The CEO of Dropbox has a 90/10 rule for remote work (www.businessinsider.com)
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 20:00
https://lemmy.world/post/6897959

The CEO of Dropbox has a 90/10 rule for remote work::“If you trust people and treat them like adults, they’ll behave like adults,” Dropbox CEO Drew Houston told Fortune.

#technology

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autotldr@lemmings.world on 16 Oct 2023 20:00 next collapse

This is the best summary I could come up with:


Drew Houston, the CEO of the file-storage company Dropbox, is continuing to tout a predominantly remote work culture, even as business leaders increasingly call for their workers to return to the office.

The San Francisco-based company — which had more than 3,000 employees before a round of layoffs — doesn’t require its workers to be present in the office.

They’re not resources to control,'" Houston told Fortune when asked about what message he had for CEOs who believed in return-to-office mandates.

Dimon — whose company requested some employees to be in the office five days a week and was tracking attendance by monitoring ID swipes — told the Economist in July: "I completely understand why someone doesn’t want to commute an hour and a half every day, totally got it.

“Obviously the company wants to spin it really positively,” a former employee who left in 2021 told Insider, adding that virtual-first meant fewer options for people who enjoyed going into the office.

Dropbox and Houston did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Insider, sent outside regular business hours.


The original article contains 382 words, the summary contains 179 words. Saved 53%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

Lifecoach5000@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 20:13 collapse

I feel like this bot should include the full quote when it sees quatation marks. Here’s the full quote from Dimon(JP Morgan)

Dimon — whose company requested some employees to be in the office five days a week and was tracking attendance by monitoring ID swipes — told the Economist in July: “I completely understand why someone doesn’t want to commute an hour and a half every day, totally got it. Doesn’t mean they have to have a job here either.”

Rascabin@lemmy.ml on 16 Oct 2023 21:23 collapse

Seriously. That last bit totally changed what he really meant.

Staple_Diet@aussie.zone on 16 Oct 2023 22:42 collapse

These summary bots are pretty shit. I find they leave out heaps of context and just make me click on the article.

Aidinthel@reddthat.com on 16 Oct 2023 20:01 next collapse

I guess it makes sense that Dropbox in particular would be cool about this.

JasSmith@sh.itjust.works on 16 Oct 2023 20:58 next collapse

Good to see them walk the talk. Zoom, on the other hand, has an identity crisis it needs to reconcile. It’s hard to convince companies they can rely on remote work with video conferencing software if Zoom won’t do it themselves.

david@feddit.uk on 16 Oct 2023 23:18 collapse

Idiots.

jdaxe@infosec.pub on 16 Oct 2023 22:22 collapse

But apparently zoom isn’t? Lol

neptune@dmv.social on 16 Oct 2023 20:01 next collapse

This means 90% of the year is spent on remote work, and the remaining 10% is dedicated to employee off-site events.

What does that mean? Five weeks of retreat a year? Who pays for that?

bsrz@lemmy.ca on 16 Oct 2023 20:16 next collapse

I wouldn’t take the 90/10 literally. It probably is closer to 1 week per quarter at an offsite event.

AtmaJnana@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 20:35 next collapse

which is not that uncommon at a tech company.

dojan@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 20:43 next collapse

Eugh. Makes me so glad I’m working at a professional company and not one of those tech bro firms. We have an annual conference you can attend either in person or remotely, and it spans like two days. Doing some random corporate BS four weeks of the year just so your CEO can pretend to be some sort of popstar sounds abysmal to me.

foggy@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 20:48 next collapse

Y’all hiring?

I work in the public sector and my management is walking back on remote work now.

Wanna line something up and quit.

dojan@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 20:50 collapse

We are actually, if you’re in Sweden.

demonsword@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 23:39 collapse

We are actually, if you’re in Sweden.

this is quite funny considering we’re discussing remote work… why should your location matters in this case?

buzziebee@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 23:46 next collapse

Employees usually have to be a tax resident in the country they are working for in Europe. Depending on the country you can go as a contractor. That can also be tricky as some countries have rules against freelance contractors only working for one client - to get around companies having employees but not registering them as employees and giving them full employment rights and benefits.

dojan@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 2023 06:34 collapse

Poorly worded by me, location doesn’t matter much, but language does. We work a lot with clients that operate in Swedish, and most of our internal communication is in Swedish as well.

Location matters a little in the sense that we still have working hours. These are somewhat flexible depending on which contract you’re working on though. But if you’re far enough away you might en up working nights or something like that.

That might also make you less likely to get the job due to extra compensation for work during nights etc.

I dunno, I’m just a developer.

yyyesss@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 22:22 next collapse

i totally agree with the sentiment. my last job was a “tech bro firm”. that entire attitude and working environment is stacked in favor of extroverts. as an introvert, that shit is extremely difficult and frustrating.

Steeve@lemmy.ca on 16 Oct 2023 23:40 collapse

Dropbox isn’t some tech bro startup anymore…

neptune@dmv.social on 16 Oct 2023 20:57 collapse

That’s still a lot. Four weeks a year?

darkmarx@lemmy.world on 16 Oct 2023 21:54 collapse

A quarter has 13 weeks, so if you do 2 week sprints and align them to start with a quarter, there is 1 week per quarter that is not accounted for. That week can be used for stuff outside of daily activities. It can be used for training, offsites, working on a pet project, etc. Its a good way to build time in the schedule for this type of thing. These types of breaks have tremendous long term value.

[deleted] on 16 Oct 2023 22:01 next collapse

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krayj@sh.itjust.works on 16 Oct 2023 23:19 next collapse

I have a designated-remote job, but I’m also in a role that’s periodically customer-facing. For accounting purposes, the time I spend working from home in my home office is considered ‘remote’ and my time on-site at customer premises is considered an off-site event. Not sure how they do it at Dropbox, but that gives you an idea of how the time categorization goes.

[deleted] on 17 Oct 2023 01:32 collapse

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scarabic@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 2023 05:24 collapse

An offsite event doesn’t have to be expensive. Some are travel and hotel junkets but others are just meetings at some location that isn’t the office - it might even be the office of another company that lends you some space for a day or two. I’ve seen companies trade this favor back and forth. The only real requirement is that you get out of the ordinary space and routine of work so you can focus completely on the people you are with and what you’re talking about.

LainOfTheWired@lemy.lol on 17 Oct 2023 00:08 next collapse

Why do people care so much what these CEOs think. Like outside of how they might change the laws to do with their industry they are in, why do people care so much about and hang on everything they say and do, doesn’t innovation come from thinking differently and not just doing it because a successful CEO said so. Take games for example has a random Minecraft, flappy bird, or among us clone ever been as successful as the original. Honesty it just brothers me. Especially the Elon Musk worshippers.

hayes_@sh.itjust.works on 17 Oct 2023 00:36 next collapse

Might have to block this bot if it posts puff piece CEO bullshit under the guise of “technology.”

Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 2023 01:01 collapse

Honestly you can probably block businessInsider as a whole.

The site really went to shit a few years ago

jagoan@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 2023 04:47 collapse

We can do that on Lemmy? How?

Live2day@lemmy.sdf.org on 17 Oct 2023 13:23 collapse

At least on sync you can. It’s under filters.

TacoButtPlug@sh.itjust.works on 11 Dec 2023 20:00 collapse

Are they hiring? Heh.