Disney CEO Bob Iger tells staff to return to office four days a week

Chief executive told workers to treat ‘Monday through Thursday as in-person workdays’, according to email

Disney’s boss has told employees who are working from home to return to the office four days a week from the start of March, according to reports.

Bob Iger, the chief executive, said hybrid workers will be asked to treat “Monday through Thursday as in-person workdays”, according to an email seen by CNBC, which first reported the news.

“As I’ve been meeting with teams throughout the company over the past few months, I’ve been reminded of the tremendous value in being together with the people you work with,” Iger wrote.

“As you’ve heard me say many times, creativity is the heart and soul of who we are and what we do at Disney. And in a creative business like ours, nothing can replace the ability to connect, observe and create with peers that comes from being physically together, nor the opportunity to grow professionally by learning from leaders and mentors.”

The move comes after Iger – who ran Disney as CEO for 15 years and retired as chairman in 2021 – came out of retirement to serve as chief executive for two years. He took the helm from Bob Chapel in November in a surprise comeback to boost investor confidence and profits at Disney’s streaming media division.

During the Covid-19 pandemic, workers were forced to work from home and many now split their time between there and the office in a “hybrid” model. Disney is one of a number of companies clamping down on flexible working. The US businesses Snap, Tesla and Goldman Sachs have asked their staff to come back to the office, while many other companies have stuck to hybrid working.

Apple in September told staff to return to the office three days a week, while the Twitter owner, Elon Musk, ordered nearly all employees to come back five days a week in November.

Citi and HSBC are among banks that have promised to make hybrid working permanent, but dealmakers still face pressure to be in the office.

Most managers believe flexible working helps productivity, though long hours are still seen as essential for career progress, a UK study has shown.

Contributor

Julia Kollewe

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Former Disney CEO Bob Iger reappointed to role in surprise decision
Move described as ‘probably the most significant piece of corporate upheaval since Steve Jobs went back to Apple’

Jasper Jolly and Mark Sweney

21, Nov, 2022 @8:13 AM

Article image
Disney breaks $7bn global box office record for 2016
Star Wars spin-off Rogue One helps studio break sales record after triumphs including Finding Dory, Zootopia and Jungle Book

Mark Sweney

20, Dec, 2016 @4:57 PM

Article image
Disney, king of the box office, now primed to do battle with Netflix
World’s biggest entertainment company reports its results this week

Mark Sweney

04, Aug, 2019 @11:01 PM

Article image
Bob Iger: Disney’s Mr Fixit returns as it faces big challenges
Chief executive brought in Marvel, Star Wars and Fox – but he may now face job losses and cost cuts

Mark Sweney

21, Nov, 2022 @2:26 PM

Article image
Paramount looks to Disney model to recover after string of flops
Hollywood studio to make more family movies and rebrand TV channel after duds such as Ben-Hur and Star Trek Beyond

Mark Sweney

30, Mar, 2017 @12:13 PM

Article image
Disney chief Bob Iger says strike by writers and actors ‘very disturbing’
Iger, 72, says decision by Sag-Aftra to recommend strike action ‘will have a very, very damaging effect on the business’

Adrian Horton

13, Jul, 2023 @2:10 PM

Article image
Star Wars forecast to make 2019 all-time record year for UK box office
With December admissions likely to hit 17m, experts predict ‘unrepeatable’ year of success

Mark Sweney

16, Dec, 2019 @6:00 AM

Article image
Disney opts for digital-first release of Mulan, shocking cinema owners
Mulan is first blockbuster to go straight to streaming in response to Covid-19 shuttering cinemas

Mark Sweney

05, Aug, 2020 @3:13 PM

Article image
Fox told to engage with Comcast despite rival bid benefit to Murdoch
Comcast’s plan to top Disney’s $52bn bid deserves fair hearing, says activist investor

Mark Sweney

23, May, 2018 @3:05 PM

Article image
Can cinemas bank on a big return to the big screen?
The Covid crisis and the TV streaming boom has badly hurt cinemas but experts say a happy ending is possible

Mark Sweney

26, Mar, 2021 @3:54 PM