I keep coming back to how it's beneficial for the corporate overlords financially to not have to have massive offices, overheads, and all those in office perks. This keeps me believing WFH is the future.
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Optionality is key, that's what I'm worried about losing in the next market downturn. Letting people work from home is great.
Forcing people to work from home to save on office real estate costs, preferences older and wealthier workers who don't need to build work relationships and can afford a home with an office.
In my experience, job hunting early in your career is a pure fishing expedition. You've got to constantly be out there looking, you take even the small jobs (I started doing software at a tiny health care IT company for $17/hr while friends were making $30/hr at better firms), and try to change jobs every three years until you find your ceiling.
The early shitty jobs give you an opportunity to network and make you more attractive to recruiters. They also tend to be much more friendly to "work from home" because they hate maintaining an office as much as you hate driving to one.
The bigger corporate positions will have departments you can move between if you don't like where you currently are but don't want to leave the firm. But then you have to start making trade off between pay/position and work from home.
When I was starting out I had to create a fake company website with fake emails to use as references. Finally found a company that bit (off of Craigslist). I think the guy who was hiring knew, but was impressed with the effort.
But once I got my foot in the door things got much easier. Doesn't take me very long to find work now days.