Is there not a danger that once some employers realise that a job can be done 100% from home, they will be attracted by someone doing the job from home, somewhere else in the world, for a tenth of the salary?
I wonder in factories that have 100% shop floor working as normal but office staff working at home. I can see that creating a big divide in the us and them causing a lot of resentment.
Our office is open, but there has been no push for people to go back at the moment and WFH is still very much the norm.
From what we've heard, the earliest that will change is 21st June if the restrictions ease as per the roadmap, but even then the plan seems to be for a 3/2 split one way or the other between office and WFH.
Prior to the pandemic, we were all in the office five days a week without exception.
It seems like this pandemic has changed the whole WFH dynamic dramatically, and that for me seems like a good thing, but I have some friends who downright hate working from home!
As of 17th May, we've been "invited" (ie ordered) back to the office (zero consultation) for 3 days a week - Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Which seems to me to be completely random and counter-productive. If everyone has to come in, then surely it would be more sensible to rota it across the week so that not everyone is in for those three days. But senior management have always despised the concept of WFH, so here we are.
I am MIGHTILY cheesed off at now having to drive 120 miles a week to a building full of people, to sit at a desk and do a job that I know I can walk downstairs and log in to do the same f*cking thing, without having to share a kitchen and toilet with 15-18 other herberts. Over the last year we've streamlined, gone paperless, productivity unaffected, zero sickness. WFH has proved to be a complete success.
I'm hoping to get tracked and traced at the first opportunity, and hopefully signed off sick. That'll teach them. I shall be complaining bitterly regardless.
As of 17th May, we've been "invited" (ie ordered) back to the office (zero consultation) for 3 days a week - Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Which seems to me to be completely random and counter-productive. If everyone has to come in, then surely it would be more sensible to rota it across the week so that not everyone is in for those three days. But senior management have always despised the concept of WFH, so here we are.
I am MIGHTILY cheesed off at now having to drive 120 miles a week to a building full of people, to sit at a desk and do a job that I know I can walk downstairs and log in to do the same f*cking thing, without having to share a kitchen and toilet with 15-18 other herberts. Over the last year we've streamlined, gone paperless, productivity unaffected, zero sickness. WFH has proved to be a complete success.
I'm hoping to get tracked and traced at the first opportunity, and hopefully signed off sick. That'll teach them. I shall be complaining bitterly regardless.
Mark me down as never return.
You have summarised in a nutshell how, when a lizard evolved some wings way back when, it said '**** that, I'm not ****ing flying. I'm gonna be . . . a dodo!'.
As of 17th May, we've been "invited" (ie ordered) back to the office (zero consultation) for 3 days a week - Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Which seems to me to be completely random and counter-productive. If everyone has to come in, then surely it would be more sensible to rota it across the week so that not everyone is in for those three days. But senior management have always despised the concept of WFH, so here we are.
I am MIGHTILY cheesed off at now having to drive 120 miles a week to a building full of people, to sit at a desk and do a job that I know I can walk downstairs and log in to do the same f*cking thing, without having to share a kitchen and toilet with 15-18 other herberts. Over the last year we've streamlined, gone paperless, productivity unaffected, zero sickness. WFH has proved to be a complete success.
I'm hoping to get tracked and traced at the first opportunity, and hopefully signed off sick. That'll teach them. I shall be complaining bitterly regardless.
Have you thought about saying you have developed a form of IBS (under lockdown) that results in a frequent (yet random) toxically smelling "evacuation" that requires an immediate post chemical resolution with materials not often stocked or available under the label of "industrial/commercial" the usage of which requires training not readily available to contracted third party cleaning staff.
Your GP has recommend permanent home working not only for your health but fundamentally for the well being and mental health of your colleagues.
It's worth a go.
I could mention that.
Or I could take the nuclear option and just violently SOIL myself at my desk within the first week. That could potentially have the desired effect of sending me back to my WFH environment, indefinitely.
I'd go with plan A. but definitely keep B in the kit bag.
I read in Richard Branson's autobiography that he selling photocopied fanzines for years and going nowhere. He started using the violently soil threat in business negotiations and as they say "the rest is history".
Or plan c
When back in the office take photos of people not social distancing or wearing masks, log any lack of hand sanitizer provision and generally look for holes in their Covid Health and Safety plans and the sue the living crap out of them and never have to work again.
Sorted
Well, I'm not taking anything off the table at this stage. Especially whatever I've ended up leaving on it.