by their own (low, or imagined / projected) high standards. Just a suggestion.
Edit: keep an eye out for the virtue signallers. Who are they trying to convince? The OP is equally blinkered.
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