If you want to get employees excited about coming into the office, you may want to focus on their top office priorities. And yet, last year, a survey from the Conference Board found that 73 percent of ...
Many companies and their employees remain out of sync on the amount of time workers should be in the office, according to a CBRE and CoreNet Global survey of 235 corporate real estate professionals.
43% of North American firms plan to expand office space. High-quality, well-located offices face tightest supply. Hybrid schedules keep offices busiest midweek. CBRE surveyed 185 executive office ...
New data shows the renewed push to get workers back to the office may be working. Office attendance last week was at its highest levels since the pandemic, according to Kastle Systems. Weekly average ...
More corporate heavyweights are requiring full-scale returns to the office, and data shows momentum is building. But there are some exceptions to the trend. Heading into 2024, many CEOs anticipated ...
In the past year, U.S. companies made more progress in getting employees back to the office than at any time since 2020, according to a forthcoming report from CBRE. Nearly three quarters of the 184 ...
The acknowledgment that real estate contracts are shaping policy represents a critical moment in the evolution of work. The ...
Nearly 3 in 5 large-scale organizations are prioritizing an increase in on-site employee presence, according to a new JLL report that could bode well for the beleaguered office sector. More employees ...
Never mind foreclosures and predictions of doom. The Real Estate Board of New York’s latest analysis of office building “visitations” presents a less pessimistic take on the endlessly discussed and ...
Even though Midtown streets are quite busy most weekdays, data from Kastle Systems show the number of workers in New York office buildings is stuck at 50% of prepandemic levels. Or is it? Data ...
Paul Weiss will begin mandating four days of weekly attendance, starting April 30. The firm joins a handful of other Big Law players including Latham, Weil and Skadden, in asking for more attendance.