People lucky enough to have the option are looking forward to working from home more after the pandemic, polls suggest — provided they’re not schooling from home at the same time. And polls also suggest employers are looking forward to offering that flexibility. Momentum is building for a “hybrid” workplace, according to experts, which would most likely allow for two to three days per week at home. Still, as vaccine rollouts gather pace and economies reopen, there doesn’t seem to be much daylight between the concept of “office-first hybrid” and simply getting staff back to their desks. Google parent Alphabet Inc. last week told staff to prepare a return to their desks by Sept. 1 and that anyone wanting to work remotely would have to get prior approval. Amazon.com Inc. also called for an “office-centric” return to work. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. bankers are dutifully trooping back to headquarters after scathing comments from Chief Executive Officer David Solomon, who called working from home an “aberration” that was bad for innovation and collaboration and said it was not “the new normal.”