I’m a full stack engineer and founder based in San Francisco, also open to remote. I’ve spent over ten years building products in fintech, SaaS, and edtech. I co-founded a YC-backed startup that raised more than $2M and got enterprise adoption, and I was the founding engineer at Lendtable where I grew the team from zero to ten and built systems that handled millions of dollars while also boosting sales conversions. I love early stage work, taking ideas from nothing to launch, modernizing messy code, and shipping fast across the ENTIRE stack
Take this with a grain of salt but I read on a similar Reddit post the return to office is mainly due to the tax incentives the city/county/state provided Amazon for having their offices located there. The Reddit user made a claim which Amazon could only receive those tax benefits if their workers actually worked in person at the location.
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I can see this being a valid argument for return to office for a lot of corporations, if its actually true. The tax benefits are too good to pass up and in office has been the status quo forever.
I’m a full stack engineer and founder based in San Francisco, also open to remote. I’ve spent over ten years building products in fintech, SaaS, and edtech. I co-founded a YC-backed startup that raised more than $2M and got enterprise adoption, and I was the founding engineer at Lendtable where I grew the team from zero to ten and built systems that handled millions of dollars while also boosting sales conversions. I love early stage work, taking ideas from nothing to launch, modernizing messy code, and shipping fast across the ENTIRE stack