Would people like to come to the office after the corona epidemic?

Due to the coronary virus epidemic, a large number of people worldwide work from home instead of from offices. But now that they’ve been working from home for so long, many people are starting to question how long it will take.

 

The owner of a large office and retail complex in the UK said office workers are tired of working from home thanks to code 19 and now want to know if they will return to the office.

 

Howard Daber, strategy manager at Canary Wharf Group, says people still want to keep office and private time separate.

 

He said employees remember the hustle and bustle of their offices and the city center.

In the area of ​​the Canary Wharf financial complex in London, where the offices of several major banks and financial institutions are located in multi-storey buildings, only 6,000 people currently work in this area before the restrictions imposed by the epidemic. .

 

However, Dabur told BBC Today that people now want to go back to work because they have been out of the office for so long.

 

(We have reached a stage where people are tired,) he said.

 

He added that people worked from home during the last months of the year, when the weather was warm and sunny, that people liked to work in a quiet environment, and that it was felt that there were few routines. There are months.

(I think people now remember meeting colleagues in the office, getting a haircut, a nice place for a lunch break, drinking coffee and everything they did in the city center.)

 

The UK government has proposed phasing out coronavirus prevention by suggesting that people work from their homes as much as possible. All legal restrictions on social activities should be lifted from June 21.

 

Dabur expects the vacant Crane Wharf offices to gradually return to pre-cod levels, but some prefer to stay at home or work a few days a week.

 

He said he thought it might be more acceptable for people to work from home at times.

 

He added that those who work in Canary Wharf will have offices in their office, but some prefer to work from home a day or two or three days a week.

 

Some companies believe that even after removing the coronavirus, they still want their employees to work from home.

 

Lloyds Banking Group wants to reduce the size of its branches by 20% over the next two years. The decision follows an employee survey in which 80 percent of employees indicate that they want to work from home at least three days a week.

 

However, some large companies, such as Goldman Sachs, reject the idea of ​​working outside the office. Chairman and CEO David Solomon described it as “temporary”.

 

Last month, Jesse Staley, CEO of Barclays Bank, said that working from home can’t take long.

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