Future of Work Roundup: August 26
A look at “quiet quitting,” plus some stats on how too many meetings are bumming us out.
This week’s Future of Work Roundup includes how more companies are finally understanding the necessity for hybrid work, plus why multitasking during a meeting may not be so bad.
From coast to coast, the biggest names in business are shying away from “requiring” people back into the office because, frankly, the people aren’t having it.
We’ve got the C-Suite shivering in their boots, do we?
The bottom line: Commutes, childcare, and Covid are the biggest reasons big orgs are seeing not only the beauty of hybrid work, but the dire need to properly invest in their hybrid workplaces.
First, it was the millennial-led companies; next came the aforementioned, buttoned-up boomers to finally see the necessity of hybrid work. And the numbers back all of this up.
Let’s drop the data.
The bottom line: With such a saturated job market, businesses have to cater to their employees, ensuring that they’re happy and they’ll stick around.
Whether you’re working in an office or at home, you don’t have to deny it; during this era of endless virtual meetings, it’s nearly impossible to not check an email here or a Slack message there.
Maybe if I didn’t have so many meetings in the first place…
The bottom line: People may have their cameras off for many reasons (messy house, kids running around), or they just focus better when they’re doing a little something extra to keep them engaged in the actual meeting.
A look at “quiet quitting,” plus some stats on how too many meetings are bumming us out.
The future of four-day work weeks, plus why women are quitting more than men.
Six experts forecast the future of work, plus driving higher work performance through closer connections.