I get that point of view, but for me, being alone in an empty office isn't much better than being alone at home. I'm not trying to force people to be in the office, I just want to find a team where people WANT to be there. It seems very hard to find, but it's also hard to believe I'm the only one in the world who wants to be part of something like that.
rachofsunshine|1 year ago
That's an advantage for you, though! Active desire to work in-office greatly reduces the amount of competition you're dealing with for jobs; all else equal, it should ~double your success rate.
johnnyanmac|1 year ago
seanmcdirmid|1 year ago
I miss nice offices though. Before the whole let's stack people side by side on desks, rather than give them some nicer spaces with lots of room for deep thought. When I was working for HARC, we had a nice former industrial space near UCLA. I totally could go for that, but when the only way to get something semi-nice and private is to work at home, well, that is going to bias people.
codr7|1 year ago
The only thing that changed is you can no longer force people to the same degree.
One alternative would be to design offices that people like to work in.
codr7|1 year ago
The only thing that changed is the power balance. It's still perfectly possible to get skilled workers into the office, they just have to want it.
CraigJPerry|1 year ago
Your employer rents a desk for you, you probably get to walk to work or at least enjoy a very short commute. You have people from other employers around you for the social aspect. Etc
I guess WeWork was a similar idea that shows now is not yet the time for this.
I still think it’d be great - reduced commuting miles / time wasted. Cheaper offices that are nicer (don’t like this co working space? Just book into a different one) etc etc
philsnow|1 year ago
If every neighborhood had at least one pub and if every pub had an upstairs co-working space, that would be amazing.
edit: ah, I realize now that I took the word "shops" to mean the colloquial "tech companies", but you probably meant brick-and-mortar retail stores that have been slow-killed by the internet
kyleee|1 year ago
fragmede|1 year ago
ensignavenger|1 year ago
codr7|1 year ago
The background hustle keeps my brain going but it doesn't bother me since it has nothing to do with me. Nice coffee helps.
rmbyrro|1 year ago
downrightmike|1 year ago
johnnyanmac|1 year ago
They don't grow on trees.
xxxtemp|1 year ago