Empty office Friday...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] Empty office Friday syndrome

48 Posts
23 Users
0 Reactions
93 Views
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Where I work we have a lot of employees who live miles away (M4 corridor) and commute into Cambridge Mon-Thurs and WFH Friday. This means that on Friday, there are only about 25% of staff in the building and the whole place is like a ghost town. Our CEO lives in Paris, so does the same.

Seems a very off set up to me, it is very boring / quiet on a Friday.

Anyone else experienced this?


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:31 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Work from home as well?


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:34 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I actually prefer being in the office, no distractions and a nice bike ride in the frost to wake me up. Plus I save on heating.....


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:35 pm
Posts: 5936
Free Member
 

Our Office empties on a Friday. Flexitime, and quite a few London staff who leave middayish mean by 1 or 2 it's about 30% full. Not me though, deadline looming...


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:37 pm
Posts: 28680
Full Member
 

Same in our place, apart from it being Thurs and Fri.... I'm at home 🙂


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:38 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

[i]Seems a very off set up to me[/i]

Why?

If you worked from home you could still have a bike ride.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:39 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Seems a very off set up to me

Was supposed to be 'odd'

I suspect it leads to lower productivity as nothing really happens on a Friday. I might be wrong, maybe the better work life balance thing evens it all out. However, if I want to discuss something with someone, or say, 'come over here and take a look at this', I can't. Obviously you can phone people up or email them, but we don't have the informal interaction you get in an office.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:42 pm
Posts: 28680
Full Member
 

You have interaction in the office ? Madness... you can't be in IT then.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:43 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I inherited a strong Protestant work ethic, so sloping off on a Friday doesn't appeal to me, I have to toil at my desk to absolve my sins......


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:43 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

You have interaction in the office ? Madness... you can't be in IT then.

We have one IT guy and occasionally we unlock the door to the IT cupboard and slide food in. No one has spoken to him for years....


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:44 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

In our agency we work every day to get stuff done well and on time. Sometimes we work from home, sometimes we work in the office on saturday and sunday and don't sleep. Give and take I guess.

I wouldn't complain about your company having a grounded but relaxed attitude to working from home. Overworking people does nothing but reduce the quality of their work. The choice of working from home on friday is a nice change for some people.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:50 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I suspect if most of our staff were local, we'd have better attendance, but we only seem to recruit from 100miles away - that must be unusual?

When we started the company (13 years ago) pretty much everyone was local and cycled to work, now it's the polar opposite. So I've seen a huge change over the last decade.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 1:52 pm
Posts: 2
Free Member
 

So you've been there 13 years and everyone who lived local to you left the firm moved on ?

All the remaining people try to stay out of the office as often as possible while you are there ?

Even your CEO who obviously respects your work (been there 13 years) tries to stay away with some vague excuses ? He even accepts the business will be less efficient (and therefore profitable ?) and even flys to Paris rather than spend one more day in the office a week with you ?

Your IT guy refuses to come out of his room to talk to you unless you offer him food ?

hmmm....


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:04 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Bloody hell and people call Teacher's lazy.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:05 pm
Posts: 53
Free Member
 

I work from home,and never go in the office.
Bit lonely..


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:06 pm
Posts: 145
Free Member
 

being at home is just a way of working, if you learn to get more out of skype, lync etc then it can be much more productive than going to the office IME/IMHO


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:08 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

hmmm....

But hey we're losing money hand over fist, so can't be all bad 😉


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:08 pm
Posts: 23277
Free Member
 

No idea. I don't work Fridays.

I took my son to the aquarium this morning, that wasn't very busy...


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:21 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

On the rare occasion I'm not in work and wander into town on a weekday, e.g. to get my hair cut, I'm always amazed at the number of 'Can of Tenants at 9 o'clock in morning' brigade I pass. Maybe that's what people do when they're working from home?


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:24 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

We had a WFH rule on Fridays. Then for technical reasons the devs had to be in on Fridays. Almost everyone travels.

So now the managers and architects go back home to their families on Thursday afternoon, we have to be away another day. There's solidarity for you.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:27 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

"Is already on way home"


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:28 pm
Posts: 28680
Full Member
 

Maybe that's what people do when they're working from home?

I'm usually out pedalling.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:29 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Maybe its a personal hygiene thing, I really need to have my annual bath soon....

This is my office area. Towards the window there is my desk, the only one with the monitor turned on and a hi-viz thing hanging up. There must be 20 empty desks around me...

[url= http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8204/8231618687_43511f7e30.jp g" target="_blank">http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8204/8231618687_43511f7e30.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[url= http://www.flickr.com/photos/brf/8231618687/ ]Untitled[/url] by [url= http://www.flickr.com/people/brf/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:29 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

We keep the blinds shut as the IT guy doesn't like bright light, being nocturnal 😉


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:30 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

It's a bit dead here today with PCS striking. Usually normal capacity though on a Friday. The older guys around here reminisce about the days when they were out from Friday lunch in the pubs... Progress!


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:32 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Hi Viz jacket, are you the office H&S rep?


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:33 pm
Posts: 12
Free Member
 

Having worked in an environment where flexible working meant occasionally doing less than 15 hours a day, they struggled with the idea of people working from home. That was a law firm. Employee relations are in the dark ages.

Current place has finally got to grips with the idea that fewer people in buildings means fewer buildings, lower costs and more profit. So it's finally introducing some useful tools (like lync). This is a technology company, where this sort of thing ought to be obvious!


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:33 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Hi Viz jacket, are you the office H&S rep?

Honest Gov, not mine, think it's a fire wardens that's been left there...


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:36 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

So much communication takes place informally eg bouncing ideas off people or chatting to people in the kitchen, which you miss if people are off site.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:37 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

So much communication takes place informally eg bouncing ideas off people or chatting to people in the kitchen, which you miss if people are off site.

Is this where you go to push the envelope?


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:40 pm
Posts: 12
Free Member
 

So much communication takes place informally eg bouncing ideas off people or chatting to people in the kitchen, which you miss if people are off site.

Conference calls are ideal for sending emails to one person, while texting another. Or taking another call.

Ignoring people is the new multitasking!


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:42 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I usually work from home Thursdays and go into the office Fridays which (today included) is usually very quiet. That way I avoid most of my colleagues for two out of 5 days!


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:42 pm
Posts: 12
Free Member
 

I usually work from home Thursdays and go into the office Fridays which (today included) is usually very quiet. That way I avoid most of my colleagues for two out of 5 days!

Depending on how next week's interview goes (eek!), if I stay where I am that's pretty much what I'm going to do. Except my two female colleagues don;t work Wednesdays, leaving me two midweek days to re-boost my testosterone levels....


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:46 pm
Posts: 3723
Free Member
 

Same in our place, apart from it being Thurs and Fri.... I'm at home

I've applied, through the flexible working thingy to work from home Thursday/Friday so i can pick my daughter up after work when my gf is travelling with work.

I'm probably one of about 10 people in the entire company that hasn't had a pint on Payday Friday lunchtime, plus i've been working since 7am.

WFH didnt really work yesterday as i was in Poland 🙁


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:51 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Conference calls are ideal for sending emails to one person, while texting another. Or taking another call.

Ignoring people is the new multitasking!

I only do informal stuff, meetings and conf calls are just such a huge waste of time (in my experience).


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:53 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Are you posting about this because you're lonely, or does it genuinely anger you that people would work from home on a friday if allowed to? :p Who on earth would rather go into an empty office to work, than sit up in bed with a cup of cha and read your emails then work in your pyjamas all day? :p


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:55 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Are you posting about this because you're lonely,

I am bored sh*tless to be honest, I need some social interaction at work and these empty desks just aren't doing it for me!


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 2:57 pm
Posts: 5686
Full Member
 

Come to my office if you want footflaps (Vision park in Histon) loads of people in here as we all work together so very little working from home going on.

Epic ride into today wasn't it too 🙂


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:02 pm
Posts: 5686
Full Member
 

Oh, should have said - we is all IT guys 😈


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:03 pm
Posts: 32265
Full Member
 

Surprising number of my colleagues are out on appointments EVERY Friday.

(In my defence I did that today as I need to do the school pick up in 10 mins...)


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:05 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

LOL I wish I could work from home on Fridays but I'd have to bring several hundred tons of machinery with me I doubt I'd get it in the garden never mind the house 😀


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:11 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Oh, should have said - we is all IT guys

Shudders...

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:11 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Clearly you're very busy too and can't possibly leave.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:16 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Clearly you're very busy too and can't possibly leave.

I am supposed to be doing a remote audit of a customer's network, we had the kick off meeting yesterday and then the customer's IT guys disabled our SSH key so I can no longer connect. So, progress has been somewhat slow to say the least.....


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:19 pm
Posts: 4961
Free Member
 

I work from home most days when not travelling or visiting sites, it has definite benefits but I miss out on some useful info you get from informal in the kitchen,at the printer etc. Webex and telecons do not replace that. Too much informal chatting and you get no work done though. Hence the why a home working office working balance is important. Too far the home working way at the moment but would hate to go back to 100% office working.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:20 pm
 TimP
Posts: 1782
Free Member
 

I am in the office but only have 10.5 working days left here so I am hardly rushed off my feet. Just finished my invoices for the month, checked reddit, read the B3TA newsletter, and now off to make a cuppa. We have Happy Shopper shortbreads with currants since it is Friday too.

And back on topic we have 4 of a possible 8 in today, but not heard a non you tube human voice since the phone rang at 14.26.

Lonely too...


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:54 pm
Posts: 27603
Full Member
 

Our side of the office is sparsely populated, at the other side of the office is populated by a Tele Sales team who use US happy clapping / dancing / yeehah motivation tactics 3 x daily.

I work from home one day a week but get distracted by Coffee / biscuits / Jeremy Kyle / Wheeler Dealers and a bike ride, so prefer to come to the office.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 3:59 pm
Posts: 2661
Free Member
 

Jerome - Member
I work from home,and never go in the office.
Bit lonely..

POSTED 1 HOUR AGO #

I bet you've got a cap end like a blood orange !


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 4:02 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

My office is about to get a smidge emptier.


 
Posted : 30/11/2012 4:02 pm

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!