While it has been clear for some time that Covid-19 is, thankfully, no longer deemed a public health emergency (the WHO chief said as much last May), the pandemic still has some distance left to run before it is declared officially over.
Now that the dust has settled, and permanent remote work looks to be not so permanent, the economic and social realities of the post-pandemic world are coming into sharper focus for workers.
It is just over a year since the generative AI revolution began, and the debate has shifted focus many times along the way.
Well, here we are, 2023 is racing toward its denouement. After another year of ups and downs, it’s time to look ahead to 2024. If you’re one of the 26% who plan to leave their job in the next 12 months, you’d be wise to make a start now.
The 2020s may be already defined as the decade of remote work, where both the perception and the reality are that you can carry out most roles from anywhere, whether you’re out west or back east, at the top of a mountain or by the beach.
What are the most significant relationships in your life? The natural answer is of course friends and family, spouses and partners. Some might even cite their pet.
We often say things were better in “the old days”, and there’s a case to be made when you’re talking about music or movies or buying a house. But there is one area where one would not trade yesterday for today, and that is the perennial job hunt.
They say it’s not what you know, it’s who you know. By some accounts, namely noted historian and etymologist Barry Popik, the saying originated more than 100 years ago; its earliest known usage in print can be found in a 1914 issue of American union periodical The Electrical Worker:
Vor Kurzem getestet
Die beliebtesten Handys
Kein Eintrag vorhanden.