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Snap Demands Employees Work In Office 80% of the Time Starting Early Next Year (cnn.com) 113

Snapchat's parent company is asking workers to return to the office 80% of the time, or the equivalent of four days a week, beginning early next year, in the latest sign of tech employees receiving less flexibility nearly three years after the pandemic took hold and amid a wave of industry cost cutting. CNN reports: "After working remotely for so long we're excited to get everyone back together next year with our new 80/20 hybrid model," a spokesperson for Snap (SNAP) confirmed to CNN in a statement Tuesday. "We believe that being together in person, while retaining flexibility for our team members, will enhance our ability to deliver on our strategic priorities of growing our community, driving revenue growth, and leading in [augmented reality]." The new policy will take effect at the end of February.

News of Snap's stricter in-office policy was first reported by Bloomberg, which cited an internal memo from CEO Evan Spiegel telling employees they may have to "sacrifice" some amount of "individual convenience" but it will benefit "our collective success."

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Snap Demands Employees Work In Office 80% of the Time Starting Early Next Year

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  • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Tuesday November 29, 2022 @07:31PM (#63089648)

    Snap has announced an emergency hiring spree.

  • by drkshadow ( 6277460 ) on Tuesday November 29, 2022 @07:37PM (#63089660)

    I was waiting after Covid: I could move out of the city, where my jobs have been centered (I'm in a particular field), or I could stay. I didn't want to leave and then be unable to get a job in the city because I did. OTOH, I don't really want to stay around so many neighbors who don't give a shit about the neighborhood, because they're all just renters anyway.

    I opted to wait. If things were still remote in two years after covid, I'd go -- there are significant drawbacks to being in the city, but I wanted to be closer to the office. So, two years later, still remote - and the companies that I've worked for in the past two years have decided that they're going to be permanently remote. Companies in California can get good employees who don't want to be in the San Francisco area, and those employees will be paid (near) California rates for leaving wherever - it's win-win for California companies and those remote workers.

    But then there's this recession, and the companies are shedding employees, and using it as an opportunity to force out the full-remote that was first required, and then a benefit of the job market after Covid.

    The question now is: is the recession going to be used to force out remote work? What will things be like in two years?...

    • The question now is: is the recession going to be used to force out remote work? What will things be like in two years?...

      I would be surprised if remote workers are not first to go. A job market in which you can switch jobs without leaving your bedroom is a very fluid market, which cuts both ways.

      I am not even arguing that this is necessarily good for business. But if companies, right or wrong, see fit to overcome the friction to staff a position in-person, then the higher difficult of re-filling it l

    • I am in the exact same situation as you. I would love to sell my more expensive property, and move permanently into my remote and very affordable one. I spent the last two years working there and proved I can do it no problem at all, so I do know it is entirely doable. It is off grid and very remote so there would be no possibility of going into an office on a regular basis, and keeping my software job.

      So I have held onto my house nearer a city where there are ample tech jobs. I feel that I can't make
    • Funny thing is... corporations are fine with offshore workers (many of whom do crappy work) and with subcontractors.

      It's about the ego of the bosses. Not about productivity.

      They can't have a big ego if the office is empty-- even if the company is productive and successful.

  • by Jason1729 ( 561790 ) on Tuesday November 29, 2022 @07:53PM (#63089690)
    The new policy will take effect at the end of February.

    So...buy March put options?
  • by ksw_92 ( 5249207 )

    IT in the US accounts for about 7.6% of the overall civilian workforce. The vast majority of the US workforce has no choice but to work outside of home. You can't, at national scale, build, transport, repair, heal, mine, grow and harvest (well, I guess farmers are mostly "work at home" in a broad sense), protect life and property, or feed and entertain the masses from your home office. When you die, the mortician is not going to do his work in his home mortuary-cum-garage.

    I have serious doubts about the bre

    • My office job is fake work, I shouldn't have to be physically present to smash buttons on a keyboard. It's ridiculous to expect it. Just as ridiculous to expect that with current technology that a construction worker can operate a backhoe remotely. Maybe one day, but it'll probably be one person monitoring 20 robotic backhoes and 95% fewer construction workers. But there is a who slew of non-IT jobs that are office jobs, and a few number of non-office jobs that could be done remotely or nearly so. Times are

    • IT in the US accounts for about 7.6% of the overall civilian workforce. The vast majority of the US workforce has no choice but to work outside of home.

      IT doesn't include phone workers etc, who can also work from home. You do realize that most people in the western world have service jobs, right? If you think the vast majority of the US workforce is doing old-timey work like fellin' trees and shit, you're off your nut.

    • At a time when companies gladly outsource work overseas to people who can't even speak English, it comes across as a bit hypocritical to demand your mostly white, male employees come into the office while letting your mostly Asian contractors work from India.

      It's not just a matter of the fact that the work can be done from home; farmers, auctioneers, lawyers, etc... routinely work from home. It's the fact that there's a substantial monetary, social, and environmental cost to commuting, and companies are

  • The US slavers want their peons back on the plantation.

    I manage a small (10) team of security architects. A few of the guys go to the office once a week. I suspect mainly to get away from the wife/kids. A few go in once a month, one goes in once every quarter and the rest (myself included) never go in.

    Productivity is high, retention is high, people want to get jobs with us. We all do our jobs well and it's noticed. We work on national critical systems.

    If your people "need" to be in the office 3-4 days a wee

    • Forgot to say, Snap people ? GTFO right now. Freshen up the CV.

      Watch their frantic backpedalling in a couple of months.

    • Or maybe different jobs have different requirements?

      Maybe the type of people that apply for different jobs also have a different work eithic then you do?

      Maybe a lot of people do not have the space at home to have an effecient workplace?

  • If only there were some companies doing good enough communication software so that people would be able to pretend as if they were in proximity of other people. Too bad there is no such thing.
  • by PortHaven ( 242123 ) on Wednesday November 30, 2022 @09:12AM (#63090538) Homepage

    Ya, time to sell that stock.

    No, this has NOTHING to do about productivity. Without a doubt, I am far more productive not spending 2-3 hours a day in traffic. Not having to take days off unexpectedly for vehicles with 100K+ miles to sit in the shop.

    Nope, this is all about control and lack of trust. And it needs to end. And frankly, I would rather see the entire economy collapse and America dissolve than return to mandatory in-officework for jobs that do not necessitate it.

  • If you don't like your job, you get another one. And even now, there is such unprecedented demand for tech workers that it's ridiculously simple to get a bunch of job offers if you're even reasonably competent.

    You also can start your own company and allow / force people work wherever and whenever they want, as long as you are complying with all Federal, state, and local employment laws. That's capitalism.

    This is likely another top-heavy tech company going through some "organic reductions in force" (meanin

  • Businesses get sweet deals because they can create jobs for states and municipalities.
    Because the employees spend money (a lot of money) and pay taxes (a lot of taxes) in those states and municipalities.

    If your company goes from delivering 5,000 workers to the local economy to 50 workers, it's going to lose a lot of political power and status.

    New York City has been pretty blunt in its opposition to working from home. Working from home destroys businesses, tax revenue, and real estate values (and hence eve

  • then the problem of 'excess headcount' takes care of itself without having to pay out PTO or severance.

  • by Ceseuron ( 944486 ) on Wednesday November 30, 2022 @01:16PM (#63091338)

    Just because a trash company that produces nothing of any societal value announces that they are forcing their workers back to the office does not indicate that remote work is over for everyone across the board.

    Snap is a worthless company with a junk stock that is trading for less now than when they went public. They are hardly an indicator of overall job market health as it relates to working from home or working from an office. I still field multiple requests per week from recruiters offering full time remote positions. My current employer is fully remote and runs monthly metrics on our productivity and the reports show a constant upward trend in the work being done.

    Articles like this are just lame bids to spread FUD about remote work by people who insist that being in an office is the only way to work for everyone. I am not concerned about what Snap is doing with their workforce, nor am I concerned with remote work going away anytime soon. I have been working full time remote since 2016, and that is not going to change for me because a worthless social media company is grasping at any straw they can to stave off the inevitable failure that is coming.

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