Thread regarding Fidelity Investments layoffs

Must be nice to just be able to "Just Quit" to all those posting "Just Quit"

For all the people posting "just quit," I'm assuming you either have wealthy parents, a wealthy spouse, a trust fund, or simply don't understand that most American households rely on two incomes to keep the lights on.

The idea that people can "just quit" comes from a place of privilege. Many people can't simply walk away from a paycheck. They can't magically afford a maid, laundry service, extra childcare, or elder care to make RTO more manageable, or months of reduced income or no income on unemployment while they search for something new. And let's be honest—the job market isn't exactly making that decision easier right now.

What makes this especially frustrating is that many of us chose these roles over the last few years because they were advertised as remote or hybrid—not because we were specifically committed to one company. Changing the rules after people have built their lives around those expectations feels like a bait-and-switch.

So when people say, "just quit," what they're really saying is, "just absorb the financial risk and disruption to your life." That's easy advice to give when you have a safety net. Not everyone does.

The result isn't that people leave. The result is that you end up with a lot of frustrated, disengaged employees who feel stuck because they can't simply walk away.

And yes, it's hard not to notice that many of the people making these decisions have financial security and flexibility that most workers don't. It's a lot easier to tell someone else to take a risk when you're insulated from the consequences yourself.

Not to mention that the office setup, hot-desking, and commutes are terrible.

Am I getting paid for that commute time? No. Should I be? Probably. We all should be.

And let's not pretend there aren't real quality-of-life impacts. A lot of people use the flexibility of remote work to take a walk, go to the gym, attend a doctor's appointment, pick up a family member, or simply take a break that helps them manage stress and stay productive. When you're spending hours each day commuting to and from an office, that time disappears.

For many people, return-to-office doesn't just mean working from a different location. It means less time for exercise, less time for family, less time for errands, and less time to take care of their mental and physical health—all while doing the exact same work they were already doing successfully from home.


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| 5 views | | 14 replies (last 1 hour ago) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kvdmbk57

14 replies (most recent on top)

@dt I had my own business and actually have a startup AND work full time. If you think starting your own business is “so easy”, go for it. Ive got news for you, it’s WAY EASIER working for someone and getting a paycheck. And I support the OP, they are correct, Fidelity had its literal best year last year but they don’t care, RTO bi--hes!

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Post ID: @ek+1kvdmbk57

You’re coping. I have no family or resources but I will always take my chances before allowing what’s happening at Fidelity to happen to me

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Post ID: @ef+1kvdmbk57

Well by “just quit” I think they mean get a job elsewhere. Not just quit and do nothing. You took it quite literally.
Trade the time spent posting here with looking for a new job.

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Post ID: @dw+1kvdmbk57

start your own company, make your own rules.

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Post ID: @dt+1kvdmbk57

OP- agree with your points but this is the reality of the corporate world. My father told me when I first entered the working world that he who holds the gold calls the shots. Let's face it most people are working a job they are not happy in but trudge thru for the paycheck. If you're fortunate enough to save enough eventually you buy your freedom and are no longer a slave as I post this on Juneteenth. In the meantime while not having financial freedom you have to eat you know what, whether that is RTO, culture change or the responsibilities and requirements of the job changing from what you originally accepted. The only thing you can do is keep working and looking for a more suitable opportunity with a different company.
So when you hear people saying just quick that is just a blanket statement, it would be like telling everyone to be 100% equities. The people that are quitting most likely have a plan- they landed a new role or have accumulated enough for financial freedom to tell Fidelity to go you know where. I can tell you that companies never make things better or easier on employees it's always this greedy more, more, more burn the staff out until the turnover ratios start showing up in the bottom line.
RTO su-ks period... & everyone knows but until you hold the gold

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Post ID: @dp+1kvdmbk57

@OP I can appreciate some of your points - especially for folks who were hired as remote or hybrid and now were told they have to go to the office - I've been in positions at Fidelity and other companies where the rules of the game were changed in many ways. Eliminating traditional pensions, cutting back on other benefit offerings, reorgs where your job title or responsibilities have change or you're forced into taking a role you are not interested in to stay employed. RTO is another flavor of this unfortunate list. Unless you're self employed, or are in a bargained for (union represented)position - it's reality. No amount of complaining will change it - it's unfair but lots of things in life are. Best to keep networking contacts fresh and current, save for a rainy day in case you've had enough or are rif'd , and be mindful that any situation can change because it's out of your hands

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Post ID: @c0+1kvdmbk57

@aa

Fetch me my severance package, errand boy, and I'll be gone like a lightning bolt.

If you are too incompetent to deliver, find a way to live with it 'cause it ain't changing any time soon.

Have a nice day 😘

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Post ID: @av+1kvdmbk57

@a1

I'll do as I please and it won't be any of the limited options that your simplistic worldview allows.

So sorry if that makes you all cranky. Maybe you can lick an extra boot tomorrow to soothe your sensitive emotions.

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Post ID: @at+1kvdmbk57

@OP

It's a bad-faith response. They don't expect you to quit. It's an attempt to marginalize concerns and limit further discourse.

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Post ID: @as+1kvdmbk57

@af that makes two of us

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Post ID: @ah+1kvdmbk57

@aa maybe you should get back to work because you are the entitled one who is stealing company time to comment on this website.

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Post ID: @af+1kvdmbk57

why are there so many foreigners who hate Americans in my country

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Post ID: @ab+1kvdmbk57

Maybe the “boomer” entitled troll that keeps calling everyone whiners should take his/her own advice and get back to work and be more productive.

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Post ID: @a4+1kvdmbk57

You'll be much happier if you spent time working and using that energy to do something productive than making a long frustrating post here which no one will ever know or care about.

You can either be grateful to have a job, which by contract is "at will" considering the market or just keep thinking about RTO.

Yes, things aren't fair sometimes. Doesn't mean you cry out on an anonymous site. If you're so concerned and worried I dare you to bring this during AAM calls, see where that lands you.

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Post ID: @a1+1kvdmbk57

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