The massive experiment underway with office staff working from home won't end anytime soon. And the New York Times last week reminded people of some less-than-successful remote work experiences of the past.
That included one at Best Buy Co.
The reasons some employers canned flexible work programs were what you would expect: Workers felt less connected to work and thus less loyal, and creativity slowed down. Yet those seem like correctable management mistakes, not unfixable problems with working from home.
And to see Best Buy on this list of employers that went back to a more traditional structure was another reminder that what Best Buy was trying to do may still not be understood. That includes even knowing that it wasn't about being allowed to telecommute.
The lessons here are still useful, too, at least for managers who don't want to treat this period as just making do until everyone can safely come back into work.
Work from home, remote working, whatever you want to call it, these are all terms that bug Jody Thompson, an author and CEO of the Twin Cities-based consulting firm CultureRx. She was a principal player when Best Buy tried to create a different structure for work.
These terms serve only to emphasize an old-fashioned notion that an office is where work is supposed to get done, and to call it "remote work" just reminds people it might even be a special perk.
As Thompson has been teaching now for more than 15 years, work is just work.