GM takes hard stance on salaried workers returning to office in January

General Motors is increasing the pressure on its 43,500 salaried workers across the United States to return to the office.

In a company-wide email to employees Tuesday morning that was obtained by the Detroit Free Press, CEO Mary Barra made it clear she wants white-collar workers at their desks inside GM facilities on three specific days of each week "at a minimum."

"At the start of the year, we asked hybrid employees to be in the office three days a week in order to drive the greatest impact. However, adherence has been mixed," Barra wrote in the email. "We are now explicitly requesting hybrid employees to be onsite beginning Jan. 8, every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday at minimum. Senior leaders will continue to have the flexibility to determine if a team needs to be in the office more frequently."

GM spokesman Kevin Kelly confirmed the new policy saying it is to help the automaker accelerate its move to selling more electric vehicles in the future. GM struggled this year to get its new EVs launched as it battled battery production problems. Barra told investors she was "disappointed" in this year's slow EV launches and that GM has fixed the battery production problems and GM will have stronger EV sales next year.

“We’re going through a historical transformation around the business,” Kelly told the Free Press. “This (new policy) is a way to get more collaboration around that transformation.”

Return to office enforcement

Many salaried workers at GM have resisted the return to the office policy. In September 2022, in internal messages to employees, GM first said it would end its Work Appropriately philosophy, which allowed for flexibility on where employees did their job, and require them to come to the office three days a week.

Days later, after much employee pushback, Barra sent out a note to the salaried workforce offering an apology of sorts for the short timing in announcing the new policy. She said GM's plan still would include a more regular, in-person presence, but it would not implement any return-to-the-office policy in 2022 as the company listens to employee feedback.

General Motors CEO Mary Barra speaks to a crowd of journalists during a fireside chat with APA president Mike Wayland at the Gem Theatre in Detroit on Monday, December 4, 2023.
General Motors CEO Mary Barra speaks to a crowd of journalists during a fireside chat with APA president Mike Wayland at the Gem Theatre in Detroit on Monday, December 4, 2023.

But by October 2022, as the Free Press first reported, GM confirmed the start date to return to the office for those three days would be Jan. 30, 2023. GM said it would not keep track of worker attendance. It was a mandate that many area leaders and businesses welcome. In GM's World Headquarters inside the Renaissance Center on Detroit's waterfront, for example, there are many businesses that rely on foot traffic from the "low thousands" of GM employees assigned to work there.