Optimism about return-to-office plans, across industries and cities, is slowly abating. In 2021, executives said 50 percent workers would be back in the office five days a week in the future; now that percentage is down to 20, according to a recent survey by Gartner
What Barrett Kime’s boss said on the recent video call was straightforward. Could members of his team at NBCUniversal show up on the few days a week that they were actually expected to be in the office?
Rebellion ensued. Kime, a senior creative director, took himself off mute. “I was talking about how it was insane to ask people to come in more often with COVID raging,” he recalled.
Other employees then jumped in to share the reasons they didn’t want to go back to the office: child care, rising gas prices, Covid-19 rates. To Kime, it marked a new phase in their return-to-office conversations.
“It’s kind of a Wizard of Oz thing,” Kime said. In other words, his team realized that there was no all-powerful being forcing their attendance; there was only a man behind a curtain (or Zoom screen). “As much as we grumbled about going back to work, we all understood that it was going to happen. But the second we started going, we realized how silly it was,” he added.
Optimism about return-to-office plans, across industries and cities, is slowly abating. When asked in early 2021 about the share of their workers who would be back in the office five days a week in the future, executives said 50%; now that percentage is down to 20, according to a recent survey from the consulting firm Gartner. Office occupancy across the country plateaued last month at around 43% as Covid cases spiked again, according to data from Kastle, a security firm.
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