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Zuckerberg Encourages Employees To Get Back To the Office (seattletimes.com) 121

An anonymous reader writes: Facebook parent company Meta, which emerged as an outspoken advocate of remote work during the pandemic, is encouraging employees to come back to the office. Some early analysis "suggests that engineers who either joined Meta in-person and then transferred to remote or remained in-person performed better on average than people who joined remotely," Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said in a statement Tuesday. Zuckerberg cautioned that the data requires further study, but encouraged employees to "find more opportunities to work with your colleagues in person" in the meantime. In 2021, Facebook established a policy that allowed all employees to work remotely even after the pandemic if their jobs could be done outside of an office. Several big tech companies including Amazon, Apple and Twitter have been trying to get workers to return to the office.
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Zuckerberg Encourages Employees To Get Back To the Office

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  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @12:25PM (#63370129) Homepage Journal

    This is the pretext.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yes it's a trap. If you go into the office they'll know you work there and fire you!

    • by garett_spencley ( 193892 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @02:31PM (#63370483) Journal

      Or this is layoffs through attrition. [chron.com]

      I don't know anything about the laws in the California but I was told, anecdotally, that there are regulations regarding the amount, circumstances and number of layoffs that Californian companies can do. If Meta wants more, but can't for legal reasons, they may be actually trying to get people to quit.

      • I don't believe there is any limitation regarding the number of workers that can be cut. The requirement is there has to be ample notice (60 days) when they do a mass layoff.
        • by Junta ( 36770 )

          I don't know specifics by state, but:
          -Someone quitting is generally cheaper (e.g. no severance required)
          -While you can have large layoffs, the bigger the layoffs the larger the threshold of notice required (at least in some states). So depending on layoffs they might incur one or two months salary compared to quitting. However attrition generally would take longer, so that doesn't matter.

          One concern is that in attrition, you generally lose the people you least want to lose. If you do feel that forever r

          • -Someone quitting is generally cheaper (e.g. no severance required) -While you can have large layoffs, the bigger the layoffs the larger the threshold of notice required (at least in some states). So depending on layoffs they might incur one or two months salary compared to quitting. However attrition generally would take longer, so that doesn't matter.

            I don't know that with any job I had in the far, far past, where I was let go...that I ever got severance...?

            Granted, those really were before my "real job

            • by Junta ( 36770 )

              Early in my career I got a one month severance.

              Colleagues that have been laid off lately have gotten 6 month severance packages, on top of the WARN notice time period.

              I personally know some that have 6 figure parachutes on *top* of their 6 month severance.

            • Severance may be a company policy, but it's never required. In fact the more desparate a company is the less severance is. At a past company there had been layoffs now and then and lots of attrition, but some stuck around because they wanted the sweet severance; and instead they were laid off without the severance.

            • by Anonymous Coward
              A company doing layoffs the smart way will likely overrepresent over-40 and diverse people in the laid off group. Problem is, those people can easily bring a lawsuit for discrimination. To avoid that, companies pay severance and make the severance conditional on waiving legal claims against the company. Additionally, companies that just drop employees to the curb with no advance notice are likely to have their better employees do the same to the company as they feel no sense of loyalty. Companies don't pay
          • -While you can have large layoffs, the bigger the layoffs the larger the threshold of notice required (at least in some states).

            This is true, but, so what? What's the hurry? Facebook is still making lots of money. Its not like they will go bankrupt if they can't lay off people immediately.

            • by Junta ( 36770 )

              2 months of payroll is more expensive than 1 month. However, as I said, this hardly makes a difference if you are comparing to attrition where they tend to wait 3-4 months to decide that people who can quit, have quit.

          • by pete6677 ( 681676 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @03:40PM (#63370725)

            Significant changes in employment terms that result in someone unwilling or unable to continue in that job, such as requiring one's regular presence in an office where that was previously not an expectation, basically count as termination, legally speaking. So it would make that person eligible for unemployment pay, severance, or whatever other benefit might apply to an involuntarily terminated employee.

            • by Junta ( 36770 )

              With attrition the goal is to annoy someone into finding a job with another company and have them voluntarily end their employment, generally as they find a new job.

              If you say "You have to come into the office" and the employee doesn't *want* to,that doesn't count as termination. The employee could ignore the edict and if the employer doesn't let them go, then their employment continues. You can talk about termination only when the employer actually, you know, terminates the employment. There are other t

        • It's called a WARN notice.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      • by sfcat ( 872532 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @03:23PM (#63370659)
        Have you been to the Meta offices? It is just about the least conducive environment for work I have ever encountered. It would be easier to work in a packed nightclub than the Meta offices. Perhaps remembering that is what keeps employees at home. I imagine this isn't a problem when most employees are at home but if they all have to make that awful commute every morning and they are all back in the office again, it will be a problem again. The truth is Meta overhired and new lines of business have failed. So the only way to boost profits left is laying off large amount of bloat they have acquired over the years.
        • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @03:38PM (#63370713)

          Well, this finally identifies a useful purpose for all their VR headsets.

          They can have everyone at the office wear one, and they'll all be programmed to make it seem like each worker is alone in their own private office with a nice desk, a closed door, and a window view. Slap in earbuds playing loud white noise, and everyone will be highly productive.

          People will just have to be trained to not swing their arms around too far so they don't accidentally whack the guy who's actually crammed in next to them.

        • Yep, the photos I've seen are frightening. This is thinly-veiled discrimination against the neurodiverse, and against people with families or who whose age doesn't begin with a 2.

      • You are probably referring to the WARN act, which states that if a layoff is above a certain percentage size, the employees must be given 60 days notice, or 60 days paid leave-of-absence among other various "land on your feet" measures such as training for resume writing, interview skills, etc.

        Boo hoo. California doesn't allow you to lay off thousands of people without giving them at least a little runway to land. If people quit, that's quite another kettle of fish.

    • by torkus ( 1133985 )

      Post-text. :)

      https://tech.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org]

      But yes, if they need to cut more they'll use in-office as another excuse.

    • How much real estate does Facebook own?

      The biggest proponents of RTO have been companies that have either a lot of owned real estate, or long-term rental contracts.

      Even if the employees aren't in the office doesn't mean maintenance goes away. The lawn still needs to be mowed, plumbing still breaks, roofs still leak, AC units still fail... In fact it can lead to more maintenance needing to be done if there isn't anyone there to catch problems while they're nascent.

      On top of that companies that own t
    • It can't be the pretext when the cuts have already been announced. All he's doing is bringing people into the office to take stock of who will be let go.

    • Personally, I'd like to "encourage" Zuck to go fist his own asshole right on up to the elbow. At this point, anyone with any kind of professional networking or contacts at other companies is probably trying to get off that sinking garbage barge anyway.

    • If they can't find you they can't fire you.
  • by TigerPlish ( 174064 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @02:26PM (#63370469)

    I'll say it very slowly, very clearly, so the retarded have a chance to catch up: "FUCK THE LANDLORDS."

    That's the only reason these asshats are clamoring for a return-to-office -- some companies don't even make money selling things -- they make money leasing land. McDonald's comes to mind. Sears was like this before, maybe it's the only piece of them that still makes money.

    Fuck 'em. Fuck the lot of them, and their stupid governance who shut down all the local economies to begin with. No, I don't care if it decimates Downtown.

    These asshats took and took and took, and they're not taking this. Where I"m at it was made plainly clear to management that we're not interested in the 40 minute gridlock commute, or the eating lunch at any number of really shitty establishments (and a couple of good ones, who still get my $).

    Fuck 'em. Fuck 'em all. You upset the world with your control-freak tendencies, now we fuck you right back where it hurts -- the pocketbook. Fair trade, no? You ruin mine, I'll ruin yours.

    If a war has been waged against the middle class, let's respond in kind: FUCK THE LANDLORDS.

    • by spun ( 1352 )

      This is it exactly. Commercial real estate. This is why even state government agencies are being pressured to get back in the office: most states lease their office space.

      If the wealthy elites want something, the media will print endless stories about why it is necessary and why, in fact, everyone already loves doing it. The government will pass any laws necessary to get the thing done, in a remarkably bipartisan and timely manner.

      There are a number of studies that show that the preferences of the average v

    • If you don't want to rent, then don't. Just don't be surprised that nobody wants to let you live in their home free of charge.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by spun ( 1352 )

        This is more commercial real estate. Who mentioned homes?

        You knee jerk reactionaries are hilarious. You whine about people being triggered, but one scary word can make your whole brain shut down, to the point you can't even comprehend plain English.

      • If you don't want to rent, then don't. Just don't be surprised that nobody wants to let you live in their home free of charge.

        1. This is about commercial real estate and the typical workplace.

        2. Not that it's any of your beeswax. but I don't rent. I bought. I pay the bank, and my mortgage doesn't change on the whims of the market. I bought just after the last financial meltdown, the one in 2008. I almost lost the house and car in 2016, but held fast, got back on my feet, and kept both. I own the car free and clear.. the house, I still owe on that. I think I aged 10 years in that span.

        3. The people I work for, they own the

        • Where I work they're shedding leases if they can, and closing some places they do own.

          I pass a building complex on my commute that is very nice, buildings look good, good landscaping and not cramped, very convenient access to mass transit and a freeway off ramp, good location, everything's perfect. But it's been unoccupied for at least 5 years that I can remember. I can't figure out why, and can only assume is that the lease is too expensive.

          In California, for tax purposes, leasing is the main source of of

    • by yagmot ( 7519124 )

      Well, that, and I would also argue that there are a bunch of managers being outed as completely useless and unnecessary. They want their "teams" to come back to the office so they can look like they actually do something at the company other than leech resources and make workers less productive.

    • Because it couldn't possibly have anything to do with the advantages of in-person collaboration or the difficulties in managing a workforce you cannot see, right?
    • by jbengt ( 874751 )

      . . . some companies don't even make money selling things -- they make money leasing land. . . . Sears was like this before, maybe it's the only piece of them that still makes money.

      Sears stores built before the 1980s were mostly owned by Sears on land owned by Sears. Sears stores built after the 1980s were mostly build-to-suit lease-back arrangements owned by the developer/mall owner. When Lampert took over Sears, he sold off the Sears-owned property to another company of his and collected rent from Sear

  • by GeekWithAKnife ( 2717871 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @02:26PM (#63370473)

    ...lemme get into the METAOFFICE wit muh VR on!

    Is this thing on? Can you see which finger I'm holding up bud?!
  • Huh?? (Score:5, Funny)

    by dskoll ( 99328 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @02:36PM (#63370497) Homepage

    What happened to the Metaverse? Isn't VR better than RR? (Real Reality)

  • Yup, and Employees ask Zuck to drop the VR Fantasy and save the company while he still can.

  • I don't buy it (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Lord Kano ( 13027 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @02:45PM (#63370541) Homepage Journal

    I'm still convinced that the reason for this push to "Return To The Office" is fueled by boomers in middle to upper management who want to be able to go back to having affairs with the cover of "I had to work late".

    LK

    • It's a mix of many things. First, "loyalty", or rather, the fear of being laid off, can only be cultured "between the lines". And of course you can't control peons talking with each other as easily if they're talking over teams and discord as you could when they would have to talk in office where everyone might be eavesdropping.

      Then there's the real estate value. Large companies tend to own the offices and they want these things to retain their value. Which is hard to do when they're essentially empty.

      Then

      • by havana9 ( 101033 )

        And of course you can't control peons talking with each other as easily if they're talking over teams and discord as you could when they would have to talk in office where everyone might be eavesdropping.

        Except the peons could talk when going to eat, or when they're on the bus returning home, or even during a nice walk outside going to the parking lot.

        Then the middle managers who keep telling their superiors how important it is, because everyone would notice they are useless

        Some middle managers are qui

        • Except the peons could talk when going to eat, or when they're on the bus returning home, or even during a nice walk outside going to the parking lot.

          Well, no, not really, because you never have any privacy in any of those situations. You never feel safe and secure because there's people at the next table or in the bus. In a teams chat, it's just you and your buddy. Or, rather, that's how it feels.

          Some middle managers are quit useful, the problem is of course of middle managers that are only capable to putting spokes on the wheels of the workers.

          Yes, I have such a useful specimen. And you can pry him from my cold, dead hands, if he goes, I will move along. I've searched for 20 years to find something like that. Just to give you an idea just HOW rare this is.

  • Assuming all other things are equal, you have 50 employees, 25 who simply refuse to ever work on site, and 25 who will work on site, or at home if need be.

    Times get tough, and you have to cut your workforce in half. Who do you terminate? Remember all other aspects are equal.

    I dunno about you, but in a company I ran, people who dictate that they refuse to work anywhere but home are going to be allowed to stay home, if needs must be. Staying home was priority number 1.

    • Times get tough, and you have to cut your workforce in half. Who do you terminate? Remember all other aspects are equal.

      But all other aspects aren't equal. The correct answer is: The less productive and more expendable ones.

      Why would I care where they are over what they produce? Unless I'm in the keeping-chairs-from-flying-off-into-orbit business, of course.

      • Times get tough, and you have to cut your workforce in half. Who do you terminate? Remember all other aspects are equal.

        But all other aspects aren't equal. The correct answer is: The less productive and more expendable ones.

        Correct - it's a hypothetical simplified to illustrate a point.

        Why would I care where they are over what they produce?

        Good question. Promotions, human interaction, professional development, networking. Now it is quite possible that a person might just be in the top one percent of programmers, and wants to only program, nothing else. Seems a little "Brave New World"ish to me, but okay. If s/he is an Alan Turing or John Rochefort level, yeah - maybe they could stay home, and maybe they could dictate to you.

        But unless Slashdot is the nexus of programming whe

        • Promotions

          Don't happen. If you want to be promoted, apply for the job you want at another company. Nobody promotes internally anymore because it will invariably start the question why Fred and not Steve. Or, worse, why not Tiffany. That simply doesn't happen if you hire from outside.

          human interaction

          That alone is enough reason for me to not want to come to the office. Human interaction is detrimental to my productivity. Humans are, essentially, time wasters.

          professional development

          My skills improve best when not interrupted by coworkers.

          networking

          I frankly have no re

          • Promotions

            Don't happen. If you want to be promoted, apply for the job you want at another company. Nobody promotes internally anymore because it will invariably start the question why Fred and not Steve. Or, worse, why not Tiffany. That simply doesn't happen if you hire from outside.

            Well, It isn't that way everywhere. Where I retired from, there were lots of internal promotions. The issue for me though was that I have the wrong genitalia.

            Women were fast tracked. with promotions. It was a tad awkward for my employer, because they were a University, and that beings a whole lot of issues regarding gender and sex. I did go along with it, but with a proviso that my raise better be really good, or else I would bail. I may have written about this before, but there were people complaining a

          • Dont forget health. Since working from home, I dont pick up every sniffle, cough, snot from coworkers that insist in coming into the office and spreading their germs everywhere. Anecdotally, I have seen far fewer "taking a sick day" emails since WFH started. Coworkers aren't bringing their kids latest sickness of the day in to spread.

        • Good question. Promotions, human interaction, professional development, networking.

          Sounds like touchy feely bullshit and ass kissing. Is the completed work of acceptable quality and done within the allotted time? Good, work wherever and whatever hours please you.

          • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

            Sounds like touchy feely bullshit and ass kissing.

            There are the real reasons.

          • Good question. Promotions, human interaction, professional development, networking.

            Sounds like touchy feely bullshit and ass kissing. Is the completed work of acceptable quality and done within the allotted time? Good, work wherever and whatever hours please you.

            The more I read of some of these posts, I think perhaps it is much better for many of us to stay away from other people.

            Human interaction is a natural thing. Has nothing to do with touching and feeling. Too much isolation and lack of human-human interaction is not mentally healthy for people other than misanthropes (which might be considered a neurosis anyhow) Professional development - I was required to travel to symposia or trade shows as a condition of employment - not one cent of that money was waste

    • Assuming all other things are equal, you have 50 employees, 25 who simply refuse to ever work on site, and 25 who will work on site, or at home if need be.

      Times get tough, and you have to cut your workforce in half. Who do you terminate?

      Remember all other aspects are equal.

      To be honest, I think I'd let the workers that have the poorest work performance go first....

      Seems the logical move to me...I don't care where they work, as long as the DO the work on time and do it well.

      Isn't that the key to gettin

      • Assuming all other things are equal, you have 50 employees, 25 who simply refuse to ever work on site, and 25 who will work on site, or at home if need be.

        Times get tough, and you have to cut your workforce in half. Who do you terminate?

        Remember all other aspects are equal.

        To be honest, I think I'd let the workers that have the poorest work performance go first....

        Of course - I would as well. It was a very simplified hypothetical, to demonstrate the point that an employee who will only work from home is less flexible than one who will work from home or come in in person if need be. They do not fit all the needs. If I needed a person who will come in, they don't fit that need. And if the work ended up needing someone who will come to work, I'd offer it to them. If they refused, I'd look for a new person who would come in, because I needed a person who would come in.

        I

  • Productivity peaked when everybody was working from home, then declined when companies started forcing workers back to the office. Forbes has an article on this titled "What’s The Future Of Remote Work In 2023?" that says "Remote workers tend to, on average, be significantly more productive than those working in an office." Apparently The Zuck doesn't read Forbes...
  • Are going to pay for Zucks bad decisions on VR. First they fire a bunch of people, then they tell everyone to be more productive.
  • I keep telling you kiddies... work doesn't exist to make you feel good, or part of something, or give you empowerment... work exists to make profit for ownership. period. When there's more jobs than applicants, employers waive benefits to attract applicants. When there's more people than jobs, you do what the company tells you or you lose your paycheck. It's that simple. We are heading into the latter- companies no longer need to offer options and are looking for ways to trim staff. If they don't see y
    • by dskoll ( 99328 )

      Sure, some businesses think the way you do. But smart business owners who (remember) are in it for the profit, will keep high-productivity employees regardless of where they work and let go of low-productivity employees.

      Being a dickhead and ordering employees to do something just because they can might make upper management feel big and powerful... but it's not a profit-maximizing strategy.

  • Facebook's onboarding tools suck.

  • Use money (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Tuesday March 14, 2023 @03:47PM (#63370765) Journal

    Why don't they pay a butt-in-chair bonus and let people decide whether they want the bonus or not? Use money to sort them, not vague insinuation.

  • ... also going to work 9-8 in the office ?
  • hahahaha if facebook's board of directors had any guts they'd fire ZUCKERBERG for causing his stock's giant collapse

  • Haha, he just told another 10,000 NOT to come back to the office.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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