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by happytoexplain
894 days ago
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I don't know a single person who doesn't list "more efficient" in their list of reasons they prefer WHO. The different opinions are only asymmetric in that the advantages alleged for WHO are typically a superset of the advantages alleged for RTO. Practically speaking, both are mostly correct - it's the person who does better with one or the other, not the policy itself. E.g. just looking at the efficiency variable alone, people who collaborate better remotely are not more or less hampered be being in-person with their colleagues than vice versa (unless you cherry-pick). So there's no reason not to just allow both, other than those common petty motivations that poor leaders are susceptible to focusing on, usually for optics reasons or other bad second-order metrics. |
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Just pointing out that if someone wants to RTO but their office wants to WFH, that person will be slightly inconvenienced. If a person who built their lifestyle around WFH is required to RTO, they might face insurmountably major problems.
And I think that's why the WFH contingent, including myself, is so much more vocal. Even if it were true that there were roughly as many RTO and WFH fans, which I don't believe for a moment, the WFH group deals with way more hardship if they don't get their way than the RTO group would.