Limited time offer, remote work conditions apply
As we approach August, and the delta variant spreads rapidly in advance of a fall peak, remote work is received renewed attention. Not just as a necessity, but as a competitive advantage.
Mid-summer is a good time to assess what we do, why, and more importantly from where. Rather than frame remote work as an accommodation, what if it was instead framed as an opportunity.
Employers! Are you taking advantage of the current opportunity to hire people traditionally excluded from the office based workforce but are now available to work remotely? This is a limited time offer as your competitors are almost certainly going to hire this talent! Act now!
— metaviews (@metaviews) July 17, 2021
We hypothesize that there are a lot of people who have previously been excluded from the workforce for a wide range of reasons who are now in a position to be part of it. This ranges from relatively low skill to highly specialized and talented.
Remote work has provided me (a physically disabled), the opportunity to work.
— Dismal practitioner 🏴 (@adhfwn) July 13, 2021
The question is not whether these people will find jobs or roles in the workforce, but who will be smart enough to hire them first. It’s not just about a labour shortage, but the need to adapt and evolve. Harnessing untapped talent is part of that.
Absurd stat of the day
— Morning Brew ☕️ (@MorningBrew) July 16, 2021
There are now more job listings for remote roles that pay at least $100,000 than in any single city in North America, according to Ladders.
Around 15% of high-paying jobs are open to remote work, compared to 5% last year
Yet even people who were already working, have found significant relief and benefits from being able to work on their own terms.
LONG LIVE REMOTE WORK! Despite everything else that’s happened this year, working from home has been a short break from discrimination for many disabled, neurodiverse, Black, Asian employees and those with mental health conditions.
— T (@teh_lah_nee) July 16, 2021
something i've been thinking about is the flexibility and dignity remote work allows people with mental illness
— heather schmelzlen (@anchorlines) July 14, 2021
Remote work has been a godsend for Muslim women in so many ways. I’m done dealing with the extra baggage that comes with an office environment like the microagressions, the invites to the pub after work, having to pray in some dusty corner of the building. Never again.
— Salma (@SalmaWrites) July 15, 2021
Remote work has also influenced broader geographic opportunities to leave crowded and extended commutes behind.
Remote Work + Relocating to low-income-tax countries in Europe is seriously under discussed
— Andreas Klinger 🏝 (@andreasklinger) July 19, 2021
South italy offers 10% income tax if you commit to two years tax residency.https://t.co/Z3C9KdEKwf
Cities have a new marketing approach in the age of remote work https://t.co/BgXCVq5VtH
— jenn barrigar (@anne_nonymity) July 16, 2021
Although moving to another city only works if remote work is permissible in the long term. The debate over the last few months has focused on which companies will stick with remote work, and which ones won’t.
In anticipation of this, a lot of people are saying they won’t come back, even if that means quitting.
Apple employees say they will leave the company as it denies remote work requests https://t.co/rcl8GZaRFj by @filipeesposito
— 9to5Mac.com (@9to5mac) July 15, 2021
Apple employees say the company is cracking down on remote work https://t.co/WDGeP5z6g6 pic.twitter.com/bHZmq0fkJe
— The Verge (@verge) July 15, 2021
One employee said they were currently on an Americans with Disabilities Act accommodation that allowed them to work from home, but were told that accommodation would be denied when the company went back to the office. “I will be out of a job in September,” they wrote in Slack.
Apple typically gives employees 30 days to find a new job within the company if their current team denies a medical accommodation. But one worker said in Slack that there weren’t any open remote positions.
Some employees say they were told only people with documented medical conditions would be approved for permanent remote work. But the form that Apple employees use to request such an accommodation asks them to release their medical records to the company, which made some people uncomfortable.
Apple is not the only company to have anecdotes about their harsh practices circulate online. It’s fueling a larger class culture that has people rethinking work and their own work/life balance. And with it a reassessment of the people who stand in the way of that balance.
https://t.co/KnCm2HMrve Those who don't want their workers remote don't care about anything other than feeling power and exacting power, because they're miserable and don't have any personal lives to speak of. They are obsessed with work, because they are empty inside. pic.twitter.com/sXgD8042ID
— Ed Zitron (@edzitron) July 19, 2021
We take for granted that there has been no balance. That we live in a society dominated by work, and that even our identities are dominated by work.
Remote work is not the future of work, it is a way to get there. The future of work is working to achieve your dreams and not sacrificing your dreams to work.
— Marcelo Lebre (@marcelo_lebre) July 19, 2021