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6 votes
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Finland has an ageing population and a labor shortage – despite government programs, immigrants and their families are not always greeted with open arms
7 votes -
Kill the five-day workweek
13 votes -
The Amazon that customers don’t see
13 votes -
A letter to my mother — Just in case
5 votes -
A teenager's guide to avoiding actual work
14 votes -
Poor in tech
13 votes -
The next great disruption is hybrid work—thoughts from Microsoft on the future of work
9 votes -
Why Amazon workers sided with the company over a union
17 votes -
Research: Adding women to the C-suite changes how companies think
7 votes -
After working at Google, I’ll never let myself love a job again
23 votes -
Unwanted touch and empty consent
12 votes -
Swedish carmaker Volvo will offer a generous paid parental leave scheme to its 40,000 employees globally
8 votes -
Organisations that do important/meaningful work?
I've been thinking a bit lately of starting to look for another place of work. Nothing is really bad at my current employer, but I've been there since 2017 and my feet are starting to itch a bit....
I've been thinking a bit lately of starting to look for another place of work. Nothing is really bad at my current employer, but I've been there since 2017 and my feet are starting to itch a bit. In addition, I'm not really to engaged in my work at the moment since I feel the domain is fairly boring and the tech is rather mundane. This might be a reflection of my sentiment of IT industry in general, i.e. lots of toys but mainly they are just different flavours of the same thing (especially when it comes to building XYZ web app).
Formerly my approach to finding a new job has been to look for companies that are looking for people with skills in technologies I am interested in learning. However, since I'm a bit dissilousioned with tech I think I need to switch my approach and look more for a mission driven organisation I can get behind!
What are your thoughts on organsations that do some kind of important work? If you were to pick a top 3 organisations where you would work which ones would you pick?
Note they don't have to be tech focused. I'm generally curious about different organisations I should look into and also to hear your thoughts on the matter!
28 votes -
Spain to launch trial of four-day working week
12 votes -
The technical interview practice gap, and how it keeps underrepresented groups out of software engineering
9 votes -
The gig economy is coming for millions of American jobs
10 votes -
Indoctrination by Fisher Price
7 votes -
Panda Express workers forced to strip in ‘cult-like’ team-building seminar, lawsuit alleges
13 votes -
Where would you live if you had no ties to where you are now?
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a...
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a year like we've just had.
For me, the difficulty has always been figuring out where to go: politics/climate/healthcare/lifestyle/language are a delicate balancing act, and I don't think anywhere's a slam dunk. Everyone's going to have their own take on what perfect looks like, and what compromises to make mapping that to the real world!
So let's assume you're packed and ready to go, nothing holding you back. You've still got to navigate inbound immigration, handle the language, find a job, all that good stuff - but the world is your oyster. Where would you choose to go?
16 votes -
Do any other US citizens think of emigrating?
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past...
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past year and a half.
What factors motivate you to move?
What would be an ideal location for you?
What timeline would are you looking at?One of the main motivators I seek to emmigrate is climate change. As the world continues to progress and evolve I do not think the United States will be able to equitabbly address the changing landscape and ways of life. As for when I would want to move, I'm not sure; currently it seems like a far off probability, but I know it's a choice I will have to make in my own lifetime.
33 votes -
Work from home expert Nicholas Bloom, a Stanford economist, says office space will get more collaborative, and you’ll still be working from home (just not as much)
4 votes -
Stop telling women they have imposter syndrome
17 votes -
Bring back the nervous breakdown
14 votes -
The Pope vs. Lululemon
5 votes -
Stop making excuses for toxic bosses
13 votes -
Norway arrests highlight impact of pandemic on sex workers – governments should include sex workers in public health and financial support responses
6 votes -
Sex workers say 'defunding Pornhub' puts their livelihoods at risk
16 votes -
How Iceland is closing the gender wage gap
6 votes -
How to resign, via Letters of Note
8 votes -
Thousands apply to be a Finn for ninety days – Americans, Canadians and Britons among those lured by campaign to attract foreign tech workers
11 votes -
Work (or, the five jobs I had before YouTube)
13 votes -
Have you attended any virtual conferences? Tell me about the things that worked well.
This could be anything, from presentation tips, to efficiently-managed breakout rooms, to finding ways to engage participants. How did it make a difference? I’m writing an article about how...
This could be anything, from presentation tips, to efficiently-managed breakout rooms, to finding ways to engage participants. How did it make a difference?
I’m writing an article about how companies can run better online events, so thinking “ideas worth stealing.” Give me details!
It’d be easy to focus on the things that don’t work — they are legion — but I’m aiming to capture the good stuff that we all wish everyone would adopt. So leave out the disappointments, and just tell me about the things you enjoyed.
If you’ve run a virtual event I’m interested in your opinions too, but keep in mind that this is meant to be tips-and-tricks worth sharing.
11 votes -
Worker cooperatives: Bringing democracy to the workplace
12 votes -
Companies often want to keep loyal employees when their jobs change or go away. Here are some effective ways to move people onto a new career path.
4 votes -
How the CCP does job promotions
6 votes -
Unilever to try out four-day working week in New Zealand
5 votes -
'I could show you stuff you wouldn’t believe:' Gravediggers speak out about horrifying conditions
8 votes -
For those new to working-at-home since the pandemic began: What purchases/subscriptions have most improved your life?
In work terms, that is. Though a "keep the baby occupied" consumer purchase might minimize meeting interruptions.
25 votes -
Preparing the workforce for current unfilled jobs
5 votes -
Migrant workers restricted to farms under one grower’s virus lockdown
8 votes -
Behold the flower box indicators: Unusual metrics for determining a team’s health
8 votes -
What retiree phone-bankers taught me about loving work
4 votes -
How do you switch to a four-day week? The pros and cons
6 votes -
Amazon's internal records show that it deceived the public on rising injury rates among its warehouse workers
12 votes -
I built a tiny home office… then I lost my job
9 votes -
Denmark confronts sexual harassment at work – more than 1,600 women have signed an open letter alleging the problem is rife in Danish media
7 votes -
The rat tribe: Meet the million migrant workers living beneath Beijing's streets
7 votes -
On the use of a life
14 votes -
Dwindling ranks and declining public trust plague police agencies amid summer of protests
8 votes