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dalton99a

(96,173 posts)
Mon Jun 22, 2026, 08:30 AM 20 hrs ago

The Real Reason Bosses Want You Back in the Office Full Time (It's Not Productivity) [View all]

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/opinion/office-work-wfh-bosses.html

The Real Reason Bosses Want You Back in the Office Full Time (It’s Not Productivity)

June 22, 2026, 5:00 a.m. ET
By Adam Grant, Marissa Shandell and Courtney Elliott
Dr. Grant, a contributing Opinion writer, is an organizational psychologist at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Ms. Shandell and Ms. Elliott are Ph.D. candidates there.

When the pandemic came to an end, many people who had been working from home assumed they would be allowed to maintain that habit at least a few days a week. But today in the U.S., a third of companies have forced everyone back to the office full time and have banned remote and hybrid work.

Some leaders say they insist on full-time in-person work because it boosts productivity, despite clear evidence that it does not. Others claim it’s about collaboration, creativity or culture. Our new research reveals that the objection to any work from home is more likely to be driven by something else entirely: ego.

Case by case, there may be good reasons for teams to work together in person. As a general rule, though, it turns out that ordering people back to the office full time is a power and status move. It’s a signature strategy of leaders who exhibit narcissistic qualities. They see any kind of remote work as a threat to their authority and admiration. They want to be worshiped at the office altar.

Over the past six years, we’ve studied why some leaders continue to support remote work, while others resist it. We surveyed thousands of executives, middle managers and frontline supervisors on a host of personality traits. When we later asked them about their stances on hybrid and remote work, their answers didn’t correlate with how much they trusted their employees or how much they loved being around people. The only trait that consistently predicted objections to remote work was narcissism — the tendency to be self-centered and entitled. The higher the opinions of themselves leaders expressed, the more they coveted power and status — and the more they favored return-to-office mandates.

That pattern held for chief executives of Fortune 500 companies. Since we couldn’t directly measure the size of their egos, we measured factors that many previous studies have identified as reliable proxies for narcissism: the sizes of their pay packages, their signatures and their photos in their company reports. (No, the chief executives probably aren’t directly overseeing the page layout, but their underlings have to figure out what will and won’t please the boss.) Commanding outsize compensation and projecting an outsize image sends a message right out of Ron Burgundy’s playbook: I’m kind of a big deal. We found that the higher chief executives scored on this index, the more likely they were to seek power and status by becoming chairmen of their own companies and joining the boards of other companies. These were the chief executives who made the most negative statements about remote and hybrid work during the first two years of the pandemic.

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Absolutely bucolic_frolic 20 hrs ago #1
some managers have limited capabilities; desk checks is one of them. dem4decades 20 hrs ago #2
Hey, it's not easy to sit in your office and track worker's bathroom trips Orrex 19 hrs ago #5
Or snag an unfortunate employee just passing by your office YodaMom2 17 hrs ago #25
Sometimes I'm gone to the bathroom so long, the inevitable question arises: True Dough 7 hrs ago #52
I've had managers in corporate settings whose only discernible function was to call meetings and waste everyone's time. sop 20 hrs ago #3
... Wednesdays 15 hrs ago #38
Republicans love home schooling but don't want their workers to work from home?? Yeah, there's a in2herbs 19 hrs ago #4
indoctrinate their offspring. no outside thoughts dave99 18 hrs ago #20
"No outside thoughts" Shipwack 17 hrs ago #28
Yep! Ego. ZDU 19 hrs ago #6
Clearly, There Are Some Jobs... ProfessorGAC 19 hrs ago #7
was this article about you ? dave99 18 hrs ago #22
Huh? ProfessorGAC 17 hrs ago #27
I appreciate this article; its thesis was clear before the pandemic even ended Orrex 19 hrs ago #8
The movie, Office Space, comes to mind. Sequoia 17 hrs ago #32
Definitely! Orrex 14 hrs ago #39
Having a narcissist boss is awful. I got to experience it sadly. Oneironaut 19 hrs ago #9
So many CEOs are sociopaths. My boss was the owner's son and a real SOB. OMGWTF 12 hrs ago #42
"Owners son" - No words are more terrifying. Ugh! Oneironaut 10 hrs ago #44
The most efficient business model is multigraincracker 19 hrs ago #10
Employee owned businesses don't have a CEO? MichMan 18 hrs ago #19
They don't have overpaid CEOs multigraincracker 17 hrs ago #33
Only $3.4 million MichMan 16 hrs ago #34
Does he need an assistant manager at half price? DFW 4 hrs ago #57
In my experience, it was also about trust nuxvomica 19 hrs ago #11
Well, I did have employees who shirked work from home. Easterncedar 8 hrs ago #49
It's all about control. n/t area51 19 hrs ago #12
That, and they have long term leases on Brick and Mortar Bristlecone 19 hrs ago #13
Might be more to it. Business analysts saw that a CRE meltdown could result in a broad financial crisis lostnfound 19 hrs ago #14
Great. Now we have found out that some of our Bosses are like Donald Trump. chouchou 18 hrs ago #15
My kid had, and still has, the option of working from home, but he didn't like it, so he went back to his office at Raftergirl 18 hrs ago #16
Yes, personally I prefer a hybrid schedule TexasBushwhacker 18 hrs ago #21
my condolences on his touch of narcissism dave99 17 hrs ago #29
Well... Raftergirl 15 hrs ago #36
In a different situation, I would have been like your kid RandomNumbers 9 hrs ago #48
Can only speak for myself. In 2012 Joinfortmill 18 hrs ago #17
I have 3 family members working from home Tree Lady 17 hrs ago #26
The Galley master needs people to whip. Old Crank 18 hrs ago #18
Watching people drive in LA traffic to the office Johonny 18 hrs ago #23
It depends on the working environment MichMan 18 hrs ago #24
I sympathize with this 100%... Moostache 17 hrs ago #31
Work from home intelpug 4 hrs ago #56
Ye Gods! Does this fit!!! slightlv 17 hrs ago #30
I disagree with the premise of this genxlib 15 hrs ago #35
Reductive analysis. maxsolomon 15 hrs ago #37
If I remember your profile genxlib 13 hrs ago #40
I worked from home, exclusively since 2002 forthemiddle 12 hrs ago #41
Illustrates the disconnect between the blue collar working class and elites MichMan 11 hrs ago #43
Covid change the work environment LogDog75 10 hrs ago #45
Most mid-level managers add absolutely nothing to organizations. waterwatcher123 9 hrs ago #46
T-rump, narcissist extraordinaire, ordered federal remote workers back to offices. Wicked Blue 9 hrs ago #47
Technology in the 90s made remote work possible. I used to work at home a lot, but still OAITW r.2.0 8 hrs ago #50
Turf. Telework means employees are on their home turf. underpants 7 hrs ago #51
My experience frequently mirrored the scenarios described in the article, BUT Pinback 7 hrs ago #53
Don't forget the real estate incentives. paulkienitz 6 hrs ago #54
They also think you're not actually working Figarosmom 5 hrs ago #55
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