Return to office is ‘dead,’ Stanford economist says. Here’s why::The share of workers being called back to the office has flatlined, suggesting remote work is an entrenched feature of the U.S. labor market.

  • ciferecaNinjo@fedia.io
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    10 months ago

    Among the primary benefits: no commute, flexible work schedules and less time getting ready for work, according to WFH Research.

    They forgot: being able to secretly simultaneously work 3 full-time overlapping jobs to triple your income.

      • ciferecaNinjo@fedia.io
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        10 months ago

        Not sure people are finding meeting-free gigs. I read about someone holding down 4 jobs who once had to attend 3 meetings at once (that story might have been in Wired mag, not sure). Like a DJ he had multiple audio streams going with headphones and made a skill of focusing where his name would most likely come up. I’m sure there’s also a long list of excuses like “had to run to stop the burning food” or whatever. Presumabely a long list of excuses to wholly nix a meeting in the first place as well.

        Some people are secretly outsourcing some of their work as well, which works for workload but not for meetings.

    • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I had a coworker who did exactly this back in the '90s. He was an expert in a really obscure programming/database platform/language from the 1970s (called “Cyborg”) that only had a few people left that knew anything about it. It took literally hours to compile even the tiniest code changes so his job mostly involved sitting around doing nothing waiting for the compiler to finish. He managed to eventually get a WFH situation (with dialup lol) that paid him $300 an hour, then went out and got two other similar WFH jobs that paid the same since his actual work load was just a few minutes per day for each. $900 an hour in the 1990s.