1. Uncompensated oncall is legally tricky in many EU companies, so a lot of midsize companies look at the cost of paying for oncall, or sometimes just the time of administering paying for oncall, and decide they can do without. High frequency oncall is also often restricted (e.g. more than 1 week in 6 is not legal here)
2. A lot of the smaller companies are europeans selling to europeans, and are much more used to a business culture of availability during office hours. Especially there's a bigger share of like b2b back office stuff in europe compared to like, restaurant POS systems.
3. Larger companies do seem more into follow the sun. A lot of the big tech in europe are subsidiaries of US companies, so if they're in Europe it means they've already opened one remote location, and therefore are more likely to have another (California, Europe, India is a super common arrangement)
1. Uncompensated oncall is legally tricky in many EU companies, so a lot of midsize companies look at the cost of paying for oncall, or sometimes just the time of administering paying for oncall, and decide they can do without. High frequency oncall is also often restricted (e.g. more than 1 week in 6 is not legal here)
2. A lot of the smaller companies are europeans selling to europeans, and are much more used to a business culture of availability during office hours. Especially there's a bigger share of like b2b back office stuff in europe compared to like, restaurant POS systems.
3. Larger companies do seem more into follow the sun. A lot of the big tech in europe are subsidiaries of US companies, so if they're in Europe it means they've already opened one remote location, and therefore are more likely to have another (California, Europe, India is a super common arrangement)