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CEO Pushes Employees To Return To Office While Working Remotely, CTO’s Brilliant Response Shut It Down For Good

by Annie Nguyen
November 7, 2025
in Social Issues

Remote work became the norm so smoothly at this Spanish tech firm that even the pandemic barely registered. The original poster (OP) and the entire team had enjoyed loose work-from-home rules for years, hiring talent from cheaper regions and watching productivity soar.

Then a new CEO, hired in 2021 while living in rural England, began campaigning hard for everyone to return to the office.

The CTO, tired of the pressure, scheduled a mandatory all-hands Tuesday and promised to cover travel for anyone far away. Every developer showed up. Read on to see whose empty chair spoke louder than any email.

A remote CEO pushed hard for return-to-office while living rural areas, until the CTO orchestrated a full-team gathering that exposed his absence

CEO Pushes Employees To Return To Office While Working Remotely, CTO’s Brilliant Response Shut It Down For Good
Not the actual photo

CEO wants return to office, CTO plays it perfect?

I work for a spanish company, it's been like 7-8 years and we know each other pretty well.

I've known, and worked with, the CTO for like 10 years now. He's a cool guy that wants stuff done.

Even before 2020, the WFH (work from home) policy was extremely relaxed (you do

you and have things done by the time we need it, we're OK) so

when the pandemic came, the transition was as easy as it could get.

In fact, as a company and, specially on the tech team, we embraced the

opportunity and started hiring people from outside the city for a cheaper salary

than in the city but, for the people, a higher salary than the one

they could get without moving into the city. I even moved out of the city during that time.

Since CTO didn't want to be a sales guy, the company hired a CEO

in 2021, an englishman that came highly recommended and was stationed in his

rural house in the English countryside. Looked like a cool relaxed guy for a while.

Once the pandemic ended, he started pushing rather heavily for a return to office

(RTO) for everyone. He made polls, lengthy emails

to everyone about how this fostered relationships and whatnot.

He got really pushy, even complaining to CTO about it. So every time he

came to Spain, people that lived around the city would go to the office

just to be there so CEO was happy. And then, one time, CTO decided

that he had enough about the whole RTO mandate and CEO complaining.

So, on a random meeting of the tech team, CTO said "ok, next tuesday,

I want everyone on the office, if you live far away, book a train,

drive, whatever you have to do, I'll pay, but be here."

And so we did. That tuesday every single one of the tech team, including

people that took a 2 or 3 hour trip to get there, was in

the office. Guess who wasn't there? Yeah, the CEO.

So, CTO took a picture, emailed it to CEO saying something along the lines

of "if you can't lead by example, don't push my people to do things

that don't work" and we went to have a relaxing lunch and beers type of day.

Aftermath: RTO mandate never came to fruition, CEO was out of the company a

year later, we closed the office since everyone works 100% of the time from

home, and, to his dismay, CTO is now CTO and acting CEO and things are going smoothly.

TLDR: WFH CEO tries to have everyone RTO, CTO arranges a day to have

everyone in the office and asks CEO why he isn't there, so CEO stops complaining about RTO.

We’ve all lived through moments where workplace expectations collide with real lived reality, and where what’s “supposed to happen” conflicts with what actually makes sense for humans doing the work.

In those moments, true leadership isn’t about authority, but authenticity. And sometimes, it only takes one inconsistency to reveal whether a leader genuinely practices what they preach.

In this story, a team accustomed to trust, autonomy, and remote work suddenly faces pressure from a new CEO demanding a return to the office.

For many employees, that shift isn’t just logistical, it’s emotional. Work location becomes tied to dignity, respect, and whether leadership truly sees people as adults capable of self-management.

The CTO’s reaction reflects frustration not only at a policy, but at the disconnect between rhetoric and behavior. Meanwhile, the CEO’s insistence, and his own absence on the chosen day, likely stem from a desire to feel in control in a changing world, even if his actions undermined his message.

It’s a dynamic psychologists call “symbolic leadership.” According to Harvard behavioral scientist Francesca Gino, employees look less at what leaders say and more at what they model; when leaders contradict their own rules, trust erodes faster than policies change.

And trust is the currency remote work thrives on. Research from Stanford’s WFH studies backs this up, finding that autonomy increases productivity and loyalty, while forced in-office mandates tend to backfire when employees feel mistrusted or unseen.

In that light, the CTO’s move wasn’t rebellion; it was clarity. By guiding everyone into the office for one day and highlighting the CEO’s absence, he mirrored the CEO’s request back to him, offering an unspoken lesson: leadership by example matters more than emails or mandates.The quiet triumph wasn’t about “winning,” but restoring alignment between expectations and fairness.

It raises a deeper question many workplaces wrestle with now: Is the push for office time truly about collaboration, or about comfort for leaders struggling to adapt?

What do you think, when leaders push policies they don’t live by, is it calling them out accountability or confrontation? How should companies balance culture, trust, and the evolving way we work?

Check out how the community responded:

Redditors praised the clever compliance trap that spotlighted the CEO’s no-show

PN_Guin − Interesting twist on compliance by forcing everyone to comply (once), to out the only one that didn't (the ceo).

Dubai_Donkey − you don't explain why the CEO didn't come. .. If the Owner is asking everyone to be there what was his excuse?

Shared tales of remote bosses enforcing RTO while skipping the office themselves

Attygalle − We got a new manager around the end of 2020 - pandemic in

full swing, everybody WFH. The manager lived more than 2 hours from the office

but was adamant that once the pandemic was over, he would be in the

office every week. Fast forward to early 2022 (I guess? Not sure about exact

timelines) and all restrictions were gone in our country.

Guess who didn't show up in the office? Our new manager. So what, you

might think. Guess who was pushing every other team member to go to the

office at least twice a week? You get it, the exact same manager who didn't come to the office.

He either was an Academy Award winning actor or just really that thick, because

people called him out on it and he simply played as if he didn't

understand it at all. "I live more than two hours away, my situation is different!" Total clown.

gsadamb − When I worked at Google, there was a tech leader, Urs Holzle, who

was in charge of most of engineering. During the pandemic, he fucked off to

New Zealand. Then Google started pushing RTO hard. Urs is still in NZ.

I think they restructured him into a senior advisor role who no longer has

direct reports, because they probably couldn't justify it to employees they were forcing

to RTO. I'm sure he's still paid as much as he was though.

Experience-Agreeable − Man, I will always remember the bosses at my job during Covid

denying most people their wfh request. My boss moved to Hawaii and worked from

home while the rest of us had to come in.

Joked power suits those who dodge it, with CTO secretly running the show

RancidHorseJizz − The CTO was already the CEO; he was just in denial.

TheRacoonNinja − The best people to put in positions of power are the ones that don't want it.

masterspeler: Questioned if city salaries stayed put after rural moves.

masterspeler − we embraced the opportunity and started hiring people from outside the city

for a cheaper salary than in the city but, for the people, a higher salary than the one they could get

without moving into the city. I even moved out of the city during that time.

Did you get to keep your city salary, or was it adjusted to match your fellow non city colleagues'?

Noted WFH savings on real estate and selective office days for real reasons only

NPHighview − I'm retired now, but still live in the vicinity of the company I'd

worked at for 12 years. Even before the pandemic, work culture was heavily email

& videoconference based. During the pandemic, they instituted WFH for everyone but the core

staff required to run the manufacturing facilities, and only just enough support staff (cafeteria, security).

WFH is still in effect, in July 2024. This means that numerous buildings on

the large company campus are no longer utilized. As a result, the CEO and

finance staff have been off-loading the older buildings on the periphery of the company campus.

One is now an indoor athletic facility; others have been sold as office buildings

to other companies, and the very oldest buildings have been demolished. I'm certain

that the net result has been financially positive for the company. At this very

minute, I'm monitoring an online auction of office and outdoor furniture left over

from the old buildings for my own home.

Extremely high quality stuff, fairly lightly used, and familiar, since I worked there

for 12 years. Literally pennies on the dollar.

mrpanicy − The people pushing for RTO in my office are in most every day.

You know who isn't? Everyone else. It's fantastic. On the days that it made

sense for me to go there it would be the executive management team and

a handful of people that live walking distance to the office OR completely new

people who still care about looking good to management.

What do I mean by good reasons to go into the office? Big project

kick-offs Check-in meetings with manager / annual reviews Client meetings Occasional

social gatherings with your immediate team What are bad reasons to go into an office?

It's a day of the week You need to go in 2 or 3 days every week because I said so Arbitrary days assigned to arbitrary people

One countryside CEO’s RTO sermons vanished the moment his empty chair starred in a team photo, proving hypocrisy crumbles faster than commutes add up. The CTO didn’t fight; he just mirrored the mandate back, and poof, office shuttered, remote reign eternal.

Leadership lesson: preach from the trenches you demand. So tell me, ever called out a remote boss’s double standard? Would you trek hours for that photo op? Spill your hybrid horror (or hero) stories below, WFH high-fives welcome!

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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