Here's the thing though.... employers were always and are always looking for ways to cut expenses (and employees are expenses). So unless you contribute directly to the company bottom line in a way that you can't be replaced either by someone thousands of miles away working via broadband or in the near/far future by AI.... they were always gonna be looking to replace you. I'm working on servers in Texas right now that years ago would have been administered by guys in Dallas. Now the only guy we have in Dallas is a tech who goes in to move cables or push buttons while we wait .
So the technology we have and technology being developed are gonna disrupt us no matter what. A CEO isn't gonna care whether you're working two floors beneath his suite or in your basement halfway across the company when he gets the word that he can chop millions of $$$ of salary and non-salary compensation off the books by using software. They just have a lot of shit to work out before it's feasible in a lot of industries. I'm 54 so I may escape having to really worry about the AI part too much, but if you're 34, it's coming.
Oh, also something I've noticed about myself as a WFH'er over the past 10+ years, and the same thing is being noticed by management over the past 3 covid/post covid WFH period.... when working from home, people tend to take less time off. Both PTO and sick time. People used to call in sick because of the sniffles, but it's incredibly rare to see any co-workers call out sick now unless their liver is falling out of their ass or some shit. During our quarterly meetings, our President always ends each call telling everybody to put some PTO on the calendar each quarter because they have been noticing that people aren't taking days like they used to. There's good and bad to that of course, but there's no way in hell that they don't like the fact that people aren't calling out because they woke up with a headache or because their daughter had to stay home from school today.
So the technology we have and technology being developed are gonna disrupt us no matter what. A CEO isn't gonna care whether you're working two floors beneath his suite or in your basement halfway across the company when he gets the word that he can chop millions of $$$ of salary and non-salary compensation off the books by using software. They just have a lot of shit to work out before it's feasible in a lot of industries. I'm 54 so I may escape having to really worry about the AI part too much, but if you're 34, it's coming.
Oh, also something I've noticed about myself as a WFH'er over the past 10+ years, and the same thing is being noticed by management over the past 3 covid/post covid WFH period.... when working from home, people tend to take less time off. Both PTO and sick time. People used to call in sick because of the sniffles, but it's incredibly rare to see any co-workers call out sick now unless their liver is falling out of their ass or some shit. During our quarterly meetings, our President always ends each call telling everybody to put some PTO on the calendar each quarter because they have been noticing that people aren't taking days like they used to. There's good and bad to that of course, but there's no way in hell that they don't like the fact that people aren't calling out because they woke up with a headache or because their daughter had to stay home from school today.
It’s easy for differences of opinion to turn into a debate where the goal is to protect the opinion rather than seek the truth. If we are all being honest, most of you like working from home because you can multitask doing your personal stuff and have your own entertainment (TV, podcasts, surfing internet, BGOL, etc) while working.
One thing that hasn’t been discussed in this thread and to look out for is that working remote increases the odds of your job getting disrupted by AI.
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