Totally understand the frustration. Many of us are feeling the same way gaslit by leadership, ignored on RTO flexibility, and dismissed when we raise legitimate concerns on Tell Dell or in 1:1s. It’s exhausting watching tone-deaf leadership push narratives that don’t reflect the day-to-day reality most of us live in.
That said, organizing a walkout or mass protest (even a coordinated “work from home” day) has to be approached very carefully. Dell will retaliate if they see it as insubordination, and there’s little protection in Texas for that kind of action. If we want to push for real change without risking our jobs, we need smarter moves.
Some ideas:
• Coordinate anonymous testimonials from current employees and publish them on a central platform (Reddit, Medium, or even external slack channels if brave enough).
• Pressure media outlets to cover Dell’s RTO rigidity, tone-deaf leadership, and declining morale especially those who cover tech culture (Business Insider, The Verge, etc.).
• Band together with a unified message on Tell Dell and public review platforms like Glassdoor numbers make it harder to ignore.
• Consider filing group ethics or HR complaints. One person can be brushed off. Dozens create a paper trail.
• Start private slack or Discord communities to plan, share info, and protect each other.
Change won’t come from hoping leadership has a change of heart. But it can come from organized, relentless pressure with safety and strategy.
Dell’s biggest fear isn’t a walkout. It’s losing control of the narrative.