HomeWorldAfter backlash, AT&T CEO says 'WFO or quit' memo was a mistake

After backlash, AT&T CEO says 'WFO or quit' memo was a mistake

He keeps the return-to-office push, but admits the tone and timing of his message made it harder to land.

December 17, 2025 / 12:52 IST
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AT&T CEO John Stankey (Courtesy: Reuters file photo)
AT&T CEO John Stankey (Courtesy: Reuters file photo)

AT&T Chief Executive Officer John Stankey has acknowledged that an internal memo widely read as “work from office or quit” was a misstep, after it sparked sharp criticism from employees and outsiders.

Stankey revisited the directive he issued in August, saying he would handle the communication differently in hindsight. He argued that the company was trying to reset expectations around workplace presence and culture, but conceded the message came across as unnecessarily blunt. He also suggested the company had been too slow to address the cultural shift it wanted, and that the wider context should have been laid out more clearly.

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The original note quickly became a flashpoint in the ongoing fight over post-pandemic work norms. Inside organisations, return-to-office rules often collide with the habits employees built over several years of remote or hybrid work. Outside the organisation, hard-line language can feed a broader narrative that companies are rolling back flexibility without offering a compelling reason.

Stankey’s comments are notable because they draw a distinction between the policy and the presentation. Reports indicate he did not reverse the return-to-office policy itself. Instead, he framed the controversy as a lesson in how culture change should be led and explained. That approach reflects a growing reality for large employers: even when leadership wants more in-person attendance, the method of getting there can either build trust or burn it.