May 29, 2026 at 3:48 am

Employees Frustrated After Company Suddenly Changes Policies and Work Schedules

by Sarrah Murtaza

Man working on a laptop

Pexels/Reddit

There’s a divided opinion over people who work from home and the ones that work on site!

This guy shares how his company introduced a new policy out of nowhere and everybody had to simply adjust.

Check out the full story.

Return-to-office mandates secret agenda

I’ve noticed frequent return-to-office discussions in both mainstream media and online chatter since late 2025 and at some point I was like, what the heck is going on?

To give you some context, I’ve been working remotely since the 2020 events.

He had no idea what was about to happen…

Since then, I’ve become somewhat of a quiet advocate for remote work because I personally view it as a step towards personal freedom and independence.

So I was surprised to see this discussion once again making the headlines in my news feed. Several high-profile organizations (Amazon, Instagram, etc.) have recently implemented or announced strict mandates, 5 days in the office, no questions asked.

Meanwhile, there’s another more niche narrative that GenZ wanna experience what it’s like working in-office ‘cuz they missed out on some indoor experience during Covid.

Apparently, GenZ really wanna experience what it’s like being bossed around in person. (Which I find very fishy.)

UH OH…

Personally, I feel like there’s something sinister and hypocritical about letting people work from home when it suits you, and then reverting because your darn company has an agenda.

Meanwhile, I think I might have uncovered what is really going on because I surveyed 1,000 full-time workers in the U.S. who are currently under RTO mandates.

Still, take it with a grain of salt as I’m a bit new to this.

So, the general conspiracy theory is that these return-to-office mandates are a stealth layoff maneuver. 72% of the people who took part in the survey believe RTO is just attrition by design.

That’s INSANE!

They think the goal isn’t to get people back to desks, but to make work so inconvenient that people quit—saving the company from paying severance or dealing with the PR mess of a formal layoff.

I think this is half the truth. We know for a fact big tech companies, for example, have no issues with laying off tens of thousands of workers. So there’s no need for stealth tactics.

I think there’s a real agenda to create friction but the real goal is to cause just enough inconvenience to make the people with other options leave so what’s left is a workforce that essentially has no leverage and desperately needs the security of their current job.

That’s wicked.

He found the crack in the system…

I asked the participants to rate their trust in corporate motives, identify specific workplace behaviors, and provide an anonymous, hypothetical message to their leadership regarding the impact of these policies.

My goal was to create a sort of a “trust score” from 0 to 100.

My data shows that the “GenZ mentorship” excuse is fake. Companies keep saying RTO is for “the kids.” But Gen Z actually had the lowest trust scores in the entire survey.

They see the senior leaders hiding in closed-door offices or downright having the audacity to work from home themselves, and they realize the mentorship is pure BS.

He goes on with his research…

Other interesting findings I’m including if anyone’s curious:

People who are strictly tracked via badge swipes have the lowest trust (50/100).

The coffee badgers (people who swipe in for a coffee then leave) have higher trust (77/100) because they usually have a “handshake deal” with their direct manager.

Basically, the more a company monitors its staff, the faster the culture deteriorates.

The office is the new job-hunting hub. This was the most surprising part to me. Instead of collaborating, people are using the office as a staging ground to leave:

Here’s what the numbers look like!

36% admit they have applied for a new job while sitting at their current office desk.

32% are intentionally doing less work as a quiet protest.

36% started a side hustle since the mandate because they don’t trust their employer anymore.

YIKES! That’s quite a research!

The job market truly feels a bit off here!

If you enjoyed this story, check out this post about an employee who took a new dress code policy to a whole new level.

Let’s find out what people on Reddit think about this one.

This user has another interesting insight to add to this analysis.

Screenshot 2026 05 27 152703 Employees Frustrated After Company Suddenly Changes Policies and Work Schedules

This user thinks companies do these things when their stocks are down.

Screenshot 2026 05 27 152719 Employees Frustrated After Company Suddenly Changes Policies and Work Schedules

That’s right! This user knows how everyone wants to copy a policy.

Screenshot 2026 05 27 152731 Employees Frustrated After Company Suddenly Changes Policies and Work Schedules

This user knows how companies time these policies.

Screenshot 2026 05 27 152746 Employees Frustrated After Company Suddenly Changes Policies and Work Schedules

This user knows this whole narrative revolves around layoffs.

Screenshot 2026 05 27 152759 Employees Frustrated After Company Suddenly Changes Policies and Work Schedules

Somebody seems a bit upset at the system!

Sarrah Murtaza | Contributing Writer, Life & Drama

Sarrah Murtaza is a contributing writer for TwistedSifter specializing in human interest stories, internet culture, and interpersonal drama. With nearly six years of experience in digital publishing, she excels at identifying compelling, community-driven conversations and elevating them into highly engaging narratives.

Sarrah brings a unique, narrative-focused approach to her journalism. Drawing on her professional background as a screenwriter and director, she has a sharp editorial eye for human conflict and motivation. This allows her to transform everyday online dilemmas and relationship dynamics into well-structured, empathetic stories that resonate deeply with readers.

As a dedicated remote professional, Sarrah uses her location independence to travel the world, bringing a diverse and exploratory perspective to her writing. When she isn't crafting stories, she can usually be found exploring a new city or working on her latest creative project.

Connect with Sarrah on Instagram and read her extended essays on Medium.