Microsoft to employees: you can continue working from home unless productivity drops

Cal Jeffrey

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In a nutshell: While some companies have chosen to return workers to the office, others have decided to keep the post-pandemic status quo. It's a controversial topic that Microsoft wishes to avoid and has committed to remaining flexible so long as productivity doesn't suffer.

During a recent internal meeting, Microsoft Executive Vice President of Cloud and AI Group Scott Guthrie promised that the company does not plan to follow Amazon's lead in mandating workers back to the office five days per week. However, two vetted Microsoft employees who attended the meeting told Business Insider under conditions of anonymity that the vow comes with the condition that productivity doesn't decline.

It would seem a bit hypocritical if the Redmond giant eliminated remote work, considering it literally makes Teams – a software suite that enables and encourages companies to allow employees to work from home. However, the question of productivity is a big one that no one has answered satisfactorily.

On the one hand, companies generally don't make wide-sweeping changes unless the government mandates it (lockdowns) or the beancounters find the changes save or make the firm more money (productivity). On the other hand, you have employees saying they "feel" more productive at home, which seems weak as an argument but is one that resistant work-from-homes cite time after time.

Microsoft's senior director of IT, Keith Boyd, says remote work can be sustainable as long as it's done right.

"If you make the time to do it right, your employees will be more engaged, more productive, and more connected, even when they're miles away," Boyd wrote in an August blog post. "And they'll be far less likely to leave for a competitor who has a more sophisticated and flexible model than you do."

The remote model has advantages from both the employee's and employer's perspectives. For example, a company that covers daycare costs can save money with a remote work program, while the employee can reap the benefits of not having to commute daily.

Unfortunately, the risks and disadvantages of remote employees primarily lie on the company's shoulders. Loss of productivity due to workers taking care of personal business or even napping is a genuine concern. It's not surprising to learn that there are actual products that circumvent monitoring measures employers frequently use to be sure their employees are working while on the clock.

Meanwhile, there are not many disadvantages for the remote employee, which is probably the most contributing factor to workers fighting tooth and nail to stay out of the office. Protests and unionizing efforts are more prevalent post-pandemic, and much of the bellyaching relates to employers reversing stay-at-home mandates.

That said, Microsoft thinks it has the remote work dynamic figured out. We'll have to see if its reassurances about continuing with the model help keep its workers in line without direct supervision.

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If you want to retain IT workers, this is how.
The only thing that matters is results.
There is more IT workers than job positions ATM.

Issue is too many sub par workers want to make 200k while they are really only worth 80k as they don't really do anything worth of value. They are not self sufficient and any hard task is well beyond their ability. If they don't have example code of how someone else did something similar they simply can't figure it out themselves. Reading the manual is beneath them for some odd reason. Also does help that pure laziness has become a trend for the younger groups.

People wonder why the job market for IT workers is crap right now.

IT needs a good cleansing.
 
Exactly... finally some logic behind this stupid argument to go back to office as disguised laid offs...
 
Microsoft and Google both sell online productivity suite so it's only natural they want to show how their platforms allow comparative performance for their customer's staff working from anywhere, be it in the office or home or cafe. When one of them instructs a mandate to return to office, the other will have a free marketing campaign to run.

They're prisoners of their own products.
 
It's quite nice that they realise being forced into the office is a punishment.

I have worked from home as a developer for over 12 years now, And the company I work for is fine with it, They want results, They don't really worry too much about where you are when the results happen. For me, A perfectly quiet house is a great place to concentrate, Others seem to need the office environment to thrive, So we have a mix of workers. I can't work in the office, Far too much noise, movement, smells and distractions. Not helped by my being Autistic.
 
It may be the ONLY time they got it right, but this time they did ..... lets see how long it lasts .....
 
I don’t see an issue with WFH in general (in industries that can support it) as much as I see issues with bad managers not holding poor performers accountable. The solution isn’t to block remote work for all, it’s to terminate individuals that don’t produce or abuse the privilege.

Too often, we see layoffs that affect good workers when there were f-ups who could have been canned years prior if management did their job.
 
My job has been remote and my company has supported remote work for over 17k employees world wide since pre-covid. We made investments when covid happen to enable it for more folks but we have always embraced it and our leadership continues to. Our offices are nearly empty except for a few folks who choose to go in a few times a week.

We have continued to make profits and grow every year (pre covid, during covid, after covid). Our way of evaluating employees based on objectives and performance has been successful. Under performers are identified very quickly and do not last long. There is no need for someone to stare over your shoulder in order to gauge your effectiveness. If they need to do that, they are ineffective in their leadership position and your company hasnt enabled you for successful evaluation of ones objectives.

Top IT talent dictates their terms of work and WFH is a preference for many. As long as the results are good, the job is being done at high effectiveness and you are meeting your objectives, it matters not if I take a nap mid day or go for a walk on my lunch.

Less gossiping, less distractions, less BS office politics and its far cheaper with no commute and eating lunch at home.

Its not for everyone, but it is for a lot of folks.
 
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