AppleMagazine

SILICON VALLEY FINDS REMOTE WORK IS EASIER TO BEGIN THAN END

Technology companies that led the charge into remote work as the pandemic unfurled are confronting a new challenge: how, when and even whether they should bring long-isolated employees back to offices that have been designed for teamwork.

“I thought this period of remote work would be the most challenging year-and-half of my career, but it’s not,”said Brent Hyder, the chief people officer for business software maker Salesforce and its roughly 65,000 employees worldwide.“Getting everything started back up the way it needs to be is proving to be even more difficult.”

That transition has been complicated by the rapid spread of the delta variant, which has scrambled the plans many tech companies had for bringing back most of their

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine1 min read
Applemagazine
SUBSCRIPTIONS AppleMagazine iOS App & Website applemagazine.com Zinio LLC.zinio.com Readly Newsstandreadly.com Magzter Newsstandmagzter.com Flipster/EBSCOebsco.com PressReaderpressreader.com Recorded Booksrecordedbooks.com OverDriveoverdrive.com Borr
AppleMagazine6 min read
The Summer After Barbenheimer And The Strikes, Hollywood Charts A New Course
“Barbenheimer” is a hard act to follow. But as Hollywood enters another summer movie season, armed with fewer superheroes and a landscape vastly altered by the strikes, it’s worth remembering the classic William Goldman quote about what works: “Nobod
AppleMagazine4 min readWorld
The Tiktok Law Kicks Off A New Showdown Between Beijing And Washington. What’s Coming Next?
TikTok is gearing up for a legal fight against a U.S. law that would force the social media platform to break ties with its China-based parent company, a move almost certainly backed by Chinese authorities as the bitter U.S.-China rivalry threatens t

Related Books & Audiobooks