In a shock to no one who has ever been in corporate leadership, remote workers are found to not get promoted at the rate that in person employees do. If I can't see you, then you don't exist.
https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/careers/remote-workers-are-losing-out-on-promotions-8219ec63?st=3xg7bzv3sxrzzy5&reflink=article_copyURL_share
Equally not shocking is that they don't get mentored. Myself and others pretty much wrote this article 2-3 years ago when this all kicked off.
Lol at this:
If I were CEO, I would be saying the same thing because it's common sense and human behavior.
Agree with all of this. If you want to promote and you are early in career you should at least work in a hybrid format and be adult enough to go into the office 2-3 days per week. If you do not, I do not think you have any right to complain if you don't get promoted.
Full disclosure: I'm 100% remote but I'm also at a startup with 6 employees. All of us including the owner are 100% remote, for now. I've told him as we grow and evolve (hopefully) I would expect to have to be at HQ 2-3 days per week especially since I'm one of the founding "executives". I'm 3 hours away from him so I would have to adjust how/where we live if it comes to that and am prepared to do that if we get to that point and I still want to be there.
https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/careers/remote-workers-are-losing-out-on-promotions-8219ec63?st=3xg7bzv3sxrzzy5&reflink=article_copyURL_share
Equally not shocking is that they don't get mentored. Myself and others pretty much wrote this article 2-3 years ago when this all kicked off.
Quote:
Over the past year, remote workers were promoted 31% less frequently than people who worked in an office, either full-time or on a hybrid basis, according to an analysis of two million white-collar workers by employment-data provider Live Data Technologies. Remote workers also get less mentorship, a gap that's especially pronounced for women, research shows.
Lol at this:
Quote:
"There's some proximity bias going on," says Nick Bloom, an economist at Stanford University who studies remote work and management practices, of the challenges facing remote workers. "I literally call it discrimination."
If I were CEO, I would be saying the same thing because it's common sense and human behavior.
Quote:
Nearly 90% of chief executives who were surveyed said that when it comes to favorable assignments, raises or promotions, they are more likely to reward employees who make an effort to come to the office. In the online survey of 1,325 CEOs of large companies in 11 countries, conducted last year by professional-services firm KPMG, almost two-thirds of respondents said they expect most employees will be working in offices full-time in another three years.
"People may not like it, but I can't build a company by playing to the lowest common denominator," says Vineet Jain, Egnyte's chief executive. "If you don't show up and work with the rest of your colleagues, it's showing a lack of connectivity and a lack of ownership."
Agree with all of this. If you want to promote and you are early in career you should at least work in a hybrid format and be adult enough to go into the office 2-3 days per week. If you do not, I do not think you have any right to complain if you don't get promoted.
Quote:
For Americans who are still fond of working from home, one piece of good news is that data shows no difference in promotion rates between hybrid workers and those who come to the office five days a week, says Bloom, the Stanford economist, who co-wrote a related 2023 National Bureau of Economic Research paper.
Bloom's research has found that fully remote workers are more productive than their fully on-site peers, but because remote workers miss out on casual in-person conversations around the office, relationships suffer, and their promotion prospects tend to take a hit. Remote work tends to be a better fit for people who are already more established in their careers and have the skills and relationships to help them win promotions, Bloom and other researchers who study workplaces say.
Full disclosure: I'm 100% remote but I'm also at a startup with 6 employees. All of us including the owner are 100% remote, for now. I've told him as we grow and evolve (hopefully) I would expect to have to be at HQ 2-3 days per week especially since I'm one of the founding "executives". I'm 3 hours away from him so I would have to adjust how/where we live if it comes to that and am prepared to do that if we get to that point and I still want to be there.