Canada's federal workers advocate for the benefits of remote work for workers and the country. Contribute to a diverse, future-ready public service in Canada today.
I’d argue some managers shouldn’t be able to work 100% remotely. At least in sectors where the people they’re managing can’t. I work in a job that has to be on location (not an office). On the one hand I don’t want them on location because they just get In the way, but on the other hand they’re so out of touch with reality because they don’t ever talk to us or our customers.
That seems like poor management rather than a symptom of remote work. A good manager would still communicate with you and your customers and familiarize themselves with the work they’re managing despite not being in person.
I’d argue some managers shouldn’t be able to work 100% remotely. At least in sectors where the people they’re managing can’t. I work in a job that has to be on location (not an office). On the one hand I don’t want them on location because they just get In the way, but on the other hand they’re so out of touch with reality because they don’t ever talk to us or our customers.
That seems like poor management rather than a symptom of remote work. A good manager would still communicate with you and your customers and familiarize themselves with the work they’re managing despite not being in person.
That’s fair, I suppose as someone not familiar with either it’s easy to confuse offsite with remote work.