Not being able to WFH would be me out of Cisco. In fact, they cannot enforce it, since I have a work contract that asks me to do just that (not in US). I've been working from home since 2000. It's a staggering deal for the company. Let's see: 1) they don't pay for office space in nice centralized, expensive locations 2) they don't have to heat/cool it 3) no security staff or reception 4) I buy a house with an additional room for Cisco at no cost to them 5) I pay for desk, chair, internet connection 6) I buy printer and scanner and pay for my own toner replacement 7) I'm now available 24x7 since my work laptop isn't in my briefcase after arriving home 8) they can schedule con-calls 12 time zones away because my work is only ten steps away 9) the time I would have spent dressing and driving is now spent working. 10) no water cooler chatter or lunch excursions 11) no cleaning or maintenance costs. Etc etc
In fact, I've heard WFH colleagues being asked in All Hands to explain to the rest of the team how come they are so effective?
This is just dumb and dumber. Nobody in my group works together. We have PM in San Jose, TME's out in the field, and engineering in India. So, the PM and execs herd into the office to make calls somewhere else, all "shoulder to shoulder" whilst wearing company supplied noise-canceling headphones so they can hear Bangalore clearly. We now have "global teams" so nobody works in a team in the one spot - we hire cheap labor in India, Poland, Bulgaria, China or the Philippines. So, just how can two halves of a team who need to talk to each other; yet both mandated to be in the office, going to do that when they at 12 time zones apart?.
All my calls are with India+Europe at 7-10am PST (late evening in India); others in late afternoon with APAC (Early morning there) and Europe 8-9 hours ahead around midday (late evening there). The company set up these global teams in these stupid time zones, and so now how do they work?
Ohh, I get it. 8 hours in the office and then another bunch of hours at home. In fact, one of my ex-VP's said just that to an all hands (she's a big women in tech mentor if you want a hint). She said it's 8 hours in the office for meetings and "collaboration", then eight hours at home is to do the work you didn't get done in the office, and the other eight hours is for rest. Executives who say things like this is Europe would end up in front of the courts.
This is settled science. There are heaps of studies that show how effective it makes people. Insecure execs are wanting to undo it to see their underlings all lined up in front of them.
I'm sure the HR people are considering it, as a way of forcing older, more established workers out but only one thing that could slow it down, is that a lot of senior execs work remotely, at least in my BU. Of course, they'll get a pass.
As I said, Dumb and Dumber