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Worklife

Most employees say they’re now in office full time — and they aren’t happy about it

HR Dive

October 11, 2023

Worklife

Most employees say they’re now in office full time — and they aren’t happy about it

HR Dive

October 11, 2023

Photo by freddie marriage on Unsplash

Dive Brief:

  • Two-thirds of employees are now in office full time, according to an Owl Labs survey of 2,000 workers conducted in June — a significant jump from 41% responding the same in 2022. Only 22% of surveyed respondents said it was their preferred working arrangement, however.
  • Workers are still finding ways to skirt the in-office requirement, Owl Labs data shows; 58% are “coffee badging,” or going to the office for only a few hours to show their face.
  • The majority of employees who continue to have remote or hybrid arrangements indicated they’d be resistant to a full-time, return-to-office policy change. Thirty-one percent said they would go but begin looking for other jobs, 22% said they’d go but be unhappy and 6% said they’d quit.

Dive Insight:

While employers have wrested back some power in the return-to-office power struggle, the Owl Labs data suggests workers are not adjusting in turn.

Tensions may only rise, as 90% of companies responding to a Resume Builder survey from August said they planned to institute return-to-office policies by the end of 2024. While employees have said they’d plan to look for another job or would quit outright if forced back to the office, there could soon be a glut of job seekers in search of an ever-shrinking supply of remote jobs.

On the flip side, employers who commit to offering remote or voluntary hybrid arrangements could stand out from the crowd and attract top talent. Workers have repeatedly emphasized their preference for flexibility over the past few years; two-thirds of respondents to Owl Labs’ survey who sought another job said they did so to gain more flexibility in terms of where or when they worked. Similarly, respondents said the top reasons they would not accept a job offer were if the company required them to work in the office at specific times or days, or didn’t allow flexible work hours.

Click for full article

Workers report finding ways to skirt in-office requirements, including via the new trend of “coffee badging"
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