NEW YORK โ€” In what experts are calling "the most predictable research since Big Tobacco funded that lung health study," commercial real estate giant JLL has released its Workforce Preference Barometer 2025, a comprehensive $400,000 survey of 8,700 workers across 31 countries that has scientifically concluded โ€” you'll never guess โ€” that people should probably go to offices more. The offices that JLL, a company with $16.6 billion in annual revenue derived almost entirely from commercial real estate, happens to own and manage.

"We approached this research with complete objectivity," said a JLL spokesperson, straightening papers on a desk inside one of the company's many, many office buildings. "It's pure coincidence that our findings align perfectly with our business model. Science works in mysterious ways."

๐Ÿ’Ž The Prophet Marginโ„ข

JLL โ€” a commercial real estate company with $16.6 billion in revenue that makes money when people go to offices โ€” has released a study confirming people should go to offices. In an act of selfless inquiry, they surveyed 8,700 workers across 31 countries to scientifically confirm what every human has known since the invention of "jobs": being exhausted is bad. The study recommends more offices. JLL's stock rose 2% on the news.

The report, which took researchers approximately zero seconds to reach its predetermined conclusion, reveals what JLL is calling a "fundamental shift" in workplace dynamics: The Return to Office wars are over, and the Time Wars have begun. Workers, having largely surrendered on the question of "where" they work, are now mounting a desperate insurgency over "when."

"We've detected a troubling trend," the report notes, with the clinical detachment of a company that definitely doesn't have a financial stake in the outcome. "Workers seem to want 'autonomy over their schedules.' This is very concerning for reasons we will not specify but trust us."

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3. QuantumWorker โ€” 03:12.89
4. SchrodingersEmployee โ€” 03:45.01
5. Your Time: --:--.--

Among the report's most shocking discoveries: work-life balance has overtaken salary as the leading priority for office workers globally, cited by 65% of respondents. This represents what economists are calling "the first time in history workers have chosen sanity over a marginal pay increase that doesn't match inflation anyway."

๐Ÿ’Ž The Sanity Premiumโ„ข

For the first time in recorded capitalism, workers are choosing "mental health" over "a 4% raise that doesn't match inflation anyway." Economists are in crisis. The entire discipline assumed humans were rational actors who wanted money โ€” not "time with their children" or "to feel okay sometimes." Goldman Sachs has issued a note warning that "workers preferring sanity to salary" could impact shareholder value. The invisible hand is now visibly trembling.

The study also documented the rise of "coffee badging" โ€” the practice of hybrid workers badging into the office just long enough to have a cup of coffee before commuting somewhere else to continue working remotely. JLL researchers expressed dismay at this behavior, which they described as "technically complying with policy while fundamentally undermining its spirit," a description that also applies to most tax law.

"Workers have achieved quantum employment: existing in a superposition of 'present' and 'gone' โ€” observable only when HR checks the badge logs."โ€” Dr. Helena Verschwindung, Institute for Workplace Disappearing Acts
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Perhaps most alarming to JLL researchers was the discovery of what they're calling the "flexibility gap": 57% of employees believe flexible working hours would improve their quality of life, yet only 49% currently have access to this benefit. The remaining 8% โ€” trapped in what scientists are calling "the gap" โ€” are statistically likely to be reading this article from a bathroom stall during a meeting that could have been an email.

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The report warns that the "psychological contract" between workers and employers is at risk. For those unfamiliar with this term, a "psychological contract" is what HR departments call "basic human dignity" when they need to put it in a spreadsheet. The report notes that workers today want to be "visible, valued, and prepared for the future" โ€” a finding so revolutionary it has been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Stating the Obvious.

๐Ÿ’Ž The Psychological Contractโ„ข

Corporate America has discovered that employees are, technically, people. This finding has been classified as a "retention risk." HR departments have responded by adding "emotional wellbeing" to the same dashboard as printer toner levels and parking validation. Workers who previously wanted "money" now want to "feel valued" โ€” a request that has been escalated to Q3, pending budget review. The revolution will be KPI'd.

Enter Suzy Welch, the 66-year-old management guru who spent her formative years at Bain & Co. โ€” a consulting firm synonymous with "helping companies optimize headcount," which is business-speak for "laying people off" โ€” before ascending to Harvard Business Review royalty. In a recent podcast appearance, Welch graciously descended from her ivory tower to explain to baristas with master's degrees why they lack "hope."

"We believed that if you worked hard, you were rewarded for it," Welch observed, speaking from a life in which this was actually true. "And so this is the disconnect." She's right, of course. There is a disconnect. It's the disconnect between people who got rewarded for working hard and people who watched that stop happening.

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๐ŸŽ‰ BINGO! ๐ŸŽ‰

Congratulations! You've won the satisfaction of knowing corporate speak has consumed your life!

๐Ÿ† You're Still Not Getting A Raise ๐Ÿ†

"Gen Z thinks, 'Yeah, I watched what happened to my parents' career and I watched what happened to my older sister's career and they worked very hard and they still got laid off.'"โ€” Suzy Welch, Management Guru, Former Bain Consultant, Definitely Not Part Of The Problem

๐Ÿ’Ž The Boomer Whispererโ„ข

Suzy Welch (66), who built her career at Bain & Co. โ€” a firm synonymous with "helping companies optimize headcount" โ€” has identified why young people lack hope. From her professorship at NYU, the former Harvard Business Review editor-in-chief has concluded that Gen Z watched their parents "work hard and still get laid off" and somehow developed trust issues. The consulting industry is baffled. Bain could not be reached for comment as they were in the middle of a restructuring.

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The report found that nearly 40% of global office workers report feeling "overwhelmed," and burnout has become a "serious threat to employers' operations." Note the framing: burnout is a threat to operations, not to the humans experiencing it. This is what happens when you let a real estate company write about human psychology โ€” the building's feelings are considered too.

Among employees considering quitting in the next 12 months, 57% report suffering from burnout. This figure rises dramatically among caregivers and what the report chillingly calls "the squeezed middle" โ€” corporate euphemism for the 42% of employees simultaneously raising children, caring for aging parents, and answering Slack messages at 11 PM while being classified as "not quite senior enough for flexibility."

๐Ÿ“‰ The Hope Deficit Quizโ„ข ๐Ÿ“‰

Are you Gen Z enough to despair? Take our scientifically questionable assessment!

Your Hope Deficit Score--

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Calculating your relationship with late-stage capitalism...

JLL's proposed solution to this crisis? "Tailored flexibility" and "smart lighting." Also "space-booking systems" and "extended access hours." If you're detecting a pattern here โ€” that every solution involves more office infrastructure โ€” congratulations, you've identified the conflict of interest that somehow escaped the study's peer reviewers.

๐Ÿ’Ž The Photon Solutionโ„ข

Corporate America's response to a generation facing climate collapse, unaffordable housing, evaporating pensions, and the death of upward mobility? Smart lighting. Also: "space-booking systems" and "extended access hours." The beatings will continue until morale improves, but rest assured โ€” they'll be circadian-rhythm-optimized beatings you pre-scheduled via an app that tracks your location. Namaste.

Meanwhile, the same report notes that employers have doubled their surveillance of workers since 2020, with 60% now tracking employee activity. This surveillance increase correlates perfectly with the decline in the "psychological contract" โ€” a coincidence so obvious that even a commercial real estate company accidentally documented it.

๐ŸŽช Match The Corporate Solution To The Existential Problemโ„ข ๐ŸŽช

Drag each "solution" to its corresponding problem. Spoiler: None of them match. That's the joke.

Corporate "Solutions" ๐Ÿ› ๏ธ

๐Ÿ’ก Smart Lighting
๐Ÿ• Pizza Party
๐Ÿ“ฑ Mindfulness App
๐Ÿ“ Ping Pong Table

Actual Problems ๐Ÿ˜ฐ

๐ŸŒ Climate Anxiety
๐Ÿ  Can't Afford Housing
๐Ÿ’ผ No Job Security
๐Ÿ”ฅ Burnout

โŒ WRONG โŒ

Correct! None of these solutions address any of these problems.
That's the entire point. Welcome to corporate wellness.

๐ŸŽ‰ You understand systemic failure! ๐ŸŽ‰

๐Ÿ’Ž The Panopticon Paradoxโ„ข

Since 2020, employers have doubled keystroke tracking, badge monitoring, and "productivity software" โ€” then commissioned a $400,000 study to understand why workers feel "psychologically unsafe." The same companies monitoring bathroom breaks are reportedly "confused" by declining trust scores. In related news, man who installed cameras in every room of his house wonders why his roommates seem "distant."

The report concludes with an invitation to the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit in Atlanta this May, where executives can pay thousands of dollars to hear other executives explain why workers who can't afford rent seem "disengaged." Continental breakfast is included. Hope is not.

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๐Ÿ’ฅ YOU HAVE REACHED CRITICAL BURNOUT ๐Ÿ’ฅ

You are now among the 57% considering quitting in the next 12 months.

HR has been notified. A pizza party is being scheduled.

๐Ÿ’Ž The Innovation Summit Griftโ„ข

This May, for the price of a median American's monthly rent, you can attend the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit in Atlanta to hear executives explain why workers who can't afford rent are "disengaged." Network with leaders who've never missed a meal discussing why employees seem "anxious." Parking is $45/day. The continental breakfast is free โ€” because you're the product. Register now; seats are limited but the irony is bottomless.

Perhaps the most telling finding in JLL's report is buried near the end: "Around one in three [workers] say they could leave for better career development or reskilling opportunities, while the same proportion is reevaluating the role of work in their lives." Translation: a third of your workforce is planning to leave, and another third is questioning whether capitalism is a viable system. The remaining third is presumably too burned out to respond to surveys.

๐Ÿ”ฎ Management Guru Says What?โ„ข ๐Ÿ”ฎ

Is this quote from a $2,000/hour consultant, a fortune cookie, or a random word generator? You'd be surprised how indistinguishable they are!

"Loading wisdom..."

Synergy Detection Accuracy: 0/0

The report's final recommendation is for companies to abandon "one-size-fits-all" approaches in favor of "tailored flexibility." This is excellent advice that JLL itself has ignored by producing a one-size-fits-all report applicable to 31 countries, treating the burnout crisis in Tokyo the same as in Topeka, and recommending "smart lighting" as a universal solution to the existential dread of late-stage capitalism.

๐Ÿ’Ž The Audacity of Hope (Deficit)โ„ข

Gen Z's radical proposition โ€” that working hard should occasionally result in not being fired โ€” has been formally diagnosed as a "generational disconnect" by the consulting class. The same industry that invented "synergistic rightsizing," "proactive career transitions," and "we're a family here (until Q4)" is baffled that young people don't believe hard work equals security. Experts recommend Gen Z "reframe their mindset," perhaps via a $12.99/month meditation app developed by a company that just laid off 30% of its workforce.

๐Ÿค Psychological Contract Negotiation Simulatorโ„ข ๐Ÿค

Try to get basic dignity from HR. Spoiler: You cannot win. That's the point.

๐Ÿ‘”
HR REPRESENTATIVE

Hi there! I understand you wanted to discuss your "work-life balance concerns." Let me just pull up your productivity metrics real quick...

REQUEST PROCESSED

DENIED

Your request has been escalated to Q4, pending budget review. In the meantime, have you tried our new mindfulness app?

As for the workers themselves โ€” the 8,700 souls across 31 countries who participated in this survey โ€” their message has been received loud and clear. They want time. They want flexibility. They want to feel valued and prepared for the future. They want the promise they were made โ€” that hard work leads to reward โ€” to actually be kept.

JLL's response to this cry for help? More offices. With better lighting.

The Time Wars have begun. And as with most wars waged by corporations against workers, the outcome will be determined by whoever can afford to hold out longer. Workers, exhausted and burned out, may not have the stamina. But they have one advantage: the ability to badge in, grab a coffee, and disappear โ€” existing in a quantum state of presence and absence, a Schrรถdinger's Employee whose engagement can never be fully measured because they are simultaneously at their desk and absolutely not.

The revolution, it turns out, will be coffee-badged.

๐Ÿ’Ž The Loyalty Paradoxโ„ข (BONUS DIAMOND)

High salaries remain the #1 reason workers leave jobs. Schedule flexibility is the #1 reason they stay. This means corporations are paying premium prices to acquire employees, then losing them for free over something that costs nothing. Somewhere, an MBA is staring at this data and concluding the solution is "a pizza party." The pizza has been ordered. It will arrive cold. No one will eat it. It will be photographed for LinkedIn.

JLL's stock rose 2% following the report's release. The irony was not included in the earnings call.