Contents
- Hey â Welcome Back!
- Elon Musk: Remote Work Hater No More
- The Tech Reckoning: You Could Be Next
- Coincidence: Remote Work Steps Forward
- Elon Again: A Messy Lesson in Change
- 3 Job Stabilizing Practices You Can Implement Today
- This Weekâs Shareable
- Latest Remote Jobs
Some say itâs Elon Musk. Others say itâs a looming recession. But could it beâĻremote work? Hereâs how to fire-proof your remote job during the techpocolypse.
đšī¸ CEOWorld: Elon is Remote Workâs Biggest Fan
đ¨ TechCrunch: Techpocolypse Layoff Numbers
đ Forbes: Lessons in Change
đ HBR Remote Work Guide: Reading List Resource
Hey â Welcome Back!
Tech layoffs been on your mind lately?
Theyâre hitting some of the most talented people at the best companies in the world, right now.
đŦ Every day, people are waking up to âgoodbye and thanks for all the fishâ emails.
Tech was once a fairytale. As it enters its villain origin era, remote workers are struggling to see the happily ever after among the chaos.
Itâs episode 27 and this week I explore what Elon Muskâs latest move says about these tech layoffs. And whether his recent flip-flops indicate that remote work is playing a bigger role than anyone expected.
Keep reading and Iâll help you navigate these unchartered waters until both feet are safely on solid ground again.
Jump on board â
Elon Musk: Remote Work Hater No More
Once upon a time, a man named Elon hated remote work.
It was a dark moment in Silicon Valley history when he bought Twitter and banned his employees from ever leaving the office.
That seems like eons ago now, though it was just last year in November. We covered those dark times in two of our most popular episodes.
You can catch them here:
Since then, heâs had a deeper change of heart. Flip-flopping faster than a fish fixed on a laser pointer â heâs embraced remote work with open arms.
đĻ Elon admitted that his big dreams for Twitter never included remote work, and that was a BIG mistake.
One of the most impressive things about Elon Musk is his flexibility.

Now heâs doubled down on remote work and has shut down two offices â one in Seattle and one in Singapore.
All the Twitter employees who worked there are now working from anywhere. Heâs switched from pro hater to drastic enforcer, on the frontlines of the battle for remote work. Thatâs like Darth Vader choosing to become a Jedi again.
Dr Gleb Tsipursky writes:
âThe fact that Musk â an extreme skeptic of remote work â acknowledged its cost-cutting benefits illustrates the future of remote work for the US economy. It highlights the misleading nature of many headlines that claim an impending recession would lead to the end of remote work.â
So, this episode isnât technically about Elon â itâs about the context that led to his revolutionary change of heart.
Thereâs a recession on the horizon. You need to know how thatâs going to impact you.
The Tech Reckoning: You Could Be Next
Letâs talk about how unstable everyoneâs jobs are right now.
I remember a time when tech was one of the most stable and secure job options in the world! Last year, there werenât enough good people around to hire. Now, tons of my friends are looking for work. It really feels like nobodyâs safe.
The media is calling it: The tech reckoning.

I guess techpocolypse is a bit dramatic, but that depends on whether youâre one of the unlucky retrenched that has been forced joined the funemployment conga line.
This reckoning has impacted everyone.
Giants like:
đĻ Amazon â 18000
đ Google â 12000
đĨī¸ Zoom - 1300
And smaller companies like:
đŠâđģ GitLab - 300
đ Swiggy - 380
đ¤ŗ Citizen â 33
And theyâre not alone. There are hundreds of companies who have all decided that now is the ideal time to drastically downsize their workforce. This is impacting hundreds of thousands of people.
đ Recession-proofing aside â no-one really knows why.
Sure, companies have doled out reasons like âgrowing painsâ but you have to admit that layoffs on this scale are extreme.
Whatâs really going on here?
Could Elonâs flip-flop be a clue that remote work has something to do with it?
Coincidence: Remote Work Steps Forward
This seems a bit too connected to be pure coincidence. These cuts and closures align perfectly with some key factors that are influencing business in a big way.
¡ đēī¸ Companies are starting to accept that great talent exists outside of the US
¡ đ Remote work is far more productive than office work
¡ đ° Itâs also a lot more cost effective
Letâs look at some rock-solid facts.
1. đŖ The COVID Growth Explosion
During the global COVID-19 lockdowns, tech went through a serious growth explosion. The pandemic might have been bad for retail, but it was brilliant for tech!

Everything scaled up â from teams and salaries, to online adoption and tech stock prices. In mid-2020, Zoom stock experienced a 700% gain!
2. đ The Rise of Remote Work
The pandemic exposed remote work for what it really is, a superior model to cubicle farms. The world was closed, but business was open and booming.
Companies finally realized that people were happier, healthier and more productive when they worked remotely.

It sparked such a change in thinking that some companies began to wonder why they had offices at all. What were they for again?
3. đ Tech Enhancing Performance
Last but not least, shiny new technology has burst onto the scene transforming high performers into super performers. Just look at the rise of AI and other automation technologies â theyâve widened the gap between these individuals and everyone else.

The more technology we embrace, the easier it is for your boss to pick high value employees out of the crowdâĻand to spot the inefficient ones.
Things are changing, fast!
Elon Again: A Messy Lesson in Change
Elon Musk is a great example of what is currently going on in the world of business.
The man knows what he wants, even if he has to press all of the buttons to get it. Thereâs a lesson in that, and one we should embrace in 2023.
The world is messy.
We like to pretend that it isnât â especially in tech â but hiding from the truth is a bad strategy. Say what you like about Elon, his business sense is sharp enough to cut through the bullshit.
And what he understands is that productivity is the key to surviving a recession. Those swanky head office buildings over at Twitter started to feel like dead weight.
So, on the one hand Elon has:
đ¸ Massive cost inefficiencies at his new tech company
And on the other he has:
đ Remote workers who might accept a pay decrease to work from home
𤊠Who are happier in general because work-life balance improves so much
Hmmm.
Higher productivity, the option of lower pay, happier people and less overheads? Sounds like remote work could bring huge efficiencies to the tech sector.
But the flip side is that itâs going to happen to a smaller headcount of people than we thought. In the spirit of the moment, letâs make sure that youâre active about your response.
3 Job Stabilizing Practices You Can Implement Today
If youâre worried about your job, here are three things that will help you become more earthquake proof now, or in your next role.
1. ⨠Expand Your Niche
First, step out of your niche.
The rule of three creates stability, so expand your skills in three niches to offset risk. Whether itâs showing three different functions on your resume, or expanding into three different industries â it demonstrates resourcefulness and adaptability.
When you cover your bases this way, you have more options when one of those niches dries up. Pick them well and when one industry stalls, another will hit a growth spurt.
2. đšī¸ Invest in Remote Upskilling
You should know this by now but â get better at remote working!
With every day that passes, remote work gains ground and is reshaping how we do business with each other.
Itâs high time everyone and their grandma learned how to do it right.
Iâm not talking about sitting in Zoom calls. Or frantically managing three chat apps, a project management platform and nine other real-time channels. No!

Thatâs a C+ at best. You need to become an asynchronous superstar. It will keep you working through climate change, pandemics and the occasional zombie apocalypse.
Make it a priority.
đ Reading List: Adding useful resources to your reading list is an easy way to upskill. I recommend starting with Harvard Business Reviewâs guide to remote work.
You think you know, until you know.
3. đ Be a Visible Expert
This last one is hard, especially if youâre an introvert. But put yourself out there and publish online. Posting insightful content related to your area of expertise results in opportunities. These can be short tweets or an entire video series like this one.
Point is â visibility is a commodity.
Take the time to showcase your skills as a subject matter expert.
Thatâs how you grow a tree of opportunity that can shake fruit into your basket when you need it. If none of those things work, try sending an old timey recruitment company a gift basket. Itâs a lost art and theyâll love it.
In all seriousness, Elon is right.
The tech world is messy.
The best thing you can do is invest in yourself so that when the tides reach in, they donât sweep you away, they just take you somewhere new.
đĸ Now I want to know â how do you create stability during this time of tech layoffs?
Iâd love to hear any advice or stories that you have for our community. Leave a comment below and Iâll personally respond.
You never know when sharing a story will help someone sleep better at night.
Thatâs it for this week â and remember, the future of work is Out of Office.
Andrew
This Weekâs Shareable
- Whatâs causing these tech layoffs? The recession? Elon Musk? Andrew suspects thereâs a link between Elonâs massive change of heart and remote work. It may be the missing ingredient spurring these layoffs. Explore this weekâs episode of OOO, and find out how to earthquake-proof your remote job. #remotework
Latest Remote Jobs
Looking to work remotely as an engineer? đĻļ Get your foot in the door here.
đĨ Software Engineer at Trilogy, $60k ($30/hour)
đĨ Senior Software Engineer â Latin America at Trilogy, $100k ($50/hour)