GM to move hundreds of salaried workers in Southeast Michigan locations

General Motors is shifting hundreds of salaried workers among its southeast Michigan locations and declaring where some new hires will work as it prepares to bring its remote workforce back to the office starting this summer.

The location shifts, GM leaders say, will improve collaboration among teams.

“The moves also reflect adapting to post-pandemic workplaces where the future will be more flexible,” said GM spokesman David Caldwell. 

The Renaissance Center in downtown Detroit sits in the background along the Detroit RiverWalk on March 11, 2021.

GM leaders held team meetings on Wednesday with white-collar workers to discuss ways in which the workplace might change for some of them when they return to the office, Caldwell said.

“These were internal meetings on the subject of the ongoing planning for return-to-work, in which there was active discussion on the benefits of remote work and how to keep some of that going forward,” Caldwell said in an email. “This was not a roll-out of a plan, however, but it’s definitely progress towards that.”

Going forward GM expects more ability for people to work from home, while also being able to come to the workplace for collaboration, Caldwell said. But he stopped short of defining how GM’s workspace will look in the future, saying that is still being decided. 

But he said while Detroit remains GM’s global headquarters, more of GM’s product-oriented teams will be based in Warren, which has been the company’s hub for its product development for some 60 years.

The automaker is taking these steps:

  • About 900 workers from its Customer Care and Aftersales offices in Grand Blanc will move to the Global Technical Center in Warren.
  • GM will move several marketing and product people from its global headquarters in the Renaissance Center in Detroit to the Technical Center in Warren. GM is still determining how many employees will make this move. 
  • Finally, GM will hire a “significant number” of new IT specialists who will be assigned to work at the RenCen.

The new hires are part of GM’s announcement last fall that it would hire 3,000 new technical experts this year. A “significant portion” of those hired will be in IT jobs, Caldwell said. GM has hired about half of that 3,000 target to date. Some hires will work in Austin, Texas, he said.

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