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Return-to-Office Mandates Aren't Working.
Author: Callum Gracie, Founder, Otto Media
Amazon did it. JPMorgan did it. The U.S. federal government did it. In 2024 and 2025, some of the biggest employers on the planet told their workers to get back to the office, five days a week, no exceptions.
Sounds decisive. Sounds like the remote work experiment is over.
Except it's not. Not even close.
Here's what the headlines won't tell you. While CEOs were making bold announcements about getting everyone back to their desks, the actual numbers were moving in the opposite direction.
U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics data shows telework rose from 17.9% in October 2022 to 23.7% in February 2025. That's not a typo. Remote work went up during the biggest wave of return-to-office mandates in corporate history.
How? Because for every Amazon forcing 350,000 people back, there are thousands of mid-size companies quietly keeping flexible arrangements in place. They're not making press releases about it. They're just hiring the talent that themandatede companies are pushing out the door.
And the workerthat s those big companies are losing? They're not happy about it. A Blind survey found 91% of Amazon employees were dissatisfied with the five-day mandate. BambooHR data revealed something even more telling. Roughly 25% of executives admitted they hoped the mandates would trigger voluntary resignations. In other words, some companies are using RTO as a backdoor layoff strategy.
The companies going the other way are winning.
While the mandate crowd doubles down on butts-in-seats, a different group of companies has been running the opposite experiment. And the results are hard to argue with.
Spotify kept its "Work From Anywhere" policy and saw attrition drop by half. Time-to-hire shrank by six days. Airbnb employees live and work from anywhere, and 20% relocated. CEO Brian Chesky called the output "superior.NVIDIA, one of the most valuable companies on the planet, continues with indefinite flexible work.
These aren't fringe startups. These are billion-dollar companies choosing flexibility because it works for their bottom line.
A joint analysis by Scoop and BCG looked at over 8,000 companies and found that fully flexible firms grew revenue 1.3 times faster than mandate-driven firms between 2019 and 2024. That's a meaningful gap. And while the researchers note correlation isn't causation, it lines up with what Stanford economist Nick Bloom has been saying for years. Hybrid work reduces recruitment and retention costs without hurting productivity, making it simply more profitable for most firms.
The best research backs this up.
Speaking of Bloom, his 2024 randomised controlled trial with 1,600 workers at Trip.com is the gold standard on this topic. Published in Nature, it found that hybrid workers (two days from home per week) showed zero negative effect on productivity, performance reviews, or promotion rates. What did change? Resignations dropped by a third.
The managers in that study are the interesting part. Before the experiment, many predicted remote work would hurt output. After seeing the data, they changed their minds. The gap between what people assume about remote work and what the evidence shows is still massive.
Meanwhile, a University of Pittsburgh study of S&P 500 companies found that RTO mandates hurt employee satisfaction without improving firm performance. No productivity boost. No financial improvement. Just unhappier workers.
So why are companies still doing it?
If the data is this clear, why do RTO mandates keep happening?
A few reasons. Some executives genuinely believe collaboration requires physical proximity. That's a fair instinct, but the research suggests it's more about how you structure collaboration than where it happens. Others are staring at expensive long-term office leases and feeling pressure to justify the cost. U.S. office vacancy hit a record 19.7% in March 2025, and nobody wants to admit their real estate strategy is a sunk cost.
And then there's the control factor. Managing remote teams requires different skills. You can't walk the floor and see who's at their desk. You need clear goals, documented processes, and trust. Not every manager has made that transition. For some, getting everyone back in the office is easier than learning how to manage outcomes instead of attendance.
Where this lands
The numbers tell a pretty simple story. Hybrid work has settled at roughly 25% of all paid workdays globally, about five times the pre-pandemic level. High-profile mandates grab attention but haven't reversed the trend. The companies offering flexibility are growing faster, hiring easier, and keeping their people longer.
Remote work isn't going anywhere. The only real question is whether your organisation is building around that reality or fighting against it.
Credits: Callum Gracie
Founder, Otto Media
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