I'm still 100% WFH.
I work for a manufacturing company and my company has been VERY careful with people coming into the office. The touch-labor, who are actually making our products, HAVE to be on site. And if they get sick then we lose money because we can't fulfill our orders. So during the height of the pandemic, the company policy was basically:
The production people have to be here; everyone else stay the **** away so they don't get sick!
The company is working on its return to work plan now, even though my city/state has been open for a while now. Like I said extra careful.
The official plan hasn't come out yet, but from what we've been told. WFH vs on-site vs hybrid will be a decision made between each employee and their supervisor. The company is not trying for consistency; the goal is to arrive at the best individual answer. So it depends on:
- your specific job responsibilities (e.g. engineers doing hands-on equipment work or running tests have been back at the office for a while)
- how effective you are at home vs in the office
- what you want to do
Most of our employees have been very effective working from home. All the engineering managers have said productivity has stayed the same or
gone up since COVID. So if your job doesn't require you to be on-site, it's going to come down to personal preference for most people. From the rumors I hear, it sounds like it will be ~10% WFH permanently, ~25% on-site permanently, ~65% hybrid.
Interestingly, if you decide on WFH permanently, they are taking your cube/desk/office away. I think that's part of the reason more people are choosing 100% WFH.
Edit: I will add that my company culture is pretty special. I've worked a few different places and this one is uniquely great.