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How many days remote are most workers?

  • snitzoid
  • 4 hours ago
  • 2 min read

Seriously? You show up for work every day? Are you asking to be a door mat?


Younger companies and leaders embrace more remote work, new study finds


The companies most likely to let you work from home are the newest ones… or at least those helmed by the youngest leaders.


According to a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper published last week, employees at companies founded after 2015 are roughly twice more likely to work from home than those at firms that got their start before 1990.



Companies born in 2020 — the ones that had no choice but to build themselves around WFH from day one — had the highest remote working days on average, at 1.74 per week. While that trend has since softened, post-lockdown cohorts (2021-25) allowed employees to work from home an average of 1.6 days per week over the last two years, well above the ~0.9 days seen for companies founded before 1980.


Leadership age tells a similar story, as younger CEOs tend to be more comfortable adopting new technologies and flexible ways of working: firms run by CEOs under 30 saw an average of 1.4 work-from-home days per week, compared to 1.1 days for those with CEOs aged 60 or older. Still, that gap fades once firm age is factored in, suggesting it’s the birth year of the company — not its leader — that matters more.


And even as big incumbents keep doubling down on returning to the office, the study finds that WFH rates could tick higher over time as older firms cycle out. Indeed, roughly half of US startups don’t survive past five years, per the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics data, and the companies that replace them tend to be more remote-friendly from the start.

 
 
 

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