Saturday, September 21, 2024

The employment power pendulum is always swinging. Here's how workers can stay ahead.

Photo illustration of a swinging pendulum.
The employment power pendulum has been moving since at least the late 1800s one expert said.
  • A power pendulum of sorts is constantly swinging back and forth between employees and employers.
  • The businesses are back on top these days as employees lose much of the pandemic power they held.
  • But there are steps workers can take to remain employable even when their bosses have all the power.

Gone are the days of a plethora of work-from-home jobs and quiet quitting. These days, most American workers may be more worried about being laid off than having to choose between dueling job offers — that is if they even have a job.

The businesses are back on top.

Amazon dealt a death knell to its hybrid work model this week, eliminating one more mode of flexibility its workers gained amid a national reckoning over work in recent years.

The force of the US economy has slowly stripped employees of the power they briefly amassed in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic (or, depending on who you ask, continued to deprive them of a power they never truly had. More on that later).

A power pendulum is constantly swinging back and forth between employers and employees, guided by market forces and an ever-changing economy. Sometimes, workers have an outsize influence over their employers, using their leverage to score better working conditions and increased pay. Other times, employers have the power to set workplace norms, and workers are better off keeping their heads down.

"When one side — capital vs. labor, for example — gets too much power or becomes too dominant, there tends to be pressure to eliminate or equalize that power," said Arne Kalleberg, professor of sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of "Good jobs, Bad Jobs: The Rise of Polarized and Precarious Employment Systems in the United States."

While individuals are powerless to control the whims of the market, there are steps employees can take to stay ahead of the swing and remain desirable regardless of who holds the workplace power.

The pendulum of power

While an effective visual metaphor, the pendulum comparison is admittedly imperfect. The cyclical nature of shifting workplace power does swing back and forth between employers and employees, but not automatically. Historical, economic, and social factors all help determine who has control at any moment.

Think of it as a supply-demand phenomenon: Whenever the labor market gets tight, and employer demand for workers exceeds the number of available workers, employees gain greater choice and, thus, power. Conversely, during a loose market, when the number of workers exceeds the number of available positions, employers have the upper hand.

The pattern dates back to at least the late 1800s, Kalleberg said, citing The Gilded Age as a pivotal turning point in American employment norms. From the late 1870s through the early 1900s, the country experienced a period of rampant markets and unprecedented employer power, leaving workers disadvantaged and exploited.

Black and white photo of men standing outside an employment agency during the great depression
The New Deal helped address the rampant unemployment during the Great Depression.

A mere three decades later, however, the power pendulum swung back toward workers with The New Deal, which included unemployment relief and minimum wage legislation, among other worker rights. The pendulum swung on and on through the neoliberal markets of the 1970s and the 1990s employment boom.

Which more or less brings us to the post-pandemic present.

"COVID arrived like a meteor killing the dinosaurs," said Gerald Davis, a professor of business administration at the University of Michigan and author of "The Vanishing American Corporation: Navigating the Hazards of a New Economy." "It changed the way that companies think about the nature of the employment relationship."

But while academics and experts agree that the pandemic was an inflection point for American employment, there's much less concurrence about who actually got the power.

COVID changes

The pandemic era gave us The Great Resignation and The Great Reshuffle, workplace trends that saw a certain type of white-collar worker gain the freedom to quit their job and score higher-paying positions at other companies with relative ease. Millions of US workers quit their jobs during the pandemic market boom, leading to a two-decade-high resignation rate.

Cat Ward, vice president of employer mobilization at employment nonprofit Jobs for the Future, attributed the reshuffling to employers being forced to reckon with a number of sudden changes, including COVID, shifting generational workplace demographics, the rise of artificial intelligence, and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) measures.

"We've seen this moment over the last four years where there's been a pretty incredible amount of innovation and change," Ward said. "Employers have been on their heels to try and adapt to all this change, and that has put more power in the hands of workers."

Kalleberg, however, suggested the narrative of a pandemic boom in employee power was largely overblown. Sure, some employees were able to work from home. Some employees transitioned into higher-paying roles. But much of the COVID-era shifts in workplace norms were unequally distributed, he said.

"For a moment there, it looked like essential workers were going to get a better break, but that seems to have dissipated," Kalleberg said.

People holding signs that say "Make them pay!" alongside other people
Union activity has seen a rejuvenation in recent years.

While there have been some mini-wins for workers in recent years — Kalleberg pointed to the recent rejuvenation of union activity as one example — the pandemic ultimately cemented an already-existing pattern of increasing employment polarization, he said. The country has steadily seen a rise in high-wage jobs and low-wage jobs, alongside the hollowing out of middle-tier, semi-skilled positions, Kalleberg said.

And with generative AI already knocking at the door of many industries, more workplace change is all but guaranteed, experts said. But whether the burgeoning technology will help put power in employer or employee hands remains to be seen.

How to avoid the pendulum's swing

As layoffs mount across sectors and qualified job seekers rack up rejections, employees are facing a dearth of workplace power.

While workers can't avoid the power pendulum's effects entirely, there are steps they can take to prioritize resiliency and ensure they remain employable even during a downturn, experts said.

One of the most important things workers can do during good times and bad is to build and maintain a flexible mindset, especially when it comes to where they're looking for jobs, according to Ward.

"Step No. 1 is to always look at where there are more recession-proof career opportunities," she said.

Healthcare, government, technology, nonprofits, education, and accounting are all areas that typically experience stability even during tough economic times, experts said. Meanwhile, industries like tech, media, real estate, and entertainment tend to downsize during a recession.

Employees should invest in their professional social capital as well, Ward said. She encouraged workers to seek out a mentor or get involved in community professional groups, many of which help people rebound after a layoff.

Workers will be best-served during difficult times if they adopt a learning mindset and invest in continual skills development regardless of what the markets are doing, experts said. Holding credentials with market value and relevance can pay off big-time when companies are looking to make cuts.

Community colleges are a great place for people to start, Kalleberg said. The local institutions often offer an array of classes on various subject matters at an affordable price.

"We can't depend on employers to teach those skills because they won't," he added. "They stopped doing it because they feared they would lose workers."

In addition to acquiring technical skills, employees should focus on developing durable human skills, like communication and leadership, Ward said, especially as AI becomes more prevalent in the workplace.

ChatGPT
Generative AI will only become more common in workplaces as time goes on.

"People should really be thinking about what it is that humans can uniquely do in the workplace," Ward said.

But even as machines become ubiquitous, the professional outlook for humans isn't entirely doom and gloom.

"I'm very impressed by the potential of AI," Kalleberg said. "It's going to eliminate jobs, but it's also going to create many more."

Artificial intelligence will offer workers endless information at their fingertips, which could eventually give them a leg up in terms of skill-building, he said. Workers who have previously lacked solid skillsets will suddenly be able to use technology to enhance the skills they do have or acquire new ones, according to Kalleberg, who suggested the invention could even be one way of rebuilding the middle class.

If that turns out to be true, it's only a matter of time before the pendulum swings yet again, and employees take back the power, experts said.

And for America's millions of workers, that day can't come soon enough.

"Employers have had their way for a long time," Kalleberg said.

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Friday, September 20, 2024

US Navy's new submarines are 'in crisis' as costs balloon by $17 billion, lawmaker says

The Virginia-class submarine USS Hawaii in blue waters next to two patrol boats in Western Australia.
The Virginia-class submarine USS Hawaii just recently finished a historic maintenance period with the Royal Australian Navy as part of AUKUS efforts.
  • The US Navy's Virginia-class submarine program is projected to run $17 billion over budget through 2030.
  • The Navy is expected to build two Virginia subs a year and faces a time crunch with upcoming deadlines.
  • A review earlier this year found most of Navy's biggest shipbuilding projects were severely delayed.

The US Navy's newest submarine program is expected to run $17 billion over its budget through the end of the decade as problems with once-smooth submarine construction deepen, a key House lawmaker said.

The news comes after a major report earlier this year revealed the Navy's biggest projects, including new Virginia-class submarines, were facing severe delays of up to three years.

On Thursday, House Rep. Ken Calvert, chairman of the House defense appropriations subcommittee, said in remarks prior to an oversight meeting that the Navy had "withheld information on costs and delays" and that its "plans to address" its shipbuilding crises "are primarily aspirational."

"In a word, these programs are in crisis," the California Republican said. "Without exception, they are falling behind. Increasingly, they are over budget. Absent today's intervention, I have zero confidence that Navy shipbuilding will get back on track."

Calvert referenced a variety of the Navy's top programs, including the Virginia-class fast attack submarine, which is manufactured by General Dynamics Corp. and Huntington Ingalls Industries.

Navy officials have attributed delays to "common issues from lingering COVID impacts across the national workforce and supply chain landscapes with industry reticent to invest."

he Virginia-class USS North Dakota (SSN 784) submarine is seen during bravo sea trials
The Navy attributed shipbuilding delays across its top programs to COVID-19's impact on the workforce and supply chain.

In his remarks, Calvert noted the Navy is struggling to construct just 1.3 of the vessels a year when its requirement is two, and the cost is expected to be $17 billion more than budgeted through 2030. It's unclear what exactly is included in that figure and whether it could be higher.

It's clear that the Navy and shipbuilders have known about this shortfall for at least 18 months," Calvert added, "when Congress was notified just two weeks ago."

The Congressional hearing was held as Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro attempted to advocate for the Shipyard Accountability and Workforce Support proposal, which was shot down by the White House. The proposal sought to reallocate money set aside for future Virginia- and Columbia-class submarines to cover shipyards' current inflation-related costs and worker pay issues, both of which the Navy and its industry partners have said are causing schedule delays and funding problems.

In regard to the SAWS proposal, HII CEO and President Christopher Kastner told Politico, "I credit Secretary Del Toro, the Navy, and DOD with a solution that is kind of genius: addresses the wage gap and invests in the industrial base without the need for funding above the Navy's planned budget. It gets at the underlying current challenges in shipbuilding so we can get these ships built and delivered on schedule to support the Navy and AUKUS."

In a statement after the Congressional hearing, the Navy said Del Toro "recognized the importance of submarine acquisitions amidst the challenges of fiscal constraints."

The statement added that Del Toro "has been advocating for improvements to the maritime industrial base, and to increase funding to ensure the Navy meets its acquisition objectives."

To alleviate its cost and manufacturing problems, the Navy added that it had created an independent cost agency to increase accuracy on program costs and was working to streamline ship design processes and improve shipyard facilities as it aims to grow its fleet to counter China.

Chart from the Secretary of the Navy's 45-day Shipbuilding Review.
The Navy's biggest shipbuilding projects are facing major delays, meanwhile China, identified by the Pentagon as the US' pacing challenge, is churning out ships at astonishing rates.

Earlier this year, the Navy held a 45-day review that found multiple of its top programs had been delayed, resulting in increased costs. The longest delays were for the coming Block IV Virginia-class submarines and Constellation-class guided missile frigates, which, based on current performances, won't be delivered for at least another 36 months.

The review was ordered by Del Toro back in January. At the time, Navy leadership expressed concern that delays facing the Virginia-class vessels could bleed into the development timeline for the new Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines, which are a top priority for the Pentagon. The delays facing the Columbia class could mean the Navy won't meet its requirement of having 10 ballistic missile subs ready to deploy at all times.

An artist rendering of the future Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines.
Future Columbia-class submarines have been a top priority for the US Navy.

Meanwhile, problems with the Navy's delivery of Virginia-class subs may impair the US' ability to fulfill its end of the AUKUS agreement.

Under AUKUS, the US Navy is expected to sell the first of as many as five Virginia-class submarines to Australia in order to give the Royal Australian Navy its first nuclear submarines

In his remarks on Thursday, Calvert slammed the Navy for its lack of urgency on the issue. "Somehow, the Navy continues to assert that commitments to INDOPACOM and our AUKUS partners remain on track" despite Virginia-class delays, he said. 

Virginia-class submarines are considered vital to the US' role in deterring and, if necessary, fighting China. Its arsenal of torpedoes, land-attack missiles, and upcoming anti-ship Tomahawk cruise missiles make it a flexible strike capability for the US in a potential conflict with China.

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An Emmy-winning 'Black Mirror' episode is getting a sequel in 2025. Here's what to know about season 7.

(L-R) Paul G. Raymond, Michaela Coel, Milanka Brooks, Jesse Plemons, Jimmi Simpson, Cristin Milloti, and Osy Ikhile in "Black Mirror" season four, episode "USS Callister."
(L-R) Paul G. Raymond, Michaela Coel, Milanka Brooks, Jesse Plemons, Jimmi Simpson, Cristin Milloti, and Osy Ikhile in "Black Mirror" season four, episode "USS Callister."
  • "Black Mirror" season seven will air in 2025 and feature the show's first sequel episode.
  • The sequel is based on the season four episode, "USS Callister."
  • Netflix announced the cast of season seven will include Cristin Milioti, Issa Rae, and Paul Giamatti.

"Black Mirror," the ground-breaking dystopian anthology series, is trying something new for season seven: its first sequel episode.

In March, Netflix announced that the series will return in 2025 and shared a video teaser for the season, featuring the USS Callister logo from season four, episode one.

During a "Next on Netflix" event in London in March to promote the streamer's upcoming UK series, Anne Mensah, vice president of UK Content at Netflix, confirmed to Business Insider and other media outlets that season seven will have a sequel to the season four episode "USS Callister."

"Once again we're spanning the coolest of cool stars with the darkest of dark stories, including for the first time a sequel," Mensah said. "It's the sci-fi adventure 'USS Callister.' Robert Daly is dead, but for the crew of the USS Callister, their problems are just beginning."

The original episode, which aired in 2017, starred Jesse Plemons, Cristin Milioti, Michaela Coel, and Billy Magnussen. Aaron Paul and Plemons' now-wife, Kirsten Dunst, also made brief cameos.

The plots of the season's other episodes are under wraps, but on Thursday, Netflix officially announced the cast for season seven.

The casting teaser also had a small reference to "Tuckersoft," the company in 2018's interactive "Bandersnatch" episode. This could mean "Bandersnatch" will also get a sequel episode, although that's unconfirmed.

Here's what we know about "Black Mirror" season seven.

Most of the 'USS Callister' cast is returning for season seven

Magnussen, Milioti, Jimmi Simpson, Paul G. Raymond, Milanka Brooks, and Osy Ikhile were in the casting announcement for season seven. They all starred in the original "USS Callister" episode, implying they are reprising the roles in the sequel.

Plemons and Coel are the only main castmembers not returning.

Rashida Jones, who has previously written an episode of "Black Mirror," will also star in season seven.

The other notable names in the season seven cast are Awkwafina, Peter Capaldi, Emma Corrin, Paul Giamatti, Issa Rae, and Tracee Ellis Ross.

'USS Callister' tells the story of a game creator

Jesse Plemons as Robert Daly in "Black Mirror" episode "USS Callister."
Jesse Plemons as Robert Daly in "Black Mirror" episode "USS Callister."

Spoilers ahead for the "USS Callister" in season four of "Black Mirror."

In the original episode, Plemons plays Robert Daly, the underappreciated creator of a virtual-reality multiplayer game called "Infinity."

Daly creates his own version of the game modeled on his favorite series, the "Star Trek" spook "USS Callister," but makes sentient clones of his co-workers for the crew. Daly uses his power to abuse the clones in the game, but at the end of the episode, they escape and trap him inside it.

Daly's death explains why Plemons was not in the season seven casting announcement. It's unclear why Coel won't return.

The sequel episode will likely follow the remaining crew members entering Infinity and interacting with real players.

In 2018, "USS Callister" was nominated for seven Emmys in the limited series or TV movie category, including an outstanding lead actor award for Plemons.

Plemons didn't win, but the show won the award for outstanding writing, sound editing, single-camera picture, and television movie.

"Black Mirror" creator Charlie Brooker told The Hollywood Reporter in May that he always intended to do a follow-up to "USS Callister," but scheduling and the COVID-19 pandemic got in the way.

"I've never had it before on 'Black Mirror,' to have a character that survives beyond one episode! So that's been a lot of fun, and then seeing them all on set has been fantastic," Brooker said.

Season 7 will be the fourth 'Black Mirror' season made by Netflix

Cristin Milloti as Nanette Cole in "Black Mirror" episode "USS Callister."
Cristin Milioti as Nanette Cole in "Black Mirror" episode "USS Callister."

"USS Callister" was part of the second season of "Black Mirror" made after Netflix bought the rights to the show in 2015 in a deal estimated to be worth $40 million, per The Guardian. The first two seasons were aired by the British broadcaster Channel 4.

However, Brooker said in the oral-history book "Inside Black Mirror" that, after the second season, a new creative team at Channel 4 wasn't as keen on spending money on the anthology series and began requesting briefs about each episode.

Meanwhile, the series exploded in popularity in the US after it was put on Netflix. Brooker said he took a deal with Netflix because the streamer had more confidence in the series.

The streamer has since produced three seasons and pioneered a special interactive episode in 2018.

Tudum reported that Brooker told Netflix's Geeked Week live event on Thursday that season seven of "Black Mirror" will have the tone of the early seasons.

"We have evolved to a place where it's kind of OG 'Black Mirror' this season. So it's all sci-fi, techno-dystopia," he said. "You can expect a mix of genres and styles.

"We've got six episodes this time, and two of them are basically feature-length. Some of them are deeply unpleasant, some are quite funny, and some are emotional."

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I was going into Amazon's office 5 days a week before the RTO push. It's helped me focus and bond with teammates.

Luka Emrashvili posing with a laptop in front of an Amazon logo.
Amazon employee Luka Emrashvili has been working from the office 5 days a week since 2022.
  • Luka Emrashvili has worked as a software development engineer at Amazon since 2022.
  • He started going into the office five days a week long before Amazon announced its RTO push this week.
  • Emrashvili said in-person work has improved his focus and helped his team bond.

This as-told-to essay is based on a transcribed conversation with Luka Emrashvili, 24, an Amazon software engineer based in New York, about the company's decision to require employees to be in the office five days a week. Business Insider verified Emrashvili's employment with documentation. The following has been edited for length and clarity.

I view working at Amazon as a big career achievement.

I'm from Georgia in Eastern Europe, where working for a Big Tech company like Amazon is a big dream for a lot of young professionals.

I applied to Amazon shortly after moving to the US to complete my bachelor's degree. I was offered a role as a software development engineer in November 2021 and my start date was July 2022.

For most of my time at Amazon, I've been going into the office five days a week. It's helped me focus and separate work from life.

When Amazon RTO rules started requiring people to come into the office three days a week, I noticed that in-person work helped me and my team collaborate better.

Everyone has their own opinion on the new five-day-a-week RTO policy, but I value in-person connection.

I didn't enjoy working remotely at Amazon

When I joined Amazon, I worked fully remotely. The office wasn't closed, but no one would come in, so I'd be alone if I went.

I found it challenging to onboard remotely. I was trying to get used to the company's systems, learn the culture, and connect with my team from home, but online meetings and conversations made me feel isolated. I found it hard to build relationships and understand how things worked.

Roughly a month after I started, I decided to work in the office five days a week. It helped me separate my home and work lives, but the office was still pretty empty.

I remember that other people who came in weren't doing so on a daily basis, more like three times a week.

I was hopeful that the 3-day rule would help rebuild the office culture

In February 2023, Amazon announced that employees would have to come in three times a week.

I remember colleagues feeling uncertain about how they'd be able to adjust.

I was glad it would incentivize people to come back to the office and rebuild the office culture that COVID-19 took away. In software engineering, it's so helpful to collaborate on problem-solving through whiteboard sessions or chatting at someone's desk.

There was a "Badge Report" for tracking your days in the office. I heard rumors about Amazon employees "coffee badging" on the news, but I don't personally know of anyone who's done it.

In-person work has helped my team collaborate and improved my focus

I heard about Amazon's new RTO policy, requiring employees to come in five days a week, on Monday.

Again, it wasn't a big change for me.

I usually work at Amazon's office near Bryant Park, and my commute takes around 15 minutes, but others have long commutes, and it might be more challenging for them to come in every day.

When we were fully remote, everything had to be scheduled and there wasn't room for spontaneous discussions or brainstorming. Now, if I have a quick question, I can just walk over to someone's desk. Those in-person conversations lead to new ideas we wouldn't have had otherwise.

Being in the same space builds a stronger sense of community, too. We've had more informal conversations over lunch or in the hallway that have helped us bond.

Emrashvili's office desk. There is a whiteboard with the word "Georgia" displayed on it on one of the cubicle walls, and postcards on the other.
Emrashvili has personalized his work set-up with mementos to remind him of Georgia.

The office environment helps me focus better. We have adjustable desks that allow you to stand up if you're tired of sitting, and I can personalize my workplace. I prefer it to working from home.

I really value in-person interactions, meetings, and collaboration, but everyone has their own preference. I still think that ideally, people should be able to choose what is most productive for them.

A spokesperson for Amazon previously told BI the return-to-office guidance was an effort to strengthen its culture. They added they had observed that in-office work makes it easier for employees to learn, model, and collaborate.

Do you have a personal story about RTO policies at work? Email ccheong@businessinsider.com

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I help the ultrawealthy secure golden visas and golden passports. Here are the top 5 countries they want to move to.

a hand holding up a golden passport against a background of stars and visa stamps.
Arton said demand for residence-by-investment is continuously growing among the wealthy.
  • Armand Arton's firm helps wealthy families secure golden visas and passports.
  • He shared the top five countries where clients are interested in relocating to via investment.
  • They were: Hungary, Greece, Italy, the UAE, and Antigua and Barbuda.

This as-told-to essay is based on a transcribed conversation with Armand Arton, 47, president of Arton Capital, a financial advisory firm, about golden visas and passports. The following has been edited for length and clarity.

I founded Arton Capital in 2006. We advise governments on how to attract wealthy global citizens to their countries through residence-by-investment programs, and we also have a private client division where we advise ultra-high and high-net-worth families about how to obtain residencies in other countries.

Our clients are based all over the world. Some have relocation needs because they're in a country where lives are in danger, while for others, it's more of a lifestyle decision. They want mobility to access more countries worldwide. We advise them about golden visas and golden passports — government programs that offer residency or citizenship rights to foreign investors.

When I first entered this industry nearly 20 years ago, the perception was that people living in the East wanted to move west. But in recent years, migration has been happening in all directions.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, many American investors couldn't enter Europe, so they are now looking for residency programs in European countries. After this year's elections in France and the UK, we're also seeing millionaires in those countries looking to relocate.

Here are the top five countries that my clients, who are looking to relocate through investment, are interested in moving to:

Hungary

In 2013, Hungary launched a program granting citizenship in exchange for investing in government bonds, with the promise of repayment after five years.

They decided to reopen it this year with an additional focus on real estate investment.

It comes with a residency card that can be renewed after 10 years.

Hungary offers a European lifestyle, is safe, and offers huge opportunities to invest in real estate.

Unlike countries like Portugal and Spain that want to abolish or redirect funds away from the property sector, Hungary encourages people to invest in real estate.

Property in Hungary is relatively inexpensive, which creates opportunities for investors. Hungary also has a stable political ecosystem. Governments haven't changed as rapidly as in Greece or Italy.

There's an option to apply for a passport in Hungary, but you will have to reside in Hungary for eight consecutive years and pass a test in the local language.

Greece

Because Hungary has just relaunched its program, there's a lot of hype around it, but recently, I've been seeing more people invest in Greece.

Greece's program stipulated a 250,000 euro minimum investment in real estate, but recently, the government announced it would increase the price to 400,000 euros. This came into effect at the start of September.

We saw a surge in clients applying for visas in Greece because everyone got their applications in before the price hike. We don't expect demand to slow down. The opportunity for easy access to Greece's storied cities, beaches, and culture will never lose its appeal, whatever the price.

Greece is a popular tourist destination, so clients buy properties they can rent out for income.

A golden visa in Greece does not automatically confer the right to work. Instead of being employed by others, investors can establish and own a business in the country. This can benefit Greek citizens, who can seek employement by the companies that golden visa applicants establish.

Similarly to Hungary, there's a flexible long-term residence pathway that offers access to the Schengen area, a border-free zone of 29 European countries where citizens and residents can travel easily.

To obtain citizenship in Greece, you must have resided in the country for seven years and passed Greek language and cultural knowledge tests.

I've found that for people applying for residency by investment, citizenship is a possibility but not the end goal. A permanent residency in a European country gives them similar rights to citizens.

Italy

Italy's program has been under the radar for a long time.

The program requires investment directly into the economy, such as the stock market, instead of real estate. It's not been as popular because it doesn't have a real estate option.

However, since Brexit created instability in Europe, Italy has become a more popular destination among ultrawealthy people already in Europe. This is thanks to its amazing tax package for anyone who decides to live in Italy and become a permanent resident.

Until August 2024, foreign income, with some exceptions, was taxed at a flat rate of 100,000 euros a year for 15 years for applicants who became tax-paying residents of Italy.

This has now been doubled to 200,000 euros per year on foreign worldwide income. We've noticed demand from people in other European countries such as England, France, and Germany, eager to take advantage of the 15-year plan.

The UAE

The UAE has quickly developed into a country that attracts the wealthy and investors.

Options for obtaining a golden visa in the UAE include investing at least AED 2 million in a bank, investment fund, or property. However, the government can also nominate applicants for a golden visa.

Residencies are typically valid for 10 years before they need to be renewed, and the UAE has been awarding citizenship to some of its biggest investors. We've worked with more than four investors who've made impressive investments in the economy, and the country has rewarded them with a UAE passport.

Citizenship-by-investment in the UAE is not an official program that everyone can apply to, and that exclusivity is a draw for people. Our information is that less than a hundred passports have been awarded.

Once you have a UAE passport, there are economic benefits. Expats are usually restricted to purchasing property in designated areas known as freehold areas. But with a UAE passport, these restrictions no longer apply.

The Caribbean Islands

Among the Caribbean Islands, Antigua and Barbuda has attracted most of our clients this year.

We feel that ultra-high-net-worth clients want a less popular program than one that everyone has, which is what's drawn people here.

Antigua is also experiencing phenomenal economic growth and attracting brands and tourism. There's a focus on luxury hotel developments.

Though it was completely devastated by hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017, it's becoming a playground for billionaires.

I'd advise wealthy migrants to get in on programs sooner rather than later

The number of applicants for golden visas increases every year. I've witnessed ups and downs in the number of residence-by-investment programs available to wealthy migrants. Countries including Bulgaria, the UK, and Ireland have recently closed programs, so at the moment, I think more programs are closing than opening, but demand for these programs constantly grows.

Programs are becoming more limited and more expensive, so I'd advise people who can afford to make these investments to do so now before processes become more difficult.

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Thursday, September 19, 2024

As a CEO, I don't share my personal life on LinkedIn. When my wife had another miscarriage, I posted about it so men know they're not alone.

Couple posing for a photo
Daniel Robbins shared about his wife's miscarriage on LinkedIn to find support from other men going through the same experience.
  • Daniel Robbins has experienced three miscarriages with his wife, Kate.
  • He struggled deeply after the first loss, but didn't know where to turn.
  • He shared his 'deep sadness' in hopes of connecting with other men.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Daniel Robbins, CEO of IBH Media. It has been edited for length and clarity.

I usually stick to business or work-related topics on LinkedIn. That changed earlier this month when I found myself struggling with a deep sadness after my wife, Kate, had her third miscarriage.

We were both frustrated and so upset. Kate could turn to her pregnancy-related app to "talk" with other women who had been in her shoes. As a man I had no similar space, but I wanted one. I needed to know how other people got through this. How did they process the trauma? Did they continue to try for a child amid what feels like bleak odds?

I couldn't ask these questions of my male friends. It felt too awkward. Instead, I found myself turning online. I posted about the agonizing days that we had experienced, the way I had cried uncontrollably learning that the pregnancy was gone, and the grief I felt for what could have been.

I became very depressed after our first miscarriage

This wasn't my first experience with loss. In early 2020, Kate had a missed miscarriage. We spent months getting excited about adding to our family, only to be told that wouldn't happen.

It was absolutely devastating for me. I'm an anxious person, so I spent years thinking about everything that could go wrong if I had a child. During that pregnancy, it felt like the stars aligned. I was finally able to overcome my anxiety and get excited about being a father.

Losing the pregnancy was the darkest time of my life. I stopped eating almost entirely and lost 40 pounds. My doctor told me I couldn't go on like that.

Oddly, COVID-19 saved my life. As the world shut down, Kate and I were spending more time together. We were able to process our loss and heal.

I've been able to be a role model for Kate's kids, but want to be a dad

Kate has two adult children from a previous relationship. I'm lucky that I've always been able to serve as a male role model for them. At the same time, we wanted to add to our family, and I wanted to be a dad.

We continued to try for a baby, and last year, Kate found out she was pregnant. Just a few days later, she miscarried. That loss was somehow easier. I hadn't had time to get excited and emotionally invested.

This third time, Kate was seven weeks pregnant when she miscarried. It was a medical emergency, and she needed surgery. Even though I have been through this grief before, the stakes this time felt even more profound. I worried it was the end of our attempts at having a baby since I'm 40 and Kate is 44.

With Kate's encouragement, I posted in hopes of connecting with other people who have been where I am.

My post showed me I'm not alone in my grief

The LinkedIn post collected dozens of comments, and many people messaged me privately. About half were men, and half were women. Some people who I barely knew shared stories that they wouldn't have shared publicly.

I know I'm not alone in my complex feelings about this loss. Older parents are becoming more common, and with that, the risk of miscarriage increases. At the same time, we live at a time when it's becoming more socially acceptable for men to talk about their emotions.

There's a belief that men and women don't have the same feelings or experiences, especially when it comes to parenting and pregnancy loss. My post has shown me that we're all human, and there are more similarities than differences in our grief. When we realize that, we can help each other.

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Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Meet Africa's richest man, a billionaire who doesn't own a home outside Nigeria

Dangote Group's CEO and chairman Aliko Dangote, dressed in a suit and tie, smiles during the African Export-Import Bank meeting in 2023 in Ghana.
Aliko Dangote is the richest person in Africa.
  • Aliko Dangote, 67, is the richest person in Africa with an estimated net worth of $11.7 billion.
  • He founded the Dangote Group, a cement manufacturer with a presence in 10 African countries.
  • His philanthropic foundation combats malnutrition and has led to a friendship with Bill Gates.

Aliko Dangote, 67, first appeared on Forbes' billionaires list in 2008, and he has been ranked Africa's richest person every year since.

Dangote earned his billionaire status as the founder of the Dangote Group, Africa's largest cement producer with branches in 10 African countries.

Despite his immense wealth — and private jet ownership — Dangote revealed in July that he does not own any homes outside Nigeria, choosing instead to invest in real estate in his home country.

Here's a look at Dangote's wealth, philanthropy, and famous friendships.

Aliko Dangote is Africa's richest person with an estimated net worth of $11.7 billion, Forbes reported.
Aliko Dangote speaks into a microphone.
Aliko Dangote.

Dangote is one of the top 200 richest people in the world at 191st on Forbes' billionaires list.

Dangote comes from a wealthy family. His great-grandfather, Alhassan Dantata, was a Nigerian businessman and one of the wealthiest people in Kano State, Tom G. Forrest wrote in "The Advance of African Capital: The Growth of Nigerian Private Enterprise."

He earned his fortune as the founder and CEO of the Dangote Group, Africa's largest producer of cement.
A Dangote Industries cement plant under construction.
A Dangote Industries cement plant.

Dangote was born in Kano, Nigeria, and graduated from Al-Azhar University in Cairo in 1977.

He started a business trading rice, sugar, and cement in 1978 and grew the venture into the Dangote Group, which now produces 51.6 million metric tons of cement each year and employs 24,000 people across 10 African countries, according to the company's official website.

In January, he opened a $19 billion oil refinery in Nigeria.
The Dangote Petroleum Refinery near Lagos.
The Dangote Petroleum Refinery near Lagos.

In an appearance on The David Rubenstein Show in 2020, Dangote said that while Nigeria is rich in oil, the country lacked the infrastructure needed to refine it. The Dangote Petroleum Refinery opened near Lagos to help take advantage of Nigeria's natural resources.

Dangote founded the Aliko Dangote Foundation in 1994 to support public health and education initiatives throughout Africa.
Aliko Dangote speaks on a panel.
Aliko Dangote at the US-Africa Leaders Summit.

The Aliko Dangote Foundation is the largest private foundation in sub-Saharan Africa. Its endowment — the largest by a single African donor — has funded the establishment of the Dangote Business School at Nigeria's Bayero University, microgrants for women in northern Nigeria as part of the Kogi Human Capital Development initiative, and $2 million in humanitarian aid for the World Food Programme.

In April 2020, Dangote funded the construction of COVID-19 isolation centers in Nigeria.
A COVID-19 isolation center with rows of beds.
A coronavirus isolation center in Kano, Nigeria.

The Aliko Dangote Foundation also built a mobile testing center and provided personal protective equipment to healthcare workers.

"There's no doubt we started on a shaky foundation," then Kano State's governor, Abdullahi Ganduje, said in a press release. "With the assistance of ADF, we can see that a friend indeed is a friend in need."

He's friends with Bill Gates.
Nigerian President Mohammadu Buhari poses with tech billionaire Bill Gate and Africa's richest man, Aliko Dangote.
Bill Gates, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, and Aliko Dangote.

In a 2019 blog post titled "How I cemented my friendship with Aliko Dangote," Gates wrote that he and Dangote "both love to geek out over things that make some people's eyes glaze over, like cement, fertilizer, and iodized salt."

Dangote has teamed up with Gates to support charitable causes. In 2016, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Aliko Dangote Foundation joined forces for a $100 million initiative combating malnutrition in Nigeria.

He's been married and divorced twice and has four children.
Halima Dangote and Honoree Aliko Dangote attend the TIME 100 Gala.
Halima Dangote and Aliko Dangote at the Time 100 Gala.

"I'm not getting younger," he told The Financial Times in 2018 of his single status. "Sixty years is no joke, but it doesn't make sense to go out and get somebody if you don't have the time."

One of Dangote's daughters, Halima Dangote, is an executive director at the Dangote Group. She attended the Time 100 Gala with him in 2014 when he was named one of Time's 100 most influential people in the world.

Dangote does not own any homes outside of Nigeria.
Aliko Dangote speaks into a microphone.
Aliko Dangote at an event in Ghana.

During a July media event at the Dangote Petroleum Refinery in Lagos, Dangote said he chooses not to own houses outside Nigeria because he wants to focus on industrialization within the country.

Dangote said that he owns a home in Lagos, as well as in his home state of Kano. He also rents a property in the Nigerian capital of Abuja.

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Meet Bill Gates' kids Jennifer, Rory, and Phoebe: From a pediatrician to a fashion startup cofounder

Bill Gates Melinda
Bill Gates has three children with Melinda French Gates, his ex-wife, and now has his first grandchild as well.
  • Bill Gates, the Microsoft cofounder, shares three kids with his ex-wife Melinda French Gates.
  • They include a recent med school graduate and a fashion startup cofounder.
  • Here's what we know about the children of one of the world's richest men.

Bill Gates' story is a quintessential example of the American entrepreneurial dream: A brilliant math whiz, Gates was 19 when he dropped out of Harvard and cofounded Microsoft with his friend Paul Allen in 1975.

Nearly 50 years later, he's one of the richest and most famous men on Earth, with a fortune of about $131 billion, per Forbes. He stepped down from Microsoft's board in 2020 and has cultivated his brand of philanthropy with the Gates Foundation — a venture he formerly ran with his now ex-wife Melinda French Gates, who resigned in May. 

Even before founding one of the world's most valuable companies, Gates' life was anything but ordinary. He grew up in a well-off and well-connected family, surrounded by his parents' rarefied personal and professional network. Their circle included a Cabinet secretary and a governor of Washington, according to "Hard Drive," the 1992 biography of Gates by James Wallace and Jim Erickson. (Brock Adams, who went on to become the transportation secretary in the Carter administration, is said to have introduced Gates' parents.)

His father, William Gates Sr., was a prominent corporate lawyer in Seattle and the president of the Washington State Bar Association.

His mother, Mary Gates, came from a line of successful bankers and sat on the boards of important financial and social institutions, including the nonprofit United Way. It was there, according to her New York Times obituary, that she met the former IBM chairman John Opel — a fateful connection thought to have led to IBM enlisting Microsoft to provide an operating system in the 1980s.

"My parents were well off — my dad did well as a lawyer, took us on great trips, we had a really nice house," Gates said in the 2019 Netflix documentary "Inside Bill's Brain."

"And I've had so much luck in terms of all these opportunities."

Despite his very public life, his three children with French Gates — Jennifer, Rory, and Phoebe — largely avoided the spotlight for most of their upbringing. 

Like their father, the three Gates children attended Seattle's elite Lakeside School, a private high school that has been recognized for excellence in STEM subjects — and that received a $40 million donation from Bill Gates in 2005 to build its financial aid fund. (Bill Gates and Paul Allen met at Lakeside and went on to build Microsoft together.)

But as they have become adults, more details have emerged about their interests, professions, and family life. 

While they have chosen different career paths, all three children are active in philanthropy — a space in which they will likely wield immense influence as they grow older. While their father has reportedly said that he plans to leave each of the Gates three children $10 million — a fraction of his fortune — they may inherit the family foundation, where most of his money will go.

Here's all we know about the Gates children.

Gates and his children did not respond to requests for comment for this story.

Jennifer Gates Nassar
jennifer bill gates
Jennifer and Bill in Monaco on June 30, 2018.

Jennifer Gates Nassar, who goes by Jenn, is the oldest of the Gates children at 28 years old.

A decorated equestrian, Gates Nassar started riding horses when she was six. Her father has shelled out millions of dollars to support her passion, including buying a California horse farm for $18 million and acquiring several parcels of land in Wellington, Florida, to build an equestrian facility.

In 2018, Gates Nassar received her undergraduate degree in human biology from Stanford University, where a computer science building was named for her father after he donated $6 million to the project in 1996.

She then attended the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, from which she graduated in May. She will continue at Mt. Sinai for her residency in pediatric research. During medical school, she also completed a Master's in Public Health at Columbia University — perhaps a natural interest given her parents' extensive philanthropic activity in the space.

"Can't believe we've reached this moment, a little girl's childhood aspiration come true," she wrote on Instagram. "It's been a whirlwind of learning, exams, late nights, tears, discipline, and many moments of self-doubt, but the highs certainly outweighed the lows these past 5 years."

In October 2021, she married Egyptian equestrian Nayel Nassar. In February 2023, reports surfaced that they bought a $51 million New York City penthouse with six bedrooms and a plunge pool. The next month, they welcomed their first child, Leila. 

In June, she announced she was pregnant with her second child.

"Leila, being promoted to big sister," she captioned an Instagram photo of herself and her daughter.

In a 2020 interview with the equestrian lifestyle publication Sidelines, Gates Nassar discussed growing up wealthy.

"I was born into a huge situation of privilege," she said. "I think it's about using those opportunities and learning from them to find things that I'm passionate about and hopefully make the world a little bit of a better place."

She recently posted about visiting Kenya, where she learned about childhood health and development in the country.

Rory John Gates
melinda and rory gates
Rory Gates, the least public of the Gates children, has reportedly infiltrated powerful circles of Washington, D.C.

Rory John Gates, who is in his mid-20s, is Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates' only son and the most private of their children. He maintains private social media accounts, and his sisters and parents rarely post photos of him.

His mother did, however, write an essay about him in 2017. Titled "How I Raised a Feminist Son," she describes as a "great son and a great brother" who "inherited his parents' obsessive love of puzzles."

In 2022, he graduated from the University of Chicago, where, based on a photo posted on Facebook, he appears to have been active in moot court. At the time of his graduation, Jennifer Gates Nassar wrote that he had achieved a double major and master's degree.

Little is publicly known about what the middle Gates child has been up to since he graduated, but a Puck report from last year gave some clues, saying that he is seen as a "rich target for Democratic social-climbers, influence-peddlers, and all variety of money chasers." According to OpenSecrets, his most recent public giving was to Nikki Haley last year.

The same report says he works as a congressional analyst while also completing a doctorate.

Phoebe Gates
Phoebe Gates with her mother Melinda Gates at New York Fashion Week
Phoebe Gates with her mother, Melinda French Gates, at New York Fashion Week.

Phoebe Gates, 22, is the youngest of the Gates children.

After graduating from high school in 2021, she followed her sister to Stanford. She graduated in June after three years with a Bachelor of Science in Human Biology. Her mom, Melinda French-Gates, delivered the university's commencement address.

In a story that Gates wrote for Nylon about her graduation day, she documented her graduation day, including a party she cohosted that featured speeches from her famous parents and a piggyback ride from her boyfriend Arthur Donald — the grandson of Sir Paul McCartney.

She has long shown an interest in fashion, interning at British Vogue and posting on social media from fashion weeks in Copenhagen, New York, and Paris. Sustainability is often a theme of her content, which highlights vintage and secondhand stores and celebrates designers who don't use real leather and fur.

That has culminated in her cofounding Phia, a sustainable fashion tech platform that is set to launch later this year, with her former college roommate.

Gates shares her parents' passion for public health. She's attended the UN General Assembly with her mother and spent time in Rwanda with Partners in Health, a nonprofit that has received funding from the Gates Foundation.

Like her mother, Gates often publicly discusses issues of gender equality, including in essays for Vogue and Teen Vogue, at philanthropic gatherings, and on social media, where she frequently posts about reproductive rights.

She's given thousands to Democrats and Democratic causes, including to Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer and the Democratic Party of Montana, per data from OpenSecrets. According to Puck, she receives a "giving allowance" that makes it possible for her to cut the checks.

Perhaps the most public of the Gates children — she's got over 450,000 Instagram followers and a partnership with Tiffany & Co. — she's given glimpses into their upbringing, including strict rules around technology. The siblings were not allowed to use their phones before bed, she told Bustle, and to get around the rule, she created a cardboard decoy.

"I thought I could dupe my dad, and it worked, actually, for a couple nights," she told the outlet earlier this year. "And then my mom came home and was like, 'This is literally a piece of cardboard you're plugging in. You're using your phone in your room.' Oh, my gosh, I remember getting in trouble for that."

It hasn't always been easy being Gates's daughter. In the Netflix documentary "What's Next? The Future With Bill Gates," she said she lost friends because of a conspiracy theory suggesting her father used COVID-19 vaccines to implant microchips into recipients.

"I've even had friends cut me off because of these vaccine rumors," she said.

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MrBeast and Amazon hit with class-action lawsuit alleging sexual harassment and dangerous conditions by contestants on 'Beast Games'

MrBeast attends Amazon's Prime Day "Ultimate Crown" gaming event where MrBeast and Ninja compete head-to-head at HyperX Arena on July 09, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Mr Beast at the Amazon Prime Day "Ultimate Crown" event in 2022.
  • MrBeast and Amazon are facing a class-action lawsuit from contestants on "Beast Games."
  • It alleges that contestants on the reality show suffered sexual harassment, pay issues, and more.
  • MrBeast, YouTube's top creator, has come under increasing scrutiny in recent months.

YouTube star MrBeast and Amazon are facing a class-action lawsuit from contestants on the reality show "Beast Games."

The complaint, a redacted copy of which was obtained by Variety, was filed this week on behalf of five unnamed contestants and alleges a number of causes of action, including sexual harassment, pay issues, and more.

The suit says that MrBeast's production company, the independent production company Off One's Base LLC, and Amazon, exploited the labor" of contestants and that the production companies created a "toxic and hostile" workplace.

It says that female contestants "particularly and collectively suffered" and that there was a prevailing "culture of misogyny and sexism" in the work environment.

On the sexual harassment allegation, the suit cites a supposed employee handbook called "How to Succeed in MrBeast Production," which it says contains lines such as: "It's okay for the boys to be childish," and "If talent wants to draw a dick on the white board in the video or do something stupid, let them… Really do everything you can to empower the boys when filming and help them make content. Help them be idiots."

In a statement, one unnamed female plaintiff said that the women on the show "honestly could not have been respected less—as people, much less employees—if they tried," per Variety.

"I wanted to join because I was a fan of MrBeast and his videos made me smile during the COVID-19 pandemic. I expected to be challenged, but I didn't think I would be treated like nothing — less than nothing," she said.

The suit says that the defendants also failed to pay minimum wages and overtime, failed to give contestants uninterrupted meal breaks or rest breaks, and exposed participants to "dangerous circumstances and conditions."

MrBeast, whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson, has YouTube's most subscribed channel, with 316 million followers.

He shot to fame with viral videos of physical challenges and extravagant giveaways.

But Donaldson has faced increasing backlash in recent months over safety concerns among contestants on "Beast Games" and news that a former employee was accused of inappropriately messaging a minor.

The star has seemingly taken some action to try to salvage his reputation, hiring a $2,000-an-hour attorney who has previously represented Alec Baldwin and Elon Musk.

Representatives for MrBeast and Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

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Bill Gates' daughter says friends have cut her off because of vaccine conspiracy theories about her dad

Bill Gates and Phoebe Gates in formal attire standing next to each other and posing for a photo.
Phoebe Gates told her dad, Bill Gates, about some of the crazy conspiracy theories she has seen about him online in the Microsoft cofounders' latest documentary.
  • Phoebe Gates discussed conspiracy theories about Bill Gates in a new Netflix documentary series.
  • These theories, often linking him to COVID-19, have affected her personal relationships.
  • Phoebe, a Stanford graduate, outlined the challenge of sharing accurate public health information.

Conspiracy theories about billionaire Bill Gates have run rampant online for years, sometimes spilling from the sphere of the internet into his daily life.

Many of the most pervasive of these conspiracy theories have linked him to COVID-19. One popular unsubstantiated claim is that the COVID-19 pandemic was a cover to allow the Microsoft cofounder to put microchips in vaccines to track people.

Now, Phoebe Gates, the youngest daughter of Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates, has said these rumors have even damaged some of her personal relationships.

Phoebe is the cofounder of Phia, a digital fashion platform. She is an outspoken social activist, sharing her views on reproductive rights and gender equality with her followers on social media.

In Netflix's latest documentary series about the Microsoft billionaire, "What's Next? The Future With Bill Gates," which premiered on September 18, he asks the 22-year-old if she has ever come across the conspiracy theories about him.

"All the time," she answered, "I've even had friends cut me off because of these vaccine rumors."

She continued to say that, as a public health graduate at Stanford University, she is concerned about effectively communicating accurate health information.

"I need to learn more because I naively still believe that digital communication can be a force to bring us together, to have reasonable debate," her father responded.

Phoebe Gates said one thing her father did not understand about social media is that facts and logic are not as important to people as finding an escape from everyday reality.

Gates then asked his daughter where conspiracy theories, such as his involvement with COVID-19 vaccines, actually come from. For Phoebe Gates, they arise from a place of fear.

During the various lockdowns, no one knew who to trust or what to believe, she said.

"The pandemic was definitely social media at its worst, oversimplifying things," her father said.

Gates has previously said that he's come to laugh about the conspiracy theories about him.

"You got to have a sense of humor," he told the BBC earlier this year. "When people say that I want to track everyone — why do I want to track everyone?"

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Amazon's RTO commandment and the office work shibboleth

Andy Jassy holding a stone that says, "Thou Must Return To The Office"
  • Amazon CEO Andy Jassy mandated all corporate employees return to the office 5 days a week.
  • This contrasts with the remote work trend that surged during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Other companies have more realistic, flexible approaches to accommodate diverse needs.

"Office mandates are never going to work."

Thus spoke Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff in 2022. In those ancient times, tech companies embraced remote work as an unstoppable innovation revolution.

Now, they're getting all biblical about in-office work. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy just issued the most extreme commandment: All corporate employees must come to the office 5 days a week.

Extremism is never the answer, though. The real world is messy and most attempts to put strict guardrails around human behavior are futile.

The reality is that there are benefits to both remote and in-office approaches. The natural course will be that a hybrid approach evolves and companies will support top employees doing what works best for each of them. Some workers will be fully remote. Some will spend a few days in the office, while others be in all the time.

Remote work benefits

Remote work supports a more diverse employee base by helping companies hire more easily in different locations. It was a boon for women, while in-office rules may hurt their careers.

Forcing staff to work in huge, expensive metropolises is also expensive. For employees, they must pay higher rent or shell out more to own homes near big cities.

For companies, operating large offices is a massive burden that seems kinda silly now. Google saved $1 billion in just one year through remote work. And no, bailing out developers who built too many offices is not a good reason for RTO.

Commuting five or more hours a week takes away time that employees could be spending on productive work. Not to mention the environmental cost from all that extra pollution.

In-office benefits

On the flip side, new workers who need training and mentorship sometimes miss out and feel isolated by sitting at home every day by themselves.

It's also easier to be rude or thoughtless with colleagues when they're on the other side of a Slack message or work email. In person, people are often more polite and their ideas are communicated with more visual cues that help collaboration.

Business Insider's Aki Ito writes brilliantly about the future of work. In December, she described a study that found collaborating in person produced more breakthroughs than remote work.

More generally, it's fun to be around other humans. And working hard together in an office creates bonds that can't be so easily formed over an internet connection.

The office shibboleth

Is that enough to order everyone back to the office 5 days a week? Of course not. All those other remote work benefits would be lost.

The truth is that in-office work is a shibboleth. A remnant of a former time that some traditional folks are trying and failing to cling to.

The march of technology was already making remote work possible and effective. Amazon's own pioneering cloud services have been a driving force behind this. Collaboration software and tools, powered by Jassy's AWS brainchild, revolutionized work even before the pandemic.

Then, COVID-19 provided the perfect real-world test case: Could the modern economy survive when everyone was stuck at home?

The answer, especially for the tech industry, was a resounding yes. As millions of people got more things done online, tech company revenue and earnings surged. Amazon's own business boomed as more people relied on the cloud to get work done.

Old-school gut versus data

This is what makes Amazon's new mandate so head-scratching. The data doesn't support such an extreme, old-fashioned approach.

In fact, Jassy admitted this. During an internal fireside chat last year, he was pressed by an Amazon employee to share data that supported an RTO mandate. Instead of offering data points, Jassy described it as a "judgment" call and compared it to other big decisions that weren't widely supported by data in the past, according to a recording of the meeting obtained by BI.

This is a company that usually obsesses over data-driven decisions, and pitches customers on taking the same approach through its cloud business.

The inevitable RTO exceptions

Then, there will always be exceptions that chip away at broad in-office mandates and breed resentment among some staff.

Employees who are perceived as the most valuable by companies will get to set their own rules. Why? Because they may jump to a remote-friendly rival if they don't get what they want. The higher up the executive ranks you go, the more this happens.

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon has raged against remote work, citing an episode when he ran into a junior employee at a restaurant in the Hamptons in the middle of a weekday, according to Bloomberg. Of course, Solomon himself was at the same restaurant at the same time, not in the office.

The new CEO of Victoria's Secret is allowed to work remotely, according to Fortune. Starbucks' new leader is using the corporate jet to commute to the office, while most employees sit in traffic or ride public transportation.

James Hamilton sailed around the world in a boat for years while leading Amazon's cloud infrastructure efforts. The company has some of the best tech in this field, so he was certainly doing a great job while not in the office. (Last time we checked, in 2021, he'd gotten an apartment in Seattle).

Benioff's messy approach

Salesforce's Benioff has flip-flopped on this issue.

A year ago, he said: "I'm a remote worker. I've always been a remote worker my whole life." (The CEO likes to hang out a lot in Hawaii). "I don't work well in an office. It just doesn't work with my personality," he added.

Meanwhile, Salesforce recently rolled out in-office requirements for some employees. There are 3 tiers, and team leaders decide how to designate different roles:

  • Office-Based: Staff work in-person 4 to 5 days per week
  • Office-Flex: Work in-person 3 days a week; or 10 days per quarter for some engineering teams
  • Remote: Work primarily from home or at a customer site

This is messy. But Benioff is at least admitting the reality of how employees work in the modern world.

"For some of them, they need to rebalance home and work. Some need to spend more time in the office. Some need to spend more time at home. Every person's different, but I think to optimize the workforce, you have to realize it's not a one-size-fits-all agenda," he said.

"People need to focus on being happy," he added.

Amen to that.

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