Zero intention to speak badly of the deceased… Just an anecdote - I started at IBM in the early 2000s right out of college. At the time his immediate legacy was the divestiture of a big chunk of IBMs real estate. As a new IBMer that meant hot-desking if I went to the office and a very liberal work from home policy 20 years before its time. I love work from home but experienced first hand how hard it can be on young people. In my first professional job I maybe saw my bosses (yes plural because of org changes and the IBM matrix) twice a year.
> In my first professional job I maybe saw my bosses (yes plural because of org changes and the IBM matrix) twice a year.
Did this work at all? How did you feel throughout it? What about your colleagues?
I did a couple of internships at IBM (1995 in Boca Raton and 2000 in Hawthorn). It was hard on young people even if you were in the office. You'd see your manager occasionally, but...it just felt like a place lacking in energy and was way too big corp to be very interesting. IBM is a big reason I delayed starting my career via grad school, a post doc in Switzerland, and then working for Microsoft in China of all places. I just didn't want the mundane techie experience, and was sort of so traumatized by IBM that I searched for different paths.