CEO of Microsoft AI Mustafa Suleyman is taking a far harder line on remote work than most of his colleagues at the tech giant, requiring his team to spend more time in the office and embracing open-floor workspaces that many engineers typically resist.
Although Microsoft recently implemented a policy requiring all employees to come into the office at least three days a week, starting January 26, Suleyman has raised the bar even higher in his own organization. According to internal documents viewed by Business Insider, his employees who live near an office have to work on-site at least four days a week; any exceptions must be approved directly by an executive reporting to Suleyman himself.
The AI executive’s philosophy is not merely about showing up. He happens to be a strong advocate for open office layouts, an idea that remains divisive in the tech industry and particularly contentious among engineers-who often turn to quiet, private spaces for deep focus work.
“I very much believe in the in-person working culture,” Suleyman told Business Insider. “We’ve been defragmenting our culture and trying to concentrate.”
Suleyman’s Collaborative ‘Neighborhoods’ and Silicon Valley Shift, A New Era for Microsoft’s AI Strategy
Suleyman has installed what he refers to as “neighbourhoods” in his office layouts, groups of 20 to 30 open desks placed in close proximity without the walls and doors that many employees prefer. He makes no apology for his dislike of closed offices in which workers can shut themselves off from the team.
“Much better for collaboration,” Suleyman said. “Everyone can see everyone else who’s in. You can feel the buzz, like there’s a real intensity about the place, and it just creates a lot more, like informal collaboration. It’s so much better.”
The approach reflects Mr. Suleyman’s broader management style, which prizes spontaneous interaction and visible energy over the privacy and quiet that many knowledge workers say they need to get the best work done.

Open floor plans have been a contentious topic in corporate America for years, with proponents like Mr. Suleyman arguing that they foster collaboration, while critics point to research showing they can reduce productivity and employee satisfaction.
Suleyman’s geographic preferences also buck norms for Microsoft leadership. While most executives are based at the company’s headquarters in Redmond, Wash., Suleyman divides his time between Silicon Valley and Seattle. The majority of his team is also located in California’s tech hub rather than the Pacific Northwest.
“There’s just huge talent density here,” he said of Silicon Valley. “It’s the place to be.” This Silicon Valley-centric approach represents something of a cultural shift for Microsoft, long identified with its Seattle-area roots. But as the company competes intensely in artificial intelligence of the most competitive talent markets in tech-Suleyman’s strategy reflects the reality of where many top AI researchers and engineers would rather work.
Varying Office Requirements and the Remote Work Tension at Microsoft
Approaches to office requirements at Microsoft vary widely throughout the vast organization. It gives individual teams and divisions considerable flexibility to set policies in broad guidelines. For example, the Corporate, External, and Legal Affairs team has already been operating on a four-day-in-office schedule for about a year.
Other teams at Microsoft that focus on the development of AI have implemented less strict policies. For instance, there are no specific return-to-office requirements in Scott Guthrie’s Cloud + AI organization beyond the company-wide minimums.
Jay Parikh’s Core AI group will enforce the standard three-day-per-week guideline for most offices starting in February, though GitHub will be exempt from that requirement, according to the internal documents.
The different approaches to remote work reflect an ongoing tension in the technology industry. Many companies fought to get employees back into offices after the pandemic, yet workers have become accustomed to flexibility and often cite remote work as one of the top conditions for job satisfaction.
Leaders like Suleyman who push for more in-person time argue that innovation and collaboration suffer when teams are distributed, but employees and some researchers counter that productivity metrics often don’t support this argument.
As Microsoft continues to invest heavily in AI and competes with rivals like Google and OpenAI, Suleyman’s strict office culture may become a test case for whether face-to-face interaction truly drives superior results in the development of leading-edge technology, or whether it simply makes recruiting top talent more challenging in an industry where working remotely has become the norm.




