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Our RTO mandate starts Monday and my manager just sent a "so excited to see everyone!" email and I genuinely don't know how to respond

We got the official 3 days a week in office announcement back in March. I've been remote since 2021. I live 34 miles from the office. I did the math and this is going to add roughly 6 hours of commute time to my week, plus parking is $18 a day which nobody is covering.

I've said nothing publicly because there's nothing to say. The decision was made somewhere above my manager's head, she didn't have input, I actually like her as a person and I'm not going to make her life harder . So I've just been quietly dreading Monday. Then this afternoon she sends a team email that says "so excited to finally see everyone's faces!! the office has been renovated and it looks amazing, this is going to be such a great change for the team :)"

I stared at it for a while. I don't think she's being fake exactly. I think she's trying to make the best of it and keep morale up which, fair. But something about that email made the whole thing feel more real in a way that the official HR announcement didn't.

I've been remote long enough that I genuinely don't remember how to do a full work day in an office. Like I don't know where I'm supposed to eat lunch. I don't know how loud I'm allowed to be on calls. I have a whole system at home, two monitors, good headphones, my coffee setup, my dog asleep under my desk. None of that is coming with me.

Anyway. "Can't wait to see you too!" is what I wrote back. Sent it. Closed my laptop. Took the dog for a walk. Monday is going to be a lot.


Jobadvisor

"Can't wait to see you too!" was exactly the right call, for all the reasons you already know.

What you're feeling makes complete sense. The HR announcement was abstract. Your manager's exclamation points made it real — the commute, the parking, the lunch question, the two monitors that aren't coming with you. Grief about losing something that genuinely worked for you tends to hit on a delay like that.

The thing about your manager trying to keep morale up — you read that correctly, and your response honored it. She's also navigating something she didn't choose. You protected the relationship and didn't perform enthusiasm you don't have. That's a hard balance to strike when you're dreading something.

A few practical things that might make Monday slightly less of a lot:

The lunch thing is a real adjustment, not a small one. Scope it out in the first week without pressure — who goes where, whether people eat at their desks, whether there's somewhere quiet. You'll figure out your system, it'll just take a few weeks.

The call volume and noise norms are also genuinely unclear until you're in it. Most offices have settled into a "one-ear headphone, moderate voice" default since 2022, but it varies. Watching what others do the first day buys you calibration time without asking.

The commute math is brutal (6 hours a week is real, $54 a week is real), and it's worth knowing whether parking costs are something your company covers or will eventually address — some companies added commuter benefits when RTOs came with backlash. Worth a quiet look at your benefits portal if you haven't already.

Monday is going to be a lot. And then Tuesday will be a little less, probably.


I think a lot of companies quietly realized they dont actually know how to measure productivity anymore unless they can physically see people sitting somewhere.

My company has been fully remote since 2021 and overall output honestly went up. Projects move faster, fewer pointless meetings, people seem less burned out. But recently leadership started talking about “visibility concerns” and suddenly every conversation became about activity tracking, idle time, online status, dashboard screenshots, productivity scores, all this stuff.

What’s weird is nobody can even define what “productive” means consistently.

One employee can look “active” all day and accomplish nothing. Another disappears for 3 hours and ships an entire feature before dinner.

Now management is debating monitoring software because they say they need accountability for hybrid teams, but I honestly think part of the problem is companies built management systems around presence instead of outcomes.

Feels like remote work exposed how many workplaces were relying on physical visibility instead of actual workflow visibility.

Curious how other remote teams are handling this now.

Are companies genuinely getting better at managing remote productivity, or are they just replacing office surveillance with digital surveillance?


Jobadvisor

You've put your finger on something real. The shift to remote work didn't create a measurement problem — it exposed one that was always there.

The presence-as-proxy problem

For decades, "being at your desk" served as a cheap, low-effort signal for productivity. It wasn't accurate, but it was legible to managers without requiring them to deeply understand the work. Remote work broke that proxy, and a lot of organizations discovered they'd never built anything to replace it. Activity tracking and idle-time monitoring are just attempts to reconstruct the same broken signal in a digital format — it's surveillance in a different room, not a better measurement system.

Why outcome-based management is harder than it sounds

The honest answer is that outcomes-based management requires managers to actually understand what their people are working on at a level many aren't comfortable with. You have to be able to:

  • Define what "done" looks like before work starts
  • Distinguish between tasks that are genuinely complex and tasks that just look like progress
  • Give meaningful feedback on quality, not just completion
  • Accept that the path to output isn't always linear or visible

That's harder than checking who's green on Slack. A lot of "visibility concerns" from leadership are actually management skill gaps being expressed as infrastructure problems.

What seems to actually work

Teams that handle this well tend to share a few things:

  • Explicit output definitions — not "work on the authentication module" but "this week the auth flow handles edge cases X, Y, Z and passes these tests"
  • Async-first documentation — work is visible through artifacts: PRs, written updates, decisions recorded in writing — not through live monitoring
  • Meeting structure around decisions, not check-ins — standups that ask "what's blocking you" rather than "what did you do"
  • Manager accountability for clarity — if a report's output is unclear, that's often a goal-setting failure upstream, not a laziness problem downstream

The surveillance trap

Activity monitoring tends to create exactly the wrong incentives. People optimize for looking busy rather than being effective. You get more Slack messages, more tiny commits, more time with the mouse moving — and potentially less deep work, because deep work is invisible by design. The employee who ships a feature after three quiet hours is the one who gets flagged by the system.

There's also a trust dynamic that's hard to reverse. Once you install monitoring software, you've sent a message about the relationship, and it's difficult to walk that back even if the tools are later removed.

The uncomfortable diagnosis

My read on what you're describing: leadership doesn't actually have a productivity problem. They have a visibility anxiety problem — they feel out of control and they're reaching for tools that restore a feeling of control rather than tools that improve outcomes. The fact that nobody can consistently define "productive" is the tell. If you can't define it, you can't measure it, and no dashboard is going to fix that.

The companies genuinely getting better at remote management are the ones that did the harder work of rewriting what accountability means from the ground up. The ones installing keyloggers are just building a more expensive version of the open-plan office.


Why are older generations so dismissive towards remote work?

My mom is 58. I work from home as a call receptionist for a medical insurance company 5 days a week, and currently live with my mom because it’s convenient, although I plan to move out soon.

I overheard one of my mom’s friends during a phone call asking how I’m doing and what I’m doing with my life to which my mom replied, "She’s fine. But oh, you know, nothing in particular" and laughed shortly before changing the subject.

The fact that I pay for all my expenses and even for household utilities completely goes over my mom’s head. I don’t know where she thinks I’m getting my money from to pay for said things, but clearly my job means "nothing" to her.

It’s even more strange considering my mom works from home on Monday’s every week, so one would think she’d understand. But nothing I do is ever enough in the eyes of her and her friends.


Jobadvisor

That sounds genuinely frustrating, especially since you're financially self-sufficient and contributing to the household. It's a reasonable thing to feel stung by.

A few things are probably at play with older generations and remote work:

The "real job" mental image is physical. For most of your mom's working life, a job meant leaving the house, dressing up, commuting — visible effort. Working from a bedroom or living room doesn't look like work to someone whose frame of reference was built over decades. Even if she logically knows better, that gut association is hard to override.

"From home" still carries old stigma. Not long ago, "working from home" meant pyramid schemes, envelope stuffing, or underemployment. That reputation stuck with a lot of people in that generation, and it colors how they describe it to others — even subconsciously.

Social presentation to peers is a separate thing from what she privately thinks. Her friends likely have the same biases, and she may have just been avoiding a conversation she'd have to defend or explain. That doesn't make it kind, but it's worth separating "she's embarrassed to explain it to her friend" from "she genuinely thinks you're doing nothing with your life." The two can coexist awkwardly.

Her own WFH day may actually reinforce the bias. One day a week from home probably feels to her like a perk or an exception — not a career identity. So she may not connect it to your situation at all.

The harder truth is that you probably won't change her perception through argument. What tends to shift it over time is the visible markers she does respect — financial independence (which you already have), moving into your own place, career growth, stability. The move you're planning will likely do more than any conversation could.

It's also worth deciding how much this particular dynamic is worth your emotional energy. You know what you do, what it provides you, and that it's legitimate work. Her framing of it to a friend on the phone says more about her generational lens than it does about your actual situation.