Dell is reportedly set to impose a company-wide return-to-office mandate requiring all employees to work on-site for at least 39 days a quarter.
As reported by The Register, the new hybrid work policy — which balances out as three days a week — is an expansion of a return-to-office mandate that was introduced last year, which dictated that employees who worked within an hour of an office had to be on-site at least three days a week.
That 2023 promise overruled Dell’s 2020 commitment during the pandemic that 60 percent of its workforce would only have to work on-premises once or twice weekly.
The new return-to-office mandate reclassifies most Dell workers as hybrid employees, according to The Register’s source. The source added that workers below a particular pay grade and level of seniority could choose to work fully remotely but that that decision could negatively impact their career opportunities at the tech giant.
The Register’s source claimed:
It’s clear from the details I’ve seen that this is a way of thinning the herd. Folks who live a few hours away from the office will have to go into an office and if they do not, they have to sign up to a remote contract with the tacit understanding that being remote is career limiting.”
The source’s logic runs that introducing the policy will encourage some workers to resign from the company because the work/life balance would no longer suit them and suggests that Dell anticipate employee attrition as a result.
Allegedly, some worker groups will be exempt from the new policy in customer-facing or field-based teams.
The source also said Dell engaged in layoffs last week, but no concrete numbers were outlined. In North America, reportedly, most workers who were fired last week were marketing and non-sales staff, while sales staff are expected to take a hit this week. According to The Register, 15 percent of Netherlands-based staff were laid off, while there’s a voluntary programme in France for workers with ten or more years with the company to leave.
2024: A Tough Year So Far For Industry Layoffs
It’s been a challenging year for layoffs in the tech space so far.
Google has already let 1,000 employees go, while The Verge reported last month that Google’s CEO Sundar Pichai told staff to expect further layoffs as 2024 progresses. Microsoft let go 1,900 workers from its gaming branches at the end of January, while Amazon began the month announcing it would cut 18,000 jobs from across its businesses.
The Wall Street Journal also reported that Salesforce was set to lay off 700 staff at the end of January, a figure which comprised around one percent of its global staff. That followed Salesforce laying off over 10 percent of its workforce in 2023.
The Tech Industry’s Return-to-Office Predicament
Despite being critical facilitators of the hybrid and remote work revolutions, many other major tech players have instituted return-to-office policies.
Amazon’s has perhaps been the most controversial story. The mandate decreed that employees must work in the office three days a week and was announced in February 2023 before being formally established in May.
In July, Amazon asked some corporate employees to relocate to other cities as part of its return-to-office policy and stated that if workers refused to relocate to their new teams’ “hubs”, Amazon would grant them 60 days to find a new team in their current city or force them into “voluntary resignation”. In October, managers were allegedly given permission to terminate employees who resisted working on-site three days a week.
Amazon’s three-day return-to-office policy is similar to several competitors, including Google’s, which started in April 2022. Apple also works three days a week in the office, which was mandated in September 2022.
In August, Zoom introduced a mandate for staff to visit the office twice a week. The policy applied to staff who live “within a commutable distance” of the office, which Zoom specified as within 50 miles. Zoom’s previous policy had been flexible in that staff could work remotely, on-premises, or on a hybrid model of their flexibility.
Microsoft currently operates with workers expected to be on-premises for at least 50 percent of their workweek unless they have special permission.
However, Microsoft has been publicly oppositional to a full return-to-office in a broader sense. Last May, a Microsoft executive urged workers to “actively fight back” against efforts by businesses to force them back to the office permanently.
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