What Facebook’s Remote Work Policy Means for the Future of Tech Salaries Everywhere

‘For some kinds of jobs, it really could become a more national and less local labor market’

Matthew Zeitlin
OneZero

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Facebook employees walk through the courtyard of the company’s main campus in Menlo Park, California (November 6, 2019). Photo: picture alliance/Getty Images

For many tech workers, the ability to do the job from anywhere — or more specifically, being able to do the job without paying Bay Area rents or spending thousands of hours every year driving on 101 or 280 — is the dream.

That may become a reality for more and more tech workers, with one little adjustment: a cutback on those generous salaries.

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said on Thursday that the company will begin to offer remote work to new hires, beginning with senior engineers, and that current employees will soon be able to request switching to remote work. But, there will be salary adjustments: “If you live in a place where the cost of living is dramatically lower, then salaries do tend to be somewhat lower,” Zuckerberg told the Wall Street Journal.

Twitter and Square, both run by Jack Dorsey, have also said that they will allow “permanent” work from home. Many employees of large technology companies have been working from home since March, due to the coronavirus pandemic, with many extending return dates to the fall or even next year; Google for example has…

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Matthew Zeitlin
OneZero

I’m a journalist covering business, finance and economics, and public policy. More clips: https://www.matthewzeitlin.com/