The coronavirus may seem like a distant memory for most, but at least one of its legacies is still very much with us: remote working.
For the tech industry in particular, it鈥檚 hard to remember a time when everyone trudged to and from the office every day. Remote work in some form or another is now considered a must-have, particularly among Millennials and Generation Z. No wonder then that 83% of UK HR professionals said remote work is crucial to attracting top talent.
Initially, most companies took a positive view of the shift, citing studies and their own anecdotal tales of greatly boosted productivity. But increasingly, business leaders have been pushing back against the phenomenon. Now, AI entrepreneur Sam Altman has joined their ranks and the OpenAI founder isn鈥檛 mincing his words.
Need Help Managing Staff? Check Out The Latest HR Software…
The Experiment Is Over
鈥淚 think definitely one of the tech industry鈥檚 worst mistakes in a long time was that everybody could go full remote forever, and startups didn鈥檛 need to be together in person and, you know, there was going to be no loss of creativity,鈥 Altman was as saying, during a recent talk hosted by financial services and software giant Stripe.
鈥淚 would say that the experiment on that is over, and the technology is not yet good enough that people can be fully remote forever, particularly in startups.鈥
This isn鈥檛 the first time he鈥檚 criticised the remote working phenomenon; earlier in the year he branded it 鈥渁 big mistake.鈥
Many of Altman鈥檚 fellow tech leaders agree, to varying degrees. In February, the CEO of Amazon made it mandatory for workers to be in the office three days a week. Elon Musk has gone further, abruptly ending remote working arrangements at both and Twitter. Many other executives have followed suit, including some, like Salesforce CEO Mike Benioff, who were initially positive about working from home.
All of them have cited worker productivity as their main concern. In a leaked internal email last year, Musk bluntly declared that 鈥淭esla has and will create and actually manufacture the most exciting and meaningful products of any company on Earth. This will not happen by phoning it in.” Retorting to critics on Twitter, Musk said employees that weren鈥檛 happy with the change could 鈥減retend to work somewhere else.鈥澛
More from News
- World Quantum Day 2026: Experts Reflect On Industry Developments This Year
- 79% Of UK Workers Fear Losing Their Jobs This Year – And Its Not AI Related
- Scail Launches To Help Regulated SaaS Businesses Navigate The AI 鈥淧erfect Storm鈥
- X Is Taking A Slightly Different Approach To Managing Click Bait Content – Will It Work?
- AI Is Meant To Reduce Workloads, Why Is It Still Causing Workers Cognitive Fatigue?
- Apple Wins Q1 As Smartphones Shipments Go Up And Competitor Sales Go Down
- Can Travellers Expect Lower Flight Prices After The Ceasefire?
- Gen Z Consumers Face The Highest Online Fraud Risks – How Are They Staying Protected?
The CEO of IBM Arvind Krishna took a different perspective in criticising remote work, saying it was employees who suffered as a result by stunting their career prospects.
“In the short term, you probably can be equally productive, but your career does suffer. Moving from there to another role is probably less likely because nobody’s observing them in another context,” Krishna told Bloomberg News. “It will be tougher. Not impossible, but probably a lot tougher.”
Is This The End For Remote Work?
But despite that growing scepticism, it doesn鈥檛 seem like we鈥檙e all being hauled back to the office any time soon.
For example, while many of the aforementioned criticisms may be valid, numerous studies have painted a very different picture. A 2022 study commissioned by Microsoft which surveyed over 20,000 staff in 11 different countries found that while 80% of managers felt staff were less productive working from home, 87% of staff insisted they were actually more 辫谤辞诲耻肠迟颈惫别.听
That latter view appears to be backed by data from the US Bureau of Statistics, which shows that worker productivity increased sharply in Q1 of 2020, the start of work-from-home mandates in the US. Those higher productivity levels remained fairly steady until suddenly dropping in the first half of 2022, precisely when US workers began returning to the office.聽
Years before the coronavirus pandemic, showed that worker performance and satisfaction significantly increased when working from home, while workforce attrition rates plummeted by half. Many subsequent studies found the same thing.聽
Business leaders can鈥檛 afford to ignore these statistics, and many have pointed to them as a reason to continue allowing employees to work remotely.
Ironically, however, it鈥檚 the recession and the need to cut costs that鈥檚 forcing even the biggest sceptics of remote working to reconsider. Just ask Elon Musk himself, who just a few months after savaging the work-from-home phenomenon closed Twitter鈥檚 offices in Seattle and Singapore and鈥 instructed employees in those places to work from home.
So will OpenAI鈥檚 Sam Altman be forced to eat his words? Only time will tell.