Company on TikTok got ROASTED for posting this incredibly cringe and honestly infuriating TikTok about how there’s two people working in office during Thanksgiving in the USA, and it’s just the two of them, no one else is there, but they still have to come to the office. They thought they were really doing something here and going to make people laugh. But they are so out of touch with reality. Almost every other company I’ve heard of let’s people work from home during this time, but not these truly soulless corporate shills, of course. And they had the audacity to say that they enjoy working in the office, and it’s not even a good office with cubicles, mind you. It’s one of the open concept ones where there’s no privacy and you have to hear everyone fully…

  • Mandy@sh.itjust.works
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    4 hours ago

    The moment I ever work in an open office is the moment I jump out the window on my first day like I’m a Chinese factory slave

  • MTK@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I might get roasted for this, but as a person who likes to work from home, I did exactly this with a friend on some holidays that both of us didn’t feel the need to take PTO on (we did get to take this PTO later) and it was a blast, having a huge office just for us was really fun.

    But I understand that I’m in a privileged position to make this choice and that it changes the context.

    • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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      4 hours ago

      I think this video gets flak, because (in your scenario) not you and your coworker made a video about having fun, but your boss made you come to the otherwise empty office to act like you’re having fun and use that as advertisement.

    • DillyDaily@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      People’s work preferences are their own, these guys are having fun, good for them.

      I always maintained I can’t work from home, I was forced to teach via zoom during lock downs and even now my job is hybrid, I teach in person in a shared classroom but I don’t have an office, I do all my prep and notes from home. Only I don’t. My productivity genuinely dropped when I lost my office.

      Then I house sat for a friend who had a home office and I realised I can work from home, just not my home, because it’s not set up for work and my head space in my home can’t flip to that “productive mode”.

      So now I go to the local library, which is better than my house but still not as good as an office because it’s still distracting.

      But it depends on the type of work, I prefer lesson planning alone in quiet peace, I get so much done, but when we’re developing community events I love being in our open staff room with laptops out, some of us sitting on the floor, others standing and just shooting ideas around, we always get so much done.

      But I’ve worked in other centres where that level of collaboration and communication wasn’t there - we didn’t have the right mix of personality types, and a workplace like my current staffroom would be chaos and nothing would get done.

  • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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    3 hours ago

    I really don’t mind the open office. It’s a good excuse not to work hard /s

  • grysbok@lemmy.sdf.org
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    5 hours ago

    I did like working in an open office back in a previous career. I did QA and was integrated with a team of devs. It was lovely to turn to the person whose code I was testing and ask for clarification on a behavior. There really was a lot of teamwork facilitated by the lack of privacy.

    The office had small rooms with doors where you could make phone calls without distracting everyone.

  • taiyang@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Let’s be real, though, it really is bliss when there’s no one else around. Hell is other people, after all!

    When I had mandatory in person office work, almost my entire team took time off, including the boss, leaving me and my mostly automated data job alone. I brought my steam deck on those days. It was bliss.

  • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    it’s hilarious how the idea of open concept office is “to encourage cooperation and stuff” when in reality all that happens is that it drives people to get noise cancelling headphones so they don’t hear Garry chewing gum as noisily as humanly possible, or all the “hmmmm Mmmhhmmhhh” sounds he makes while eating lunch at his desk. (Seriously, Garry, you’re not making love to it.)

    Or Chatty Kathy on the phone gossiping about this or that.

    People are weird. the world was a better place when we didn’t realize how weird.

  • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    You do know some jobs can’t be done remote right?

    It’s possible the two people are the two with jobs that require some potential in person intervention (IT being the main case)

    If something physically fails, you can’t exactly fix that remotely.

    The fact only 2 people remained says to me they prolly had that sort of job, or, some people genuinely prefer working in the office.

    Sounds crazy but some people don’t have a comfortable set up at home and find it easier to focus in the office. I’ve had data where construction was right outside my window at home so yeah, I went into work to have some quiet.

    Most of the time I prefer WFH, for sure.

    But to pretend that literally everyone can always wfh, and always wants to, is silly and you’ve gone too far off the other end.

    And the statement at the top implies the two people chose not to take PTO anyways. Maybe they wanted to save their PTO for christmas/new years.

    Stop being so judgy lol

    • AmidFuror@fedia.io
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      11 hours ago

      This. You might be an engineer or scientist who works part of their time in the office part of the building and part time in a workshop or lab.

      Chill out about what other people are doing with their lives.

      • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        Resibrands is basically franchises for painters and home improvement folks. These are not engineers or scientists.

    • Zorque@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Would the people who have to deal with hardware not be… where the hardware is? They seem to be sitting in random places.

      Seems pretty obvious it’s marketing, not reality, though.

      • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        For IT or something, if you have an outage because a piece of hardware failed, then you need to look at your network redundancy. single points of failure like that shouldn’t exist- and it’s been that way for decades if not longer.

        if IT is in on a holiday, it’s more likely either that their company wants on site coverage because “reasons”… or it’s patch day.

      • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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        11 hours ago

        The hardware is probably in a climate controlled room beside them. And they’re at the desks monitoring things in a quieter and less restrictive space.

    • BlueLineBae
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      11 hours ago

      I didn’t interpret this as it’s bad to make people come to the office that physically need to be there or that it’s judging them for not taking PTO. I interpreted this as a cringe showboat where they try to show how cool it is to be in the office and everyone should love being in the office. The commentnand response at the bottom about the open floorplan say it all.

  • DaddleDew@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    I work in an office cubicle. I am constantly interrupted by coworkers asking for stuff or wanting to take about non-work related things. Or I am distracted by other co-workers who are having loud conversations within 2 meters of me.

    I am probably 5x more productive at home than in this environment.

  • m_f
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    9 hours ago

    The company:

    Nooo! We love our open concept office! ☺️

    Nobody asked you. Let’s see what your employees think of it

      • m_f
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        11 hours ago

        Edited my comment to be more clear. I’m quoting what the company says in the screenshot to defend themselves. Nobody asked the company what they think of the open office plan, if you really cared you’d ask the employees that have to put up with it.

  • Fizz@lemmy.nz
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    9 hours ago

    I worked over the holidays and I enjoyed it. It was chill and I got paid to do basically no work. I could have taken it as a holiday but chose not to.

    I don’t get why people have such an entitlement over what they’re doing during paid hours. If I’m paid a good amount idc what I’m doing or where I’m doing it.

    • DuckWrangler9000@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 hours ago

      Rush hour traffic in big cities is like 1.5 hours each way. 3 hours of your life gone to hang out in an empty office.

      • GluWu@lemm.ee
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        7 hours ago

        Where I’ll watch 10 hours of YouTube and get paid enough to afford several days of… “pleasure”.