My favorite director made RTO mandatory for his org on a "we're better together" campaign, moved his office away from the org, and spends most of his days on zoom calls with executives. And it turns out, when he's on zoom for most of a day, he doesn't see the point to coming into the office!
One thing I have seen is a massive increase in wider executive meetings. With Zoom calls routinely having 100 executives. There's no time to manage their own teams because top execs are forever inviting everyone to 'fireside chats' and 'deep dives' because on the surface it costs nothing to add another person to a Zoom call.
Not all of the stakeholder's voices are in the room, right? Something that's essential for Big Tech is the wave of newly minted engineers to facilitate growth (and replace people that retire). These people don't even work for your company yet, but I know that the're going to have an awful onboarding experience when there is nobody to sit next to them and answer all the "dumb questions" that we inevitably have when we're learning the field.
My impression from working at Google was that mentorship was one of the most important software engineering job responsibilities. There were many summers there where I had interns and my full-time job was answering their questions, and that seemed to be what was expected. (They made some neat stuff that I would have prioritized for myself to do!) Big Tech's goal is to get huge, so they can pursue any opportunity that comes up. It isn't necessarily for Engineer #23847 on Team #8734 to type in as much code as possible.
(Whether or not this strategy is a good idea is up for debate, several rounds of layoffs later.)
Yeah I hear that as a common argument but why is that my problem? Why should I be forced to commute just because a junior engineer can’t figure shit out?
Because your job at this type of company is to train junior engineers. That might not be a priority elsewhere, so the idea is to get you to work elsewhere instead.
For me personally, being able to move somewhere with a lower cost of living without having a lengthy commute is a huge benefit. Especially in the face of ongoing layoffs.