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Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky ‘guarantees’ many bosses calling people back to the office ‘are going away to the Hamptons for the summer’

Nicholas Gordon
By
Nicholas Gordon
Nicholas Gordon
Asia Editor
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Nicholas Gordon
By
Nicholas Gordon
Nicholas Gordon
Asia Editor
Down Arrow Button Icon
May 11, 2023, 5:09 AM ET
Brian Chesky also suggested that the ability to hire from anywhere could be more valuable than forcing people to work in one location.
Brian Chesky also suggested that the ability to hire from anywhere could be more valuable than forcing people to work in one location.Eugene Gologursky—Getty Images for Fast Company

Brian Chesky suspects that the managers demanding workers regularly come back to the office may not be quite so consistent when it comes to their own in-person work. 

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“I guarantee you that many of these CEOs who are calling people back to the office in New York City are going away to the Hamptons for the summer or going to Europe in August,” the Airbnb CEO said on The Verge’s Decoder podcast in an interview released Wednesday.

Earlier surveys have suggested a divide in who gets to work from home. The Future Forum reported in an April 2022 survey that only 19% of executives were commuting into the office each day, compared to 35% of non-executives. 

Bosses have regularly complained about remote work in their drive to get people back to the office. An October survey from Microsoft reported that 85% of employers feared that employees working at home were less productive than when they worked at the office. 

Big names in tech have also shifted away from remote work. Both Salesforce’s Marc Benioff and Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg suggest that employees who joined their companies as remote hires were less productive than those who at least had some in-person office time before going remote. (Surveys of employees routinely report that workers feel they are more productive at home.)

Chesky gave a different view of the remote work and productivity question in his interview with The Verge.

“Are you more productive having people physically in an office together and then constraining who you hire to a 30-mile or a 60-mile commuting radius to the office? Or by allowing your team to be able to hire people from anywhere?” He asked.

He continued that even for roles that might require regular in-person work, like creative teams, employees likely don’t need to be together “50 weeks a year.” 

“If people want to go away for the summer, that’s possible,” he said. 

Airbnb made its “work from anywhere” policy permanent in April last year. A month later, Chesky claimed in an interview with Coins2Day that the policy change had encouraged a million people to visit the company’s job page.

‘The number one complaint at Airbnb is affordability’

Chesky’s interview also covered the announcement of Airbnb Rooms, a renewed focus on the ability to book an individual room, rather than an entire property.

Airbnb’s CEO told The Verge that the reason for the “all-new take on the original Airbnb” was to provide cheaper options for users amid rising costs. “Probably the number one complaint at Airbnb is affordability,” Chesky said. 

Chesky told Coins2Day last week that the idea for Rooms and several other new Airbnb features came from the experience of exclusively staying in Airbnb properties for six months. The Airbnb CEO complained that some hosts added onerous requests to his booking, like cleaning fees and a list of chores for guests to perform.

“The worst 10% of guest and host experiences were making it worse for everyone,” he told Coins2Day. 

Airbnb shares fell by 10.9% on Wednesday following the release of the company’s most recent earnings. It beat expectations on revenue, and swung to a $117 million quarterly net profit, as opposed to a $19 million net loss a year earlier.

Yet the company warned that it expected bookings to fall in the coming quarter, and forecast “unfavorable” year-on-year comparisons to 2022’s boom in so-called revenge travel.

Coins2Day Brainstorm AI returns to San Francisco Dec. 8–9 to convene the smartest people we know—technologists, entrepreneurs, Coins2Day Global 500 executives, investors, policymakers, and the brilliant minds in between—to explore and interrogate the most pressing questions about AI at another pivotal moment. Register here.
About the Author
Nicholas Gordon
By Nicholas GordonAsia Editor
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Nicholas Gordon is an Asia editor based in Hong Kong, where he helps to drive Coins2Day’s coverage of Asian business and economics news.

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