RTO mandates backfire as 72% of workers see ‘stealth layoff’ — Enhancv

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — A survey of 1,000 United States full-time workers subject to stricter return-to-office (RTO) policies reveals a profound breakdown in workplace trust, with 72% of employees believing mandates are a deliberate tool to drive voluntary attrition.
Rather than fostering collaboration, the push for physical presence has triggered a wave of strategic resistance, including “coffee badging” and on-site job hunting, signaling a fundamental shift in the employer-employee social contract.
The stealth layoff theory erodes trust
The primary driver of employee resentment stems from a widespread belief that RTO mandates are not about culture or collaboration, but about reducing headcount without paying severance.
This stealth layoff perception is not limited to a vocal minority; even among the remaining 28%, trust in corporate motives remains exceptionally low, with the average trust score for RTO’s stated purpose—productivity—sitting at a mediocre 59 out of 100.
This massive trust deficit has effectively canceled the psychological contract between employers and employees. When workers believe the “culture-building” narrative is merely a cover for cost-cutting, the internal dynamic shifts from contribution to self-preservation.
One respondent captured the prevailing sentiment, describing the mandate as a “slap in the face” after 16 years of dedication, while others reported increased stress and decreased productivity due to lengthy commutes, directly contradicting the stated goals of the mandates.
Enhancv notes, “The recurring themes are clear: productivity is down, stress is up, and the ‘culture’ being built is one of resentment.”
Tactical presence and rise of ‘coffee badging’
In response to perceived corporate duplicity, employees are weaponizing their physical presence by prioritizing personal security over organizational goals.
The survey identified “coffee badging”—swiping in and leaving early to meet tracking requirements—as a dominant trend, with 46% of workers admitting to it.
This behavior becomes normalized among those who suspect a hidden agenda, turning the office into a space of performative compliance rather than genuine productivity.
The data further reveals a “surveillance paradox,” in which aggressive badge-tracking backfires by undermining mission alignment.
Workers who are strictly monitored reported the lowest trust scores (50/100), feeling like “factory laborers,” while those who regularly coffee badge but have high trust in their managers scored significantly higher (77/100).
This collapse in trust turns the office into a liability, with 36% of surveyed employees admitting they have applied for new jobs while sitting at their current desks, and another 32% intentionally reducing their daily output as a form of quiet protest.
Enhancv warns, “By forcing a physical presence that this generation views as performative, companies may be solving a short-term real estate problem while creating a long-term retention crisis with the very talent they claim to be developing.”

Independent




