If the return-to-office movement was a game, employers would be winning. This year, in-office attendance reached its highest level since 2020, with 72% of US companies reaching their RTO goals, up from 61% in 2024, data from real estate group CBRE found. (At the same time, the rate of companies tracking in-office attendance hit 69%, up from 45% the year prior.) And some employers, most recently Microsoft and NBCUniversal, have also upped their RTO requirements, the Washington Post reported. Paul Morgan, the global chief operating officer of work dynamics at real estate firm JLL, told HR Brew that he expects employers’ attendance mandates to continue to evolve. “Organizations are finding the right balance. At first, they want people back in to build the culture, and the collaboration, and learning, and the innovation, and then I suspect we’ll probably see some tweaking of those policies downstream,” he said. Employers still trying to reach their RTO goals might consider what employees want. For more on what employees want from their work life, keep reading here.—MC |