Thread regarding Dell Inc. layoffs

Work-life balance

Is this even a thing anymore? :)

How Companies Are Taking Away Work-Life Balance:

  1. Mandatory RTO Policies – Many companies (like Dell) are forcing employees back into the office, often without a clear business justification. This removes the flexibility that allowed employees to integrate work and life more effectively.
  2. Always-On Culture – With tools like Teams, Slack, and email, employees are expected to be available at all hours, blurring the line between work and personal time.
  3. Increased Workloads – Companies are cutting costs by reducing headcount while increasing expectations for remaining employees.
  4. Surveillance & Micromanagement – More businesses are using tracking software to monitor productivity, leading to pressure for constant output rather than focusing on meaningful results.
  5. Rigid Policies – Instead of outcome-based work, some companies are reverting to time-based performance, requiring employees to be online for specific hours rather than delivering results on their own schedule.
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| 1561 views | | 12 replies (last March 14, 2025) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jpab12t9

12 replies (most recent on top)

Real estate grifters don't want corporate real estate to fail. The outdated office model will be shoved on to the workforce to prop up billionaires. Same story different decade. There is no RTO benefit outside of propping up corporate real estate. Investors and banks have too much money invested and happy to be bailed out by the government one way or the other. Either giving away tax payer money directly to billionaires or forcing the private sector back into a 1980s office environment.

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Post ID: @bh+1jpab12t9

Any company that talks about it isn't doing it nor has intentions of truly supporting it - Lip service only.

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Post ID: @b3+1jpab12t9

"OMG….imaging having to actually work a full 8 hours!!!"

Sounds like a vacation to me.

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Post ID: @ap+1jpab12t9

At 5:00 pm the phone is off, computer shutdown.
If I’m on a customer call it gets turned over to the next shift

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Post ID: @aj+1jpab12t9

Anyone suspect leaders coming on here making posts about the pro office work etc. Or making the “entitled” comments?

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Post ID: @af+1jpab12t9

nope, just democrats whining.

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Post ID: @ae+1jpab12t9

I wonder how this going down in countries with strong work councils.

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Post ID: @ab+1jpab12t9

@a1+1jpab12t9

I completely agree with you that nobody is entitled to a job, and companies have the right to set their policies. But let’s be clear: just as companies have the right to change the terms of employment, employees also have the right to decide whether those terms still work for them.

For someone who has worked remotely for years, delivered exceptional results, and proven their value, this shift isn’t about entitlement - it’s about recognizing what works best for productivity and well-being. The idea that “if you don’t like it, leave” assumes that businesses don’t need to compete for top talent. In reality, the most skilled employees do have options, and many are choosing to walk away from rigid, outdated policies.

If a company wants to retain its best people, it should be asking: Are we creating an environment where high performers want to stay? If the answer is no, they’ll lose top talent to companies that embrace flexibility and trust their employees to deliver results - regardless of where they work.

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Post ID: @a4+1jpab12t9

@a1+1jpab12t9

Blah blah blah boring

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Post ID: @a3+1jpab12t9

8 hours mandatory is next on the docket, get use to disappointment folks.

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Post ID: @a2+1jpab12t9

You have the option to quit. Nobody is “entitled” to a job. If you don’t like the terms of the job, then leave

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Post ID: @a1+1jpab12t9

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