Current:Home > NewsAirbnb let its workers live and work anywhere. Spoiler: They're loving it -Wealth Empowerment Zone
Airbnb let its workers live and work anywhere. Spoiler: They're loving it
View
Date:2025-04-26 11:43:16
When Carrie Kissell learned that her employer, Airbnb, was letting people live and work anywhere, she was on a sailboat off the coast of Key Biscayne, enjoying some time off with her partner.
The thought came to her: Why not just stay on the boat?
"It was this opportunity I couldn't not take," says Kissell, an internal events planner formerly based in San Francisco.
Her weekday routine for the next three months was typical — eat breakfast, open laptop, attend meetings, get stuff done.
"And then when the workday was over, I'd close my laptop and you know, go snorkeling," she says.
Work from home, work from the office, work from Argentina
At a time when more and more workers are finding themselves back in their offices at least a few days a week, Airbnb is going full throttle on flexibility. This week marks one year since the company announced its Live and Work Anywhere policy, and now, it's time to gloat.
"The business has actually never performed better since we moved to this program," says Airbnb Chief Financial Officer Dave Stephenson. "It's working really well for us."
Other companies, including tech ones, are taking a very different path.
The Pew Research Center found that among people whose jobs can be done remotely, just over a third are still working from home all the time, down from 43% a year ago.
At Airbnb, all but a very few employees have a choice: They can work from home (anywhere in the country where they're based), or they can go into an Airbnb office (there are 26 of them around the world).
Regardless of where they live in their home country, they keep their same salary.
And they aren't bound by geography, with the company allowing them to work in over 170 other countries for up to 90 days per year per country. Airbnb is talking to governments abroad about making it easier for all people to work around the world.
Talent doesn't want to be tied down
There is an obvious business interest here. People who can jet off somewhere with their laptops are potential Airbnb guests and hosts.
Freeing people from the office has also provided savings for the company, whose office footprint is now less than half of what it was before the pandemic.
Still, Stephenson insists that Live and Work Anywhere is really about winning the global war for talent.
"The best talent in the world is not all within a 50-mile radius of San Francisco," he says.
And that talent, Stephenson says, no longer wants to be tied down.
Before the pandemic, 95% of Airbnb employees lived near a company office. Now, almost a quarter of employees are more than 50 miles from an office, beyond a comfortable commute.
A migration out of San Francisco
Steve Stecher has gone even farther than an hour's drive.
Stecher moved his family out of a one-bedroom apartment in San Francisco during the pandemic, and since last fall they have spent most of their time in Buenos Aires.
That has dramatically changed their financial picture, says Stecher, a senior manager of quality assurance at Airbnb.
"Don't repeat this to my boss, but I think it's about 30%, or maybe 40% maximum, of the cost of living in the Bay Area," he says.
Stecher manages a team of about 140 people, many of whom have also moved out of California, but primarily to the Midwest and East Coast where they have family, he says.
"We did used to have a lot of fun in person," Stecher says about one of the tradeoffs in his new life.
Airbnb now flies teams in for regular in-person gatherings, which the company sees as critical to success.
"We are not remote first. We are just being intentional about how we gather," says Stephenson. "It's not a random three days a week where you hope to run into people at a water cooler."
Deploying a team called Ground Control, Airbnb works to ensure that the right people are in the right place at the right time for these large gatherings.
"We're still learning the right rhythms for when people are getting together," Stephenson says. "I think that's the biggest challenge that we have."
Catering to different needs, and a healthy bottom line
Airbnb added 900,000 hosts last year, reaching a total of 6.6 million worldwide. Revenue growth has been strong. Stephenson sees these as signs the company is moving in the right direction.
Moreover, employees are happy. Airbnb's attrition rate is close to an all-time low and falling, the company says.
And Airbnb's goal of hiring more women and under-represented minorities has gotten a boost from the new policy.
"Now that we're in a live anywhere context, it really gives us an opportunity to cater to different needs," says Benny Etienne, a leader of Black@, the company's affinity group for Black employees. "Within a diverse group, we all have very diverse identities and diverse realities."
So far, only about 20% of Airbnb employees have taken advantage of Live and Work Anywhere to relocate domestically or travel abroad.
Etienne, who works for Ground Control out of Airbnb's Montreal office, is encouraging anyone who can take their work somewhere else to try it, at least for a week.
"The change of scenery has a huge impact on your mental health," she says on a call from Mérida, Mexico, where she's spent most of the winter and spring.
Farther south, the savings that Stecher and his family have enjoyed since leaving San Francisco have allowed his wife, Ana Ruiz, who worked in banking, to stay home with their children in Buenos Aires and also to travel, something the family is passionate about.
"We were just in our own little world in the U.S.," says Ruiz, who grew up in Mexico. "Now, to be in different parts of the world and live the culture and experience the food... and speaking a different language, it's just amazing. It's just so nice."
veryGood! (36254)
Related
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Details of Matthew Perry's Will Revealed
- NFL free agency winners, losers: Cowboys wisely opt not to overspend on Day 1
- Scott Peterson appears virtually in California court as LA Innocence Project takes up murder case
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- No, the Bengals' Joe Burrow isn't MAGA like friend Nick Bosa, but there are questions
- Dan + Shay serenade 'The Voice' contestant and her fiancé, more highlights from auditions
- Alito extends Supreme Court pause of SB4, Texas immigration law that would allow state to arrest migrants
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- What was nearly nude John Cena really wearing at the Oscars?
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Proof Channing Tatum Is Already a Part of Zoë Kravitz’s Family
- Viral video of Biden effigy beating prompts calls for top Kansas Republican leaders to resign
- Beyoncé reveals 'Act II' album title: Everything we know so far about 'Cowboy Carter'
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- West Virginia GOP County Commissioners arrested over skipping meetings in protest
- Kentucky rising fast in NCAA tournament bracketology: Predicting men's March Madness field
- New York’s budget season starts with friction over taxes and education funding
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Proof Brittany and Patrick Mahomes' 2 Kids Were the MVPs of Their Family Vacation
Purple Ohio? Parties in the former bellwether state take lessons from 2023 abortion, marijuana votes
Lake Minnetonka just misses breaking 100-year record, ice remains after warm winter
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Proof Jax Taylor and Brittany Cartwright's Marriage Was Imploding Months Before Separation
Peter Navarro, former Trump White House adviser, ordered to report to federal prison by March 19
Jury sees bedroom photo of empty box that held gun used in Michigan school shooting