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Apple is tracking the attendance of its employees at offices using badge records in order to ensure they are coming in at least three times a week, according to Platformer's Zoë Schiffer.

apple-park-at-night-1.jpg

Since April 2022, Apple employees have been operating on a hybrid home/office work policy as part of a gradual return strategy following the pandemic, with staff required to work from the office at least three days per week.

Employees are required to be in the office on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays, with most able to work remotely on Wednesdays and Fridays. However, it appears that Apple is doubling down on this strategy as it looks for ways across the company to cut costs.

In a post on Twitter, Schiffer said that Apple is now actively tracking in-person attendance using badge records and will give employees "escalating warnings" if they don't come in the required three times per week.

According to Schiffer, some Apple offices have even warned staff that failure to comply could result in job termination, although that "doesn't appear to be a company-wide policy."

The development follows a recent report by Bloomberg's Mark Gurman in which he outlined several cost-cutting measures being newly enacted by Apple, including managers becoming "as strict as ever" about office attendance, with some staff believing it to be a harbinger of Apple firing employees who don't meet the requirement.

In this regard, Gurman has also reported an overlap in retail stores, with Apple taking a closer look at work attendance and hours, and the company ditching its "special sick time" for time missed due to Covid, asking staff to use their normal sick time instead.

According to the report, Apple isn't always filling positions when employees leave, suggesting the crackdown on staff who do not fulfill the in-person work requirements is at least in part one aspect of its wider strategy to cut costs while avoiding the sort of mass layoffs that have recently befallen other tech giants, including Meta, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon.

Article Link: Apple 'Tracking Employee Attendance' in Crackdown on Remote Working
 
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wanha

macrumors 65816
Oct 30, 2020
1,482
4,354
Not saying Apple is wrong to do this (after all, their corporate culture relies largely on in-person collaboration), but it's always problematic to force people into something they don't want to do. It creates resistance and resentment that corrode culture from within.

I do wonder if paying a bonus for employees who show up at the office would have had a more desirable effect on overall morale...
 

Krizoitz

macrumors 68000
Apr 26, 2003
1,743
2,093
Tokyo, Japan
Not saying Apple is wrong to do this (after all, their corporate culture relies largely on in-person collaboration), but it's always problematic to force people into something they don't want to do. It creates resistance and resentment that corrode culture from within.

I do wonder if paying a bonus for employees who show up at the office would have had a more desirable effect on overall morale...
I mean very few people WANT to work. We do it because we need to in order to make money. Seems pretty reasonable for a company to require it’s employees to you know show up. This was the norm pre pandemic across industries. Apple isn’t doing anything outside the ordinary here don’t see why it’s news.
 

nwcs

macrumors 68030
Sep 21, 2009
2,722
5,262
Tennessee
Not saying Apple is wrong to do this (after all, their corporate culture relies largely on in-person collaboration), but it's always problematic to force people into something they don't want to do. It creates resistance and resentment that corrode culture from within.

I do wonder if paying a bonus for employees who show up at the office would have had a more desirable effect on overall morale...
That would be a bad precedent. You shouldn't need to bribe employees to do the job they already agreed to do for the compensation they are getting. I agree it's problematic to force people to do something they aren't wanting to do however the fix is simple: find another job which has the terms you're looking for. I suspect there are other out of work people who would jump at the chance to take their place under the existing terms.
 

sinoka56

macrumors 6502
Jun 13, 2013
313
590
if apple are interested in cost cutting where possible then they should encourage more work from home as it'll be cheaper in the long run for them. the facilities management costs would be lower the more people don't need a physical office.
Unless they have an agreement with the city to make sure % works in person in the spaceship to get tax cuts.

As usual, (tax) money trumps environment savings of WFH because the rich don't want their real estate to lose value.
 

wanha

macrumors 65816
Oct 30, 2020
1,482
4,354
I mean very few people WANT to work. We do it because we need to in order to make money. Seems pretty reasonable for a company to require it’s employees to you know show up. This was the norm pre pandemic across industries. Apple isn’t doing anything outside the ordinary here don’t see why it’s news.

Would you say you perform your best when coerced?
 

sw1tcher

macrumors 603
Jan 6, 2004
5,450
18,936
Having to be in-office 3 days a week isn't asking much. It's not as if the company is asking employees to be in the office at least 40 hours/5 days a week or that they need to be working “extremely hardcore” while logging “long hours at high intensity.”
 

chenks

macrumors 65816
Oct 23, 2007
1,187
489
UK
would be interested to see productivity stats for when someone is in the office or at home.
i can tell you that i'm way more productive since i've been working from home since March 2020.
less distractions, can focus more, no travel time etc etc.

the reasons why some companies and governments want people back in the office is solely to support the surrounding businesses that benefit from having people in that location - local shops/coffee houses, public transport etc etc
 

wanha

macrumors 65816
Oct 30, 2020
1,482
4,354
That would be a bad precedent. You shouldn't need to bribe employees to do the job they already agreed to do for the compensation they are getting. I agree it's problematic to force people to do something they aren't wanting to do however the fix is simple: find another job which has the terms you're looking for. I suspect there are other out of work people who would jump at the chance to take their place under the existing terms.

I get the philosophy you state and it's probably how Apple views it too, but times they are a-changin - after COVID, remote work is seen as normal and in some cases, even as a right.

As is often the case, when there is coercion and discontentment, the people with the best job options are likely to leave (usually your best employees).

Those with less options (usually not your best employees) will reluctantly stay.

The net effect is that you replace your best employees with average or good employees, while continuing to fester a growing sense of resentment toward the employer.
 

BellSystem

macrumors 6502
Mar 17, 2022
450
1,035
Boston, MA
if apple are interested in cost cutting where possible then they should encourage more work from home as it'll be cheaper in the long run for them. the facilities management costs would be lower the more people don't need a physical office.
Facility costs wouldn’t be impacted at the scale of their footprint. They would have to drop full buildings. Even if you saved a few hours on maintenance people, you’re likely to pay more on repairs because nobody is paying attention to small problems until they are big problems. An example is a small roof leak in an abandoned office that isn’t seen until it’s a much bigger issue. Bottom line it’s a waste to pay for square footage that goes unused and if Apple wants its people at the office, they need to go or find new work. Apple can do whatever it wants to do and doesn’t need to answer to employees that can be easily replaced at this point. If Apple thought productivity was better with wfh I am sure they would have continued it. But the reality is not everyone is productive at home and Apple wants its people working to the bone. That’s what these people signed up for. They are free to find wfh jobs elsewhere…they would probably be better off…Apple sucks to work for.
 
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sw1tcher

macrumors 603
Jan 6, 2004
5,450
18,936
would be interested to see productivity stats for when someone is in the office or at home.
i can tell you that i'm way more productive since i've been working from home since March 2020.
less distractions, can focus more, no travel time etc etc.
Apple's productivity stats = how buggy their software is.

iOS 16 has been pretty darn buggy if you ask me.





 

randian

macrumors 6502a
Jan 15, 2014
789
363
Face to face meetings are more productive than zoom.
Are they? That depends on what the meeting is for, as meetings are a big drain on productivity, and are best avoided entirely. This rule by Apple smacks of corporate executives thinking that what works for their job is best for everybody. The decision as to remote or not should have been left to team managers.
 

wxnats

macrumors 6502a
Sep 10, 2014
899
598
Northern Virginia
Not saying Apple is wrong to do this (after all, their corporate culture relies largely on in-person collaboration), but it's always problematic to force people into something they don't want to do. It creates resistance and resentment that corrode culture from within.

I do wonder if paying a bonus for employees who show up at the office would have had a more desirable effect on overall morale...
It is not unreasonable for a company to expect people to show up in an office three days a week. If the employee doesn’t want an in person job, they should find one that says 100% virtual in their offer letter.

Employees shouldn’t want all of these tech companies to be 100% virtual. Their jobs would be shipped outside the US.
 

Abazigal

Contributor
Jul 18, 2011
19,642
22,148
Singapore
The pendulum has swung the other way. But companies didn’t want to come down hard. It was a tough period for all.

Face to face meetings are more productive than zoom.

Frankly, I will say both are a waste of time. The main advantage with zoom is that I can be doing something else offscreen like marking my books or playing slay the spire on my iPad.
 

newyorksole

macrumors 603
Apr 2, 2008
5,099
6,405
New York.
easy. go to the office, swipe your badge and then leave after lunch to work from home.

and if they aren’t looking at the time you came in— work from home in the morning and go in at lunch.

companies (mine included) were extremely productive and successful WFH during the pandemic.

I do understand the desire to have people go in though.
 

Abazigal

Contributor
Jul 18, 2011
19,642
22,148
Singapore
would be interested to see productivity stats for when someone is in the office or at home.
i can tell you that i'm way more productive since i've been working from home since March 2020.
less distractions, can focus more, no travel time etc etc.

the reasons why some companies and governments want people back in the office is solely to support the surrounding businesses that benefit from having people in that location - local shops/coffee houses, public transport etc etc

Well, people here have been complaining about how buggy Apple software has been of late. You know, the period when Apple employees have been working away from campus…
 
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