Employers see you as a means to an end. All of the "family" and "work life balance" talk is complete BS. If you log into Linkedin right now, your feed might be loaded with really bad stories about working long hours (unpaid/salary), being mistreated, being interview-ghosted, being asked to relocated and then fired, and so on.
The employee had all of the leverage during c19 but now the shoe is on the other foot.
The game has changed quite dramatically, with the people working in the biggest corporations not feeling the heat yet. That day is coming.
On the day the 5-day work week does start, everything reverts back to pre-2015. Since you will be expected to be sitting at your desk, slipping out to a dentist appointment or leaving :30 minutes early every day to pick your kid up from day care will become a BIG problem. Why? Even if your boss is cool with it, all those people sitting in fear at their desks for 8-9 hours will be resentful. They will talk about you. It will become hostile. When you do get PERMISSION to leave, you will be expected to make up the time.
Things to expect in 2025:
- The 5 day work week, w/WFH being an option only for family emergencies, installs, etc. The loosey-goosey nature of this will be gone.
- Since we have "open seating" and no more cubicles, GM may institute assigned seating so the managers can take attendance. This will really amplify the people who aren't showing up.
- The people not showing up will be fired. Nothing complicated here. Patty-cake games are gone.
- An emphasis on "winning" and "sacrifices". A serious tone overall that expects more from people.
- Calibration firings. No need to elaborate. It's coming early next year.
- A lingering threat. The chill in the air from the calibrations will have a lasting effect. Between the emphasis on being in office, having strict workplace goals and expectations, and having your work productivity measured...things will get stressful.
- Pettiness: A dress code may return and the "you can't park here with anything but a GM car" on designated lots & structures may return.
- The rapid decline of the GM stock price. Gm is failing in China. The government EV subsidies are ending. Portfolio changes are coming. Projects will be canceled. More layoffs and stock buybacks won't be enough to make an impression on stock holders who will drop GM like a rock. The auto industry in general is in trouble GLOBALLY. This will make upper management spiteful.
- Changes in management. As the issues outlined in the last point come to a head, expect a shakeup in groups and managers. Groups will be combined, eliminated, splintered, etc. We may see layers of management become obsolete in the process.