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Best Buy Follows Yahoo in Banning Remote Work

bednarz writes "Is telecommuting the new scapegoat for poor performance? Best Buy, in the midst of a corporate restructuring, has canceled its flexible work program and expects corporate employees to put in traditional 40-hour work weeks at the retailer's headquarters (they used to be able to work whenever and wherever they wanted). The announcement comes on the heels of Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer's decision to end telecommuting, which ignited a firestorm of criticism. It also follows news of Best Buy's plans to lay off 400 corporate workers as part of a plan to cut $725 million in costs and restructure its business. This could signal the beginning of a trend, or be an indication that telecommuters need to actively justify their preference for working outside the office."

7 of 317 comments (clear)

  1. Terrible move by a dying entity by ModernGeek · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is a terrible move by a dying entity that is showing its irrelevance by going back further into the dark ages.

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    1. Re:Terrible move by a dying entity by Karl+Cocknozzle · · Score: 4, Informative

      Nope - that's the point of the exercise. You're not fired - you're quitting.

      If this is truly what they're up to they'll be disappointed. A great many states unemployment laws explicitly take into account a fundamental change in the terms of a job as "involuntary termination." It is hard to imagine that a person being required to move thousands of miles as a condition of continued emplyment wouldn't be viewed as a "fundamental change of terms."

      Since a lot of these people will likely be moms or people with family "situations" they're coping with lawsuits seem almost to be a given. They must really be short on cash if this is how they choose to conduct a layoff.

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  2. As a former Employee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I can tell you Best Buy treats their employees like total crap. I did not work in a retail store, I worked in one of their service centers. Worst run company ever. They actually had a VP come down one week and tell us we needed to tape yellow lanes on the floor to tell people where to walk and then 3 weeks later another VP came down and made them change it to red tape, then 2 months later another VP came down and wanted all the lines moved because he didn't think it was clear which areas were for walking and which areas were work areas. Ridiculous.

  3. Re:What firestorm by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 5, Informative

    This while she was building a nursery in her office so she could spend time with her kid at work.

    http://healthland.time.com/2013/02/28/how-yahoo-ceo-marissa-mayer-is-building-a-nursery-by-her-office-and-dissing-working-moms/

    If that's not her giving her workforce the finger then I don't know what is.

  4. Re:Real motive by Whatsisname · · Score: 4, Informative

    Best Buy is headquartered in Minnesota, an at-will employment state. They can eliminate anyone at any time for any reason, and don't need a bogus excuse to do so.

  5. Very misleading headlines by Wister285 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Does anyone seem to realize that work from home is not being banned, but PERMANENTLY working from home? There is a huge difference. Casual work from home is much different than never seeing your coworkers. Is permanent working from home a scapegoat? Perhaps, but it's not unreasonable that troubled companies need all hands on deck while at their most vulnerable.

  6. This is worse than it sounds by Saxophonist · · Score: 4, Informative

    Best Buy headquarters is in one of the areas of the Twin Cities metro with the worst traffic congestion already, and it is not well-served by public transit. Public policy in Minnesota is starting to tend toward encouraging more remote work and/or flexibility because the cost of maintaining and upgrading roads and transit is becoming unaffordable. I don't know about other areas of employment, but competent programmers are not usually having trouble finding work in the Twin Cities metro. Granted, many of Best Buy's developers are contractors anyway.

    This move is likely just to drive away people with other options, and with a company that's already a sinking ship, it's certainly going the wrong direction.