Tag: hybrid work

Are RTO Policies and In-Office Mandates Just a Return to More Managerial Control?

I WAS INTO REMOTE work long before anyone called it that. But it took me some time before I had a job suited for it. Back then I was a Vice President at the much maligned, ahead of its time Pets.com — it was an early version of Chewy despite what Chewy’s former CEO says

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Want Hybrid Work to Work? Gallup Says You Need a “Workplace Value Proposition”

I CAN’T TELL YOU how many times I longed for hybrid work. It wasn’t called that back when I first asked my boss about it in 2000, or again in 2007-2008, or even as recently as 2016. It wasn’t called hybrid, or remote, or anything back then, but it didn’t matter because I worked for

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It’s Hard Getting Remote Workers Back in the Office. Is Hybrid a Better Approach?

GETTING EMPLOYEES BACK in the office is a full-time job. The debate over return to work policies continues and shows no sign of going away anytime soon. A story this past week from Bloomberg cuts to the heart of the issue: “Nearly four years after pandemic-induced office shutdowns, the fight over working remotely or showing

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Debating remote work? Then why not talk about when workers are most productive?

HERE’S ANOTHER WRINKLE to the debate over remote and hybrid work — it’s called chronoworking. That’s not a word that rolls off the tongue easily, and it was new to me when I read a BBC Worklife story about it titled The ‘chronoworking’ productivity hack that helps workers excel. So, what is “chronoworking?” As BBC

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Who Knew? Yes, We All Need to Know the Important Effect of Griping on the Job

Editor’s Note: Happy New Year and welcome to January 2024. Here’s hoping that this year is a LOT better than 2023. I’VE HAD A LOT OF JOBS and worked in many different workplaces, but I never heard anyone ever claim that one of the things we needed was more griping on the job. I managed

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Here’s the Reason On-Site (not Remote) Workers are so Terribly Disengaged

LEAVE IT TO GALLUP to point out an obvious workforce fact that most people don’t talk about — “58% of American workers work fully on-site and can’t do their jobs remotely.” Consider this the next battle in the war over remote employees returning to the office. Gallup notes that this gets lost in the ongoing

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Is the 4-Day Work Week REALLY an Idea Whose Time Has Finally Come?

YOU DON’T REALLY KNOW what a four-day work week is like until you actually work one. I know how it is because I found myself working one (more on that shortly) back near the beginning of my career. And you quickly learn this: once you work a four-day work week, you NEVER want to go

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When it comes to hiring, savvy recruiters really need to give as much info as they get

FIRST, AN APOLOGY: I’ve been writing a lot about recruiting and hiring recently. I’m really sorry for that. My intent was NOT to make this a talent management blog, and that’s easy for me since I worked and wrote about it for so damn long at so many places. But, I still see many things

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Remote work has caused a lot of issues, but it never will stop office romances

ALTHOUGH THE RISE of remote and hybrid work has brought huge changes to the workplace, one thing hasn’t changed – when people work together, workplace romances usually follow. The Financial Post recently published a story that pointed out that, “Remote work hasn’t killed the office romance, but colleagues tempted to fall into each other’s arms might want to

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