Los Angeles Times

It’s off to work they go at Disney

CEO Bob Iger orders a March return to office to encourage in-person creativity.

- By Ryan Faughnder

The work-from-home era is over at the Walt Disney Co.

Chief Executive Bob Iger has ordered employees to return to the office four days a week — Monday through Thursday — starting March 1, according to a Monday email to staff viewed by The Times.

Iger, who returned to the chief executive role less than two months ago, described the change as a way to encourage in-person collaborat­ion in service of creativity at the Burbank-based company.

“As you’ve heard me say many times, creativity is the heart and soul of who we are and what we do at Disney,” Iger said in the message. “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. It is my belief that working together more in-person will benefit the company’s creativity, culture and our employees’ careers.”

CNBC first reported on the change.

Corporate leaders have been grappling with how to manage employees’ return to offices after many establishe­d f lexible, hybrid schedules during the COVID-19 pandemic that allowed them to work from anywhere, saving money and time from long commutes. Many of the biggest employ

ers in the Los Angeles area are focused on technology, entertainm­ent and media, and they view their company culture as a key to recruiting and retaining top talent.

Companies have adopted widely varying policies during the last three years in order to balance their own needs with employee demand for f lexibility as hybrid schedules became more firmly accepted. Peloton Interactiv­e called employees back Tuesday through Thursday, while Apple brought staffers back in on Tuesdays, Thursdays and an additional day determined by individual teams.

The return-to-office plan is just one of the significan­t changes Iger has brought to the entertainm­ent giant since his return in November, when the company’s board of directors recruited him to replace Chief Executive Bob Chapek, who was dismissed amid the firm’s struggles just months after receiving a contract extension.

Iger has tasked a team of executives to restructur­e Disney, unwinding Chapek’s strategy of separating creative decisions from distributi­on plans. The move is meant to return power to the company’s creative leaders.

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