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19 votes
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How to be great? Just be good, repeatably.
10 votes -
New York could become the first state to fully decriminalize sex work
5 votes -
The Fair Work Ombudsman has finalised its investigation into Uber and found its drivers to be independent contractors, not employees.
ABC news article: Uber drivers are not employees, Fair Work Ombudsman finds Fair Work Ombudsman's media release: Uber Australia investigation finalised
10 votes -
Corporations are getting better at gutting worker protections
7 votes -
Minimum wage will rise three per cent to $740.80 a week on Fair Work ruling
6 votes -
A generation is learning how to strike: An interview with Isra Hirsi
6 votes -
When you leave your old job on good terms, you want to ensure a smooth transition to make life easier for your replacement. This succession planning checklist can help you to hand over the reins.
14 votes -
One Year Off, Every Seven Years: How about this for a demand? You work for six years and you get a whole paid year off to do whatever the hell you want.
18 votes -
How Montreal freelancers are organizing
4 votes -
A union fight at Marquette University
6 votes -
With workers hard to find, immigration crackdown leaves Iowa town in a bind
8 votes -
Jeremy was fired for refusing fingerprinting at work. His case led to an 'extraordinary' unfair dismissal ruling.
13 votes -
California teachers pay for their own substitutes during extended sick leave
10 votes -
As Cyberpunk 2077 development intensifies, CD Projekt Red pledges to be 'more humane' to its workers
20 votes -
Connecticut Senate gives final approval to $15 minimum wage; Gov. Ned Lamont pledges to sign bill
8 votes -
The teacher shortage is real, large and growing, and worse than we thought (part 1)
22 votes -
I’m writing an article about “How to hand over the reins when you leave a job.” I’d like your advice about what I should include.
My premise is that you genuinely want to help the company and the next person who moves into your old position. Maybe you got a promotion, or you found an even-better job. In any case, you want...
My premise is that you genuinely want to help the company and the next person who moves into your old position. Maybe you got a promotion, or you found an even-better job. In any case, you want the old coworkers to succeed, and you want to make a smooth transition.
So there’s a few pieces to this:
• What do you do when you leave a job?
• What have other people done, when they left/moved on, that gave you the knowledge and skills you needed to excel?
• What did they NOT provide that you wish they had?
It’d be easy for me to focus on “what did you do” but none of us know how successful that was. So tell me, rather, about your experience as the person picking up the reins. What did that teach you about the process?
Anecdotes welcome! (And tell me how to refer to you in the article. Private is fine.)
10 votes -
"How to do what you love": An essay on finding goals and discovering what things you really enjoy doing.
9 votes -
The American Dream is killing us
14 votes -
It’s time to stop referring to maternity leave as “generous”
10 votes -
Labor in Algeria’s revolt
5 votes -
'It's a laughable fiction': How Uber's $82 billion valuation was built on a lie to its workers
13 votes -
A video game workers’ walkout
9 votes -
Over 150 Riot employees walk out to protest forced arbitration and sexist culture
13 votes -
“We’re drinking now”: The oldest newspaper in New Orleans just fired its entire staff
11 votes -
'League of Legends' studio faces employee walkout, promises changes
14 votes -
#DataScience Hive mind: I’m writing an article about the career path for job-changers who want to get into data science fields. I’d love your input.
It’s no secret that data science is a good career path. The jobs are in demand, the salaries are compelling, and the work is interesting. So how does someone break in? In particular, I’m...
It’s no secret that data science is a good career path. The jobs are in demand, the salaries are compelling, and the work is interesting. So how does someone break in?
In particular, I’m interested in how an experienced IT professional can move into data science. What advice would you give to someone with, say, five years of computing experience, who wants to break into the field? Tell me about the skills required, where you’d tell your friend to go to acquire them, and how to get a job without a specialized degree. What would make you say, “I want to hire this person, even if the individual lacks the relevant schooling”?
6 votes -
Why big companies squander brilliant ideas
4 votes -
More than 6,000 Australian taxi and car-hire drivers, operators and licence owners across four states are taking on ridesharing giant Uber, as part of a major class action
9 votes -
The productivity pit: Work communication software like Teams, Slack, and Workplace were supposed to make us more productive. They haven’t.
10 votes -
I’m a North Carolina public school teacher. Here’s why I’m walking out today.
6 votes -
I can't do anything for fun anymore; every hobby is an attempt to make money
43 votes -
The once-hot robotics startup Anki is shutting down after raising more than $200 million
7 votes -
Where to research IT salaries
5 votes -
“I felt like it was a betrayal, and we had raised funds on a false pretense”: The Correspondent’s first US employee speaks out
13 votes -
Fast-food workers are always in the line of fire
6 votes -
Microsoft staff are openly questioning the value of diversity
18 votes -
An ode to sanitation workers
7 votes -
How to hone your disruption-spotting skills
3 votes -
The sharing economy is going to innovate us into the Victorian Era
15 votes -
We just remembered how to strike
9 votes -
The age of robot farmers - Picking strawberries takes speed, stamina, and skill. Can a robot do it?
14 votes -
Colorado could be the next state to let its employees collectively bargain
8 votes -
Eight books that can help make you a better leader
4 votes -
How great managers give and receive feedback
3 votes -
Madhouse production assistant hospitalized for overwork, demands compensation for unpaid overtime
6 votes -
Seventeen indie artists on their oddest odd jobs that pay the bills when music doesn’t
4 votes -
Holding platforms accountable to digital workers’ rights
7 votes -
I'm a paramedic, please stop asking me about the worst thing I've ever seen
21 votes