Beautiful Virgin Islands

Monday, Jul 13, 2026

How COVID has forced the end of 9-to-5, office-based workdays

How COVID has forced the end of 9-to-5, office-based workdays

A number of other large tech companies are embracing new work policies after nearly a year of COVID-19.

“The 9-to-5 workday is dead,” Salesforce President Brent Hyder said in a statement earlier this week. “And the employee experience is about more than ping-pong tables and snacks.”

The software company said nearly half of its employees said they only want to come into work a few times a month in a firm-wide survey, but 80% want to stay connected to a physical workplace. As a compromise, Salesforce will offer three different employment options for its workers.


Some employees will work a “flex” option, meaning they’ll come into the office between one and three times per week; some will work remotely full-time; and others will work in an office full-time, Hyder explained. He added that it no longer makes sense to expect all employees to work an eight-hour workday and expect to do their jobs successfully.

“This work-from-anywhere model will unlock new growth opportunities that will help us drive greater equality,” Hyder said. “Our talent strategy is no longer bound by barriers like location, so we can broaden our search beyond traditional city centers and welcome untapped talent from new communities and geographies.”

People make their way into the Salesforce Transit Center after it reopened, in San Francisco.


A number of other large tech companies have embraced a similar sentiment after nearly a year of adapting to workplace changes brought on by the 1COVID1-19 pandemic.

Spotify announced its “work from anywhere” plan for employees on Friday that will allow employees to choose whether they want to work from home or an office space going forward.


“Effectiveness can’t be measured by the number of hours people spend in an office,” the company said in a blog post. “Instead, giving people the freedom to choose where they work will boost effectiveness. Giving our people more flexibility will support a better work-life balance and also help tap into new talent pools while keeping our existing band members.”

Twitter said in May that its employees could work from home if "forever” if that's their desire. Shopify announced in May that it would be a “digital-by-default” company. Microsoft adopted a new work-from-home policy in October. Oracle said in December that it might allow employees to choose office locations and whether they want to work from home. The list goes on.


A December Pew Research Center survey of more than 10,300 panelists found that 54% of Americans would consider working from home after the pandemic ends if given the opportunity, and 20% were already working from home.

Jonathan Corpina, Senior Managing Partner at Meridian Equity Partners Inc., who normally works on the New York Stock Exchange trading floor, works in his home office in Armonk, NY.


“While 1COVID1-19 was a horrendous force on millions of lives and their livelihoods, ... the optimist in me sees it will also have surfaced many positives,” Stephan Aarstol, business owner and author of “The Five Hour Workday,” told Fox Business. “Our society finally taking a hard look at how we work and challenging the validity of the 9-5 workday may be one of the positives.”

Aarstol’s Mark Cuban-backed, San Diego-based company Tower Paddle Boards has experimented with a five-hour workday over the past five years. The business owner said he created a constraint for his company that 1COVID1-19 eventually forced on others.
“If people couldn’t be as productive as they

were before, they risked being fired,” he said of his company. “Our customer service team’s hours shrunk, too, so we didn’t answer the phone after 1 p.m. ... Then we looked for what broke, assuming it would be lots of things. The reality is: not much broke.”

Company leaders have the power to determine how many hours constitute a full workday -- not societal pressure, Aarstol explained.

1COVID1-19 was a Pandora’s box of sorts that suddenly and over an extended period of time forced a different decision upon them that they may not have even known was a possibility before,” he said. “Their self-interest of not wanting to go back may be the basis of their decision going forward. And that Pandora's box opening for the employees may put intense pressure on the decision-makers decision in the future.”

Many employers and employees are also leaving densely-populated and high-priced cities and moving to smaller cities across the country.

The 110 Arroyo Seco Parkway that leads to downtown Los Angeles during the coronavirus outbreak in Los Angeles, Calif.


The shift toward more work-from-home opportunities will likely open opportunities for workers to move outside of big metropolitan areas while keeping their Silicon Valley and New York City jobs.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg said in a May 21 townhall video that the tech giant was thinking of ways to make its remote work policy more flexible for employees who might wish to work outside of the company's urban office locations in Silicon Valley, New York City, Chicago, Boston and elsewhere..


Now, the company is working to develop a permanent plan for the company's future that will include more flexible work options.

Multiple reports have noted tech companies’ and employees’ growing shift away from Silicon Valley and New York City into places like Texas and Florida in what has been dubbed the “tech exodus.” Tesla CEO Elon Musk, for example, announced in December that he had moved from California to Texas as he builds a 4-million-square-foot factory near Austin.


Oracle announced in its quarterly report released in December that it was moving its headquarters from Silicon Valley to Austin; financial technology company Hewlett Packard Enterprise and venture capital firm V8C did the same.


“Our low taxes, high quality of life, top-notch workforce, and tier-one universities create an environment where innovative companies like HPE can flourish,” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said in a December statement when he shared news of HPE’s move. “We look forward to a successful partnership with HPE, as together we build a more prosperous future for Texas."

Austin, Texas


Miami has also attracted the attention of some tech leaders, including tech investor Keith Rabois and Blumberg Capital founder David Blumberg.

“As of last night, we have moved out of California, and are now happier residents of southern Florida,” Blumberg announced in December, according to the San Francisco Financial Times. “Poor governance at the local level in San Francisco and statewide in California has driven us away.”

His statement continued: “We certainly hope and pray that California will take action to remedy the disastrous self-inflicted political situation and restore its former luster and quality of life, but for now we are voting with our feet.”

The forced constraint of 1COVID1-19 has undoubtedly shaped Americans’ habits and preferences, as Aarstol noted.

A forced shift toward work-from-home culture and away from the once widely accepted 9-5 workday will shape the future of American employment opportunities and what company policies and cultures will boost productivity.

“Rules ... are starting to be devised to manage this new phenomenon. The ground has shifted. The old rules won’t work,” Aarstol said. “At this point, we’re not even out of the pandemic yet. The real test is when the all-clear slowly sounds over the next year, and every company and every employee has a decision to make … about how to work.”

Newsletter

Related Articles

Beautiful Virgin Islands
0:00
0:00
Close
World Cup Visitors Turn American Big-Box Stores Into Souvenir Stops
Netflix Weighs Always-On Channels, Bundles and Short-Form Video
Passenger Is Pulled Partly Outside Ryanair Jet After Window Fails Mid-Flight
The AI Invoice Shock: Layoffs Didn't Save Managers Money — They Cost Them More
Concern: Sexually Transmitted Bacterium Among Men Develops Antibiotic Resistance
Following Massive Investor Demand: SK Hynix Raises 26.5 Billion Dollars on Nasdaq
Passenger Partially Pulled Out of Ryanair Jet After Cabin Window Fails Mid-Flight
After Four Years, and Under a Heavy Veil of Secrecy: King Charles Meets His Grandchildren, Harry and Meghan's Children
Severe Heatwave Drives Dangerous Ground-Level Ozone Pollution Across Two Thirds of European Union
Westminster in Freefall as Farage's By-Election Gamble Triggers Broader Systemic Crises
Institutional Fractures and Political Volatility Reshape Britain's Domestic Landscape
Deadly Fire, Health Emergencies and Political Upheaval Shape a Volatile Global News Cycle
Flight Instructor Jumped to His Death — Student Landed the Plane: "You Know What You Need to Do"
The Physical and Electronic Barriers Disrupting Domestic Wireless Networks
France and Morocco Open World Cup Quarter-Finals as Collina Defends Refereeing
Prince Harry Suffers Major Court Defeat in Legal Battle Against Daily Mail Publisher
Bonnie Tyler, Welsh Singer Behind Total Eclipse of the Heart, Dies at 75
Tech Pulse: The Future of AI and Screen Culture
Global News Briefing: Escalating Geopolitical Tensions and Corporate Shakeups
Global News Brief: Escalating Conflicts, Public Health Crises, and World Cup Drama
Federal Financial Framework Shifts as Treasury Launches Universal Savings Program for Minors
French Court Allows Le Pen to Run for Presidency, but with an Electronic Tag: "I Will Appeal, and I Will Run"
$1.4 Trillion: The Lawsuit That Could Crush Meta
Europe's Growing Struggle with Extreme Heat and Air Conditioning
UK Daily Briefing: Legal Developments and Social Issues
Political Turmoil and Rising Costs
Anthropic Reengineers Agentic Architecture to Shift Autonomous Workplace Automation to the Cloud
Logic Flaw in Windows 11 Permission Architecture Silently Consumes Hundreds of Gigabytes of Local Storage
Apple Advances Late-Stage Operating Systems with Fourth Beta Deployments
Global Crisis Alert: Escalating Middle East Tensions and UK Political Upheaval
Deep Purple Has Released Its Best Album in Decades
Microsoft Lays Off 4,800 Employees and Xbox Suffers the Hardest Blow
Morocco and France Advance as 2026 FIFA World Cup Enters Quarterfinals.
Historic 2026 Tour de France Opens in Barcelona With Revamped Team Time Trial.
Global Mergers and Acquisitions Approach $4 Trillion Defying Geopolitical Tumult.
Negotiators Advance 20-Point Framework for Gaza Ceasefire and Demilitarization.
OECD Warns Middle East Conflict Will Depress Global Economic Growth.
Ukrainian Drones Strike Major Oil Terminal in St. Petersburg.
World Meteorological Organization Issues Urgent Alert Over Rapidly Intensifying El Niño.
United States Commemorates 250th Anniversary With Diplomatic Summits and Global Flotilla.
Iran Begins Days-Long Funeral for Supreme Leader Khamenei Amid Strait of Hormuz Standoff.
Technology giant reports surging carbon emissions driven by artificial intelligence infrastructure demands.
Artificial intelligence adoption accelerates workforce reductions across the technology and financial sectors.
Global technology and financial conglomerates collaborate to launch a new stablecoin standard.
United States regulators lift export restrictions on a major frontier artificial intelligence model.
Luxury bags take over the World Cup: style, status symbol, or just showing off?
×