- Yeah, I’d guess this is the real reason driving many companies to force a return-to-office. Nothing to do with productivity at all; just shoring up their property values. - 100% that and tax breaks for having people in the city for work. 
 
- Back in 2015 I did an analysis for the company I was working for of how much it cost for each employee based in our largest office (central Sydney). - It was pretty detailed, all insurances, utilities, staff amenities, even factored in the 2-3 accidental fire brigade callouts we averaged a year! Literally the complete total cost averaged out for each person. - The numbers blew me away. It showed that even if staff working from home were 35-40% less productive, we’d still be ahead if we didn’t need to provide them with office space in the centre of the city. - At that point I though, oh shit, one day companies like this aren’t going to give us a nice city centre office are they… - I figured there would be a shift over the next 10-15 yrs as companies started thinking about this and WFH became a bigger thing. But COVID will have accelerated things - I reckon we will eventually move from a situation where WFH is like a privilege, to one where being provided a decent permanent office to work out of will be the privilege. One probably reserved for only the most senior staff. 



