18 points

When the lockdowns happened due to COVID, it was just incredible at the sheer number of jobs that could have been done at home.

Some people, like Sam Seder from The Majority Report, speculated that people will use this in the future to leverage their power as employees for added privacy and flexibility in working.

The other thing is that businesses could save on massive costs by simply not, as others have mentioned here, leasing/building/renting/whatever large office spaces, and those former office spaces can be made into something else, like more afforable housing.

But everyone just kinda forgot, or seriously underestimated, at the desire for businesses to have control over their employees. This is one major reason why so many businesses want private healthcare. It allows them to fuck over their employees more than they would otherwise, even if it is much more expensive for them to do so than just paying a tax for public healthcare.

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8 points

Sell the desks, save money on the office, utilities, and office supplies?

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4 points

That would require an admission of fault for the last year of these attacks on WFH. No no we don’t do that here

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1 point

Or, even WORSE: Give up their hatred of poor people in order to save money.

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11 points

That’s so, so stupid… They really are the dumbest of morons. They lost money, so they waste even more money and make their best workers flee.

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7 points

This article misses the real point… they want voluntary turnover, when you layoff there’s severance and unemployment costs…

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21 points
*

Bunch of real Einstein’s running these places, huh? Fucking morons, just don’t waste the money leasing large offices.

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8 points

It’s all about status. Big building = big dick. And more buildings spread all over the place is the equivalent to them having tons of kids.

It’s such a primitive, ape-brain thing to do, but that’s how these psychopaths operate.

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4 points

Seriously. Every job I had, the C-level were all about flexing the size of the company.

One Fintech company I worked at got a giant skyscraper in front of city hall as a Fuck You to the mayor because they had beef with them a few years back. Another tech company constantly bragged about how much square footage of campus they had, constantly comparing themselves to empires.

All just dick measuring.

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3 points

In my experience CXX folks were all about being seen and having something tangible to show off to potential partners and customers. It’s one thing to give people a tour of your facility. It’s another to meet up at a co-working space and settle in for a PowerPoint presentation full of abstract numbers and graphs about your "virtual "company. I’m not saying that’s right, and I’m certainly not arguing for RTO, but it helps explain that motivation and total lack of confidence in WFH.

It’s still a “primitive ape-brain” thing to do though.

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2 points

constantly comparing themselves to empires.

Good thing empires never fall, right?

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165 points

Anyone who does not understand the sunk cost fallacy should not be in management.

You’ve spent $x on office space. You can:

A. Use it, and make your employees hate working for you or

B. Let it go unused, and your employees are happier to continue working for you.

The money is spent either way. The only difference is morale, which does in fact directly contribute to your bottom line.

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68 points

C. Get rid of what you don’t need so that everyone is happy

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36 points

When you are locked in to a 3/5/10 year lease for the space, that’s not actually an option. Most leases signed pre covid should be up by now but clueless management probably renewed anyways.

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13 points

And the really big corporations own their buildings. You think the company locked into leases are mad? The companies who own the building are pissed! Some have a multi million dollar building that’s losing value faster than the speed of light.

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2 points

Are sublets not an option?

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10 points

You mean sell it for money and actually make more profit while everyone is happy? Preposterous!

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1 point
*

IMO, it’s worse than that. It’s not like creating a digital product, paying for a Super Bowl ad, etc. Those desks, phones, computers all still exist and can be sold. Not to mention the real estate! The slightest bit of foresight and planning and these companies could easily offset any costs they’re paying, but no; they only focus on the current fiscal quarter…

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Or c, keep just enough office space to create rolling “layoffs” as people are asked to return to the office.

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22 points

Step 1: Hire staff

Step 2: Train staff to do job

Step 3: COVID! Oh no! Everyone work from home.

Step 4: ???

Step 5: Fire staff to save money.

Step 6: Profit.

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8 points

C. Sublet out the property and make back the cost of the lease or even a bit of profit.

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10 points

It’s nice to find the rant in your head written out. A previous employer of mine dropped two properties in favor of a store front.

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5 points

They can’t depreciate the assets and use them as a deduction if it doesn’t count as an office expense. That only qualifies if a threshhold minimum number of workers spend a threshhold minimum amount of time in the office.

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2 points

There have to be relationships at play or something like that. Or saving face. Maybe investments?

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Work Reform

!workreform@lemmy.world

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A place to discuss positive changes that can make work more equitable, and to vent about current practices. We are NOT against work; we just want the fruits of our labor to be recognized better.

Our Philosophies:

  • All workers must be paid a living wage for their labor.
  • Income inequality is the main cause of lower living standards.
  • Workers must join together and fight back for what is rightfully theirs.
  • We must not be divided and conquered. Workers gain the most when they focus on unifying issues.

Our Goals

  • Higher wages for underpaid workers.
  • Better worker representation, including but not limited to unions.
  • Better and fewer working hours.
  • Stimulating a massive wave of worker organizing in the United States and beyond.
  • Organizing and supporting political causes and campaigns that put workers first.

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