Hindustan Times (East UP)

Most staff won’t return to office until Jun: Tim Cook

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CUPERTINO: Apple Inc. chief executive Tim Cook shared new details on the company’s plan to return to the office during a virtual town hall meeting with employees on Thursday.

Cook said it “seems likely” that the majority of teams won’t be back before June 2021. The Cupertino, California-based technology giant has historical­ly had an office-centric culture, but the CEO implied that the company’s success this year during the pandemic lockdown could enable more flexibilit­y to work remotely in the future.

Still, Cook has been adamant publicly about his desire for staff to ultimately return to the office.

“There’s no replacemen­t for face-to-face collaborat­ion, but we have also learned a great deal about how we can get our work done outside of the office without sacrificin­g productivi­ty or results,” he told staff, according to people familiar with the comments. “All of these learnings are important. When we’re on the other side of this pandemic, we will preserve everything that is great about Apple while incorporat­ing the best of our transforma­tions this year.”

Cook added that because of the challenges of recent months, Apple will be giving employees in many regions an additional paid holiday scheduled for January 4. Other companies, including Alphabet Inc.’s Google, have also given staff an extra paid day off recently.

Apple’s employee donation programme is having its strongest year ever, the CEO also noted. Since the initiative began, more than $591 million has been donated to charities and employees have volunteere­d more than 1.6 million hours. The company is making a $5 million donation to organisati­ons helping those hurt by Covid-19, Cook said.

Several other Apple executives spoke during the town hall meeting, including the chiefs of retail, legal, environmen­t, marketing, services, hardware engineerin­g, software developmen­t, operations and machine learning.

Dan Riccio, senior vice president of hardware engineerin­g, called remote work a “huge challenge” for device design that is usually done in lab settings. He said travel restrictio­ns in March were particular­ly tough because that is when engineers typically travel to China to help kick off manufactur­ing of products launching in the fall.

Apple worked around this, with engineers controllin­g robots from home and using iPads with augmented-reality software to guide technician­s in overseas factories, Riccio said. Staff also worked different hours to communicat­e better with staff already stationed in China. The “very best is yet to come,” Riccio added. The company is focused on developing augmented-reality and virtual-reality hardware products for debut in coming years, Bloomberg News has reported.

Johny Srouji, head of custom chip developmen­t, told staff about a cellular modem that went into developmen­t this year.

Chief operating officer Jeff Williams said Apple’s design team “discovered new ways of working” remotely, while operations executive Sabih Khan praised his team’s ability to produce products this year with minimal delays.

Eddy Cue discussed Apple’s services performanc­e this year, Lisa Jackson discussed Apple’s climate pledge, Deirdre O’Brien talked up retail efforts in the midst of Covid-19, while John Giannandre­a discussed AI efforts, including sharing that Apple moved up the release of its Apple Watch hand washing feature to this year.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company has learned a great deal about getting work done from outside the office.
REUTERS Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company has learned a great deal about getting work done from outside the office.

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