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How tech companies from Google to Salesforce are planning to reopen offices and bring employees back to work in the wake of the coronavirus crisis

  • Tech companies are starting to reveal their plans for sending employees back to the office in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak.
  • While many companies have said their employees can continue working remotely, others, like Apple, have had workers reporting to their jobs since May.
  • Regardless of when tech companies return to full capacity, the open-floor-plan office and free snacks Silicon Valley is famous for seem like a thing of the past.
  • Companies like Facebook and Google are eliminating all-you-can-eat cafeterias in favor of boxed lunches, and companies like Salesforce are adding glass dividers to employee desks.
  • Elevators and conference rooms will have limited capacity, and perks like gyms and nap rooms will be shut down completely.

As countries around the world begin gradually reopening businesses in the wake of the coronavirus crisis, tech companies have begun asking: what do offices look like after a pandemic?

While companies like Apple have had employees reporting to the office since May, others, like Twitter and Facebook, have assured employees that while offices may reopen, employees won't be due back for the rest of the year — or longer — if they prefer staying home.

But the tech world still has to decide what to do about the hundreds of thousands of square feet of office space in their portfolios, particularly in places like the San Francisco Bay Area, where companies like Salesforce and Google are based.

In Salesforce's case, the company wrote a 21-page handbook for reopening after closing its doors in March, according to The New York Times' Natasha Singer. Its plan includes rethinking some of the materials inside the office, adding glass dividers, and mandating social distancing, even in elevators.

Here's how major tech companies are thinking about the future of their offices and their plans for sending employees back to work.

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