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Can Employers Force Teleworking Americans Back to the Office?

From curbside pickup to having groceries delivered, the COVID-19 pandemic changed many norms in American society, including what it means to be on the job.

“It’s been that catalyst that transformed how we work. It’s changed the acceptability of working at home,” says Timothy Golden, professor of management at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York. “Employee expectations and the norms for employees have been altered by this experience of mass remote work.”

In the three-plus years since the pandemic forced many to work from home, remote work has transformed from a temporary arrangement to a new way of living and working. More than one-third of Americans, 34%, worked from home at least some of the time in 2022, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. By comparison, just 24% of people teleworked in 2019, before the pandemic.

Jaleesa Garland, a marketing manager at an e-commerce startup, works in her apartment in Tulsa, Oklahoma, July 9, 2021.

Many major companies such as Amazon, Apple, Meta [Facebook] and Disney have called workers back into the office for at least part of the week. In October 2022, bank and financial holding company Goldman Sachs said that more than two-thirds of its staff were back in the office full-time.

Organizational psychologist Cathleen Swody says her corporate clients are mostly settling on a hybrid schedule where workers are in the office about three days a week.

“I am hearing a lot of pushback from employees against the mandatory full-time, back-to-work option,” says Swody, a managing partner at Thrive Leadership. “They feel that they’ve been working from home for three years. They’ve been demonstrating their performance and that they’re trustworthy, and that they can actually get their work done without being on site. And now they feel a little bit like that’s being called into question.”

Golden, who has studied the issue for more than 20 years, says remote work highlights an ever-present tension between managers and employees.

“Remote work brings to the surface a lot of these classic issues in management thought, in terms of control versus autonomy,” Golden says. “Managers have a sense that maybe, somehow, they have less control over their employees because they can’t physically observe them all the time. And so, that’s uncomfortable for many managers.”

People work over lunch downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday, March 15, 2022.

People work over lunch downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday, March 15, 2022.

McKinsey and Company, a management consulting firm, surveyed 25,000 Americans in the spring of 2022 and found that 58% reported having the opportunity to work from home at least one day a week, while 35% said they could work from home five days a week. Eighty-seven percent of people who have the option to work from home take advantage of the opportunity, the survey said.

“A majority of what we’re talking about is some combination of one, two, three days per week working from home. It’s not fully remote,” says Ryan Luby, an associate partner at McKinsey & Company. “The implication of that is that folks tend to live within a reasonable commuting radius of their offices. …You’re still going to be what we think about as tethered to an urban core.”

Having the flexibility to work remotely is more valuable than money to some employees, according to Luby, which could help boost employers’ bottom line.

“It looks like folks are willing to exchange wage growth for the opportunity to work flexibly,” Luby says. “And I think, in a world in which wages are increasing rapidly and employers are concerned about wage growth, I think there’s an interesting opportunity … to think about granting flexibility.”

Wisconsin resident Sarah Motiff works from home in Columbus, on Sept. 13, 2022.

Wisconsin resident Sarah Motiff works from home in Columbus, on Sept. 13, 2022.

Employers might not have much of a choice. The newest entrants into the job market — recent college graduates — are beginning their careers with different expectations than previous generations.

“They have begun the world of work with the presence of remote work … and so, that’s what they know. And in large ways, that’s what they have come to expect,” Golden says. “And so, when they look for career opportunities and job opportunities, they look for remote work as an option. Maybe not full time, maybe as a hybrid form.”

The experts agree that there’s almost no chance of going back to the office full time for the majority of workers who were able to telework during the pandemic.

“The horse has been let out of the barn. We have experience. We have demonstrated that the technology can work, that we can be effective not being in the office full time. And we’ve seen a lot of perks for employees and for work-life management, flexibility for organizations,” Swody says. “I think it’s going to be very hard to go back to where we were.”

https://www.voanews.com/a/can-employers-force-teleworking-americans-back-to-the-office-/7201900.html Can Employers Force Teleworking Americans Back to the Office?

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