Xerox Canadian employees need to buckle up since they will be back to the office soon. With an old school mindset from the 90’s, the management team wants every person back in the office. The company is not doing well so they blame it on the fact that people are doing nothing at home… they think going to the office will scare you to work?
6 replies (most recent on top)
Xerox temp staff have been working since the pandemic, and working for minimum wage.
https://www.businessinsider.com/quit-job-flexible-remote-working-from-home-return-to-office-2021-6
top 100 employers? old data, xerox doesn't make the list in 2021.https://www.canadastop100.com/national/
12 upvotes in 5 minutes? quit that dying company and run away as quickly as you can to a better future.
Working at Xerox Canada is Awesome! Average employee age now at 48.3 and dropping... watch out gen x’s!
https://reviews.canadastop100.com/top-employer-xerox
If you only rely on e-signatures for legal documents I feel bad for you. Good luck with "security".
While office pages are declining, print as a technology is growing everywhere. If you can't see that you are either blind or Xerox management.
The nightmare facing printer manufacturers is simple. The world realized they can work from home. They also realized they could read onscreen. But more that that, even, they realized signing a PDF with Adobe Reader is faster and easier than printing and scanning back the document, like a caveman would do. The world, in short, realized it can do quite well without printers, for many of the things it thought it couldn't do without.
The exodus back to the office will likely confirm in part this as we see click charges absolutely not coming to pre-covid days on average. Today millennials think business cards are a quaint idea. Where I currently work, a software startup, no one has business cards. Everyone works from home. We use PandaDoc to sign all contracts etc. We are not alone. Printing is almost non existent.
Horse saddle makers sure still exist today and this is the pattern the print industry must come to accept. The future may not be printed yet, but one can safely bet it'll hold less and less pages, every year.