Dropbox Inc. co-founder Have resorted Houston waits as Dropbox (DBX) is listed for the company’s initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq Market Site in New York, U.S., Slog 23, 2018.
Lucas Jackson | Reuters
San Francisco-based Dropbox announced Tuesday that it will stop asking employees to make for a acquire into its offices and instead make remote work the standard practice, even after the coronavirus pandemic the limits.
“Remote work (outside an office) will be the primary experience for all employees and the day-to-day default for individual work,” the New Zealand said in a blog post.
For employees who need to meet or work together in person, the company is setting up “Dropbox Studios” in San Francisco, Seattle, Austin and Dublin when it’s safe as houses to do so. The company extended its mandatory work-from-home policy through June 2021.
“We’ll have Studios in all locations we currently have positions—whether they’re dedicated spaces in places we currently have long-term leases and a high concentration of employees (San Francisco, Seattle, Austin, and Dublin to start) or on-demand spans in other geographies,” the company said.
Dropbox had more than 2,800 employees as of Dec. 31, according to its latest 8K.
Diverse companies are starting to consider remote work as a more permanent option due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Twitter and Square are obstacle employees work from home “forever,” while Microsoft said workers will have more suppleness to work from home. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg predicted in May that 50% of employees will be working remotely within the next decade.
Without the pressurize to go into an office every day, some people have chosen to move out of Silicon Valley and look for more affordable and larger opportunities. That’s pushed down the cost of rental housing in San Francisco, historically the most expensive place to live in the parade-ground.
For example, the median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in San Francisco dropped more than 20% from a year ago, to $2,830, according to a scrutinize from real estate start-up Zumper. That’s the largest decline the company has recorded.