I know this will vary a lot, so hypothetically let’s say you currently WFH/work remotely at least 3 days a week. Your commute to work takes an hour max (door to door) each way. If you were given the choice of a 4 day week working onsite, or a 5 day week WFH (or as many days as you’d like) for the same pay, which would you choose?

  • Dem Bosain
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    132 years ago

    I need to go into the office to be productive. I don’t begrudge anyone that wants to work from home, I wish it worked for me, but it doesn’t. During the pandemic I was 100% work-from-home and got very little done. I actually asked my boss how long it would be until we could go back to the office. Donkey-brains chose that time to upgrade the office furniture and shampoo the carpets. It was another month until the office was open. I went back, and it was heaven. There were very few people there. I could sit at my desk, listen to my music, and do whatever I needed. Don’t ask me what the difference was. Maybe I just have an affinity for flickering fluorescent tubes.

    • @AgentGrimstone@lemmy.world
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      22 years ago

      Like you, I was just more productive in an environment that’s not my home. There were a few times when they allowed us back in the office and only 3 of us showed up. Big empty office with the feeling that I can work at my own pace yet couldn’t get too comfortable because it’s still a professional workspace, it was perfect.

  • PorkRollWobbly
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    152 years ago

    I feel like we’re at the point where WFH workers can work from home for four days for more pay.

    • @SomeoneElse@lemmy.caOP
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      42 years ago

      I mean workers feel like that, but employees and governments don’t seem to. And the propaganda against WFH is still going strong.

      • PorkRollWobbly
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        12 years ago

        I’m just trying to do something small to change the cultural milieu so that folks don’t feel that work has to come with some sort of punishment attached to it. It’s nothing personal, I’m just being a pedant. Have a good one!

  • @jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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    102 years ago

    I don’t want to go in to the office. The pay doesn’t include the extra commute time, plus getting dressed up slightly nicer.

    I live alone. I don’t have kids. Home is fine.

    The office is loud. Often the wrong temperature. I get interrupted a lot. I don’t get as much done on the tiny monitor they provide vs the big ass 4k ones I have home.

    Some people are really not great at responding on slack though. If they could get on my level that would be nice.

  • Neuromancer
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    82 years ago

    I work in a job where working from an office doesn’t make sense. So I’ve always wfh. In my current role, I’d never work for any employer that required me to go to an office. It’s counter productive to the job.

    In your scenario, if I had a job that made sense, I’d pick wfh because I won’t commute an hour. 15-30 is the tops I’ll commute.

    • @SomeoneElse@lemmy.caOP
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      12 years ago

      I’ve seen a couple of people say they wouldn’t commute more than 20 mins - I wasn’t expecting that tbh. I’m from London and an hour commute, door to desk, is pretty standard. Even my journey to secondary school took 45mins at the very least!

      • Neuromancer
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        2 years ago

        30 is about as far as I’ll go. Maybe 45. I haven’t communted for work in years. I know people who commute hours and I’d never do it.

        Time has value. If I’m spending hours commuting, that’s time lost.

  • We WFH and have a “no meetings on Monday and Fridays” policy.

    So people could hypothetically not work those days.

    Doesn’t bother me as long as the tasks get done.

  • @amenotef@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    For me. 100% remote.

    But I work more for objectives rather than gross time/days. If the project is falling behind I work extra to gain some safeguard. If the project is going well I work more relaxed.

    I don’t mind working extra hours if I’m already saving a lot of time avoiding travelling to the client or going to the office, living in another place away from a city. Etc.

  • @Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 years ago

    The commute time is kinda worse than work time, so the 4 days in the office are equal to 5 days WFH timewise. And I would still be missing out on benefits like cheaper lunch at home and wearing comfortable clothes, and not being tired all the time. On the other hand, I would always have 3 day weekends.

    • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      92 years ago

      Yeah, count time getting ready and you’re easily wasting 1.5-2 hrs a day going to an office.

      When we started wfh, most people picked up overtime and still spent the same amount of time devoted to work with a significant pay increase.

      It’s a lot of time and effort everyone was just used to giving up for free. Why go back to it?

      Especially since it’s 2023 and we’re still getting new COVID waves.

    • themeatbridge
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      52 years ago

      I work full time from home. Fridays almost never have any big meetings or important deadlines, so if you need to knock off early and beat the vacation traffic, it’s not a problem. And all the little things you usually reserve for a day off, like doctor’s or dentist’s appointments or a haircut, any of that can happen during the week without missing a beat. You don’t always need a 3 day weekend, but when you want one, you take one.

      • @SomeoneElse@lemmy.caOP
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        32 years ago

        It’s the same for my partner. I don’t think he’s worked past 3pm on Fridays in the 7 months he’s been there. There’s just nothing going on.

  • Alien Nathan Edward
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    282 years ago

    WFH for 5 days will still result in less time spent doing dumb shit I don’t want to do than RTO for 4. That doesn’t even count the pomodoro breaks I take where in the office I can’t do anything but walk in circles but at home I can start laundry or prep for dinner.

    • TheLowestStone
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      62 years ago

      That was the best part of WFH for me. I could start a brisket in the morning and baby it all day long.

      • Alien Nathan Edward
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        12 years ago

        I legit have a pork shoulder dry brining rn for tomorrow. I know an electric smoker isn’t quite the same as a proper charcoal offset rig but my setup means I can do bbq any day I want to

  • @hawgietonight@lemmy.world
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    92 years ago

    I took WFH for higher pay in 2013. It makes sense because I’m more productive without the noise, uncomfortable lighting, interruptions and subpar hardware.

    Not conidering going back to office unless things change A LOT

  • @fred@lemmy.ml
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    142 years ago

    Not even a question for me: full remote or bust. The extra day off wouldn’t make up for all the time wasted just from the pageantry of going to and being at an office.

  • @noseatbelt@lemmy.ca
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    152 years ago

    I’ve been WFH full time since early covid, so WFH for sure. My commute wasn’t even bad, my office is less than 10 minutes away.

    I’m not a social person so there is no upside to going into the office for me. Everything to do with my job must be communicated by email so it’s documented, so it’s just a waste of time if someone wants to chat in person or on the phone about it.

    Plus I don’t have to wear pants.

    The one downside is my dogs seem to have developed separation anxiety since I’m around all the time.

    • @severien@lemmy.world
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      -22 years ago

      Not sure if you understood the question, you’d work just 4 says a week onsite (and in total). You’d have one extra day free.

      • @noseatbelt@lemmy.ca
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        72 years ago

        …yes, and? I don’t want to work on site. My WFH schedule is flexible enough that I don’t need an “extra day free”. I don’t think it’s worth it. Working fewer days isn’t always better for everyone.