How employees are embracing coffee badging as a soft revolt against office mandates
Read more at CNBC
Topics
-
Amazon Ordered Employees Back to the Office, but There’s Not Enough Room for Everyone
The tech giant’s already unpopular full-week RTO mandate hit another snag when several regional offices said their spaces would not be ready by the January 2 deadline.Inc. - 1d -
How Companies Can Create or Improve Employee Assistance Programs
A new survey indicates that while more businesses offer programs supporting employee mental health and wellness, workers have plenty of ideas to make them better.Inc. - 5d -
Why Valuable Employees Often Leave After Tighter Return-to-Office Mandates
Many businesses imposing stricter RTO rules lose some of their most valuable and hard to replace employees, according to recently released studies.Inc. - 5d -
Bain launches $4.3bn counterbid against KKR for Japan’s Fuji Soft
Takeover battle between private equity firms could trigger wave of aggressive dealmaking in TokyoFinancial Times - Dec. 11 -
How Jensen Huang Solicits Employee Emails to Keep Nvidia on Top
A new book on the rockstar CEO explores his ‘Top-5 Things’ messages, which lets him know what staffers are thinking about, so the company can stay abreast of nascent tech innovations.Inc. - Dec. 10 -
The Digital Natives Will Revolt—and That’s Good for Everybody
From underconsumption and de-influencing to work-life balance and the novelty of no-tech, Gen Z will upend the status quo.Wired - Dec. 8 -
Employees are being marched back to the office. But why? | Eva Wiseman
The pandemic gave us a valuable opportunity to change our ways, yet many workplaces have rebuffed the lesson. When I work in the office (the canal flashing down to my left, to my right a desk of ...The Guardian - Dec. 8 -
From outsider to the Oval Office, bitcoin surges as a new administration embraces crypto
Bitcoin burst on the scene after trust had withered in the financial system and Washington’s ability to protect people from itABC News - Dec. 5 -
How South Korea’s president could be removed from office
Yoon Suk Yeol faces an impeachment bid after his failed attempt to impose martial lawFinancial Times - Dec. 5
More from CNBC
-
The Fed has a big interest rate decision coming Wednesday. Here's what to expect
CNBC - 20m -
Here’s what a blockbuster Nissan-Honda merger could mean for the auto industry
CNBC - 47m -
U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments over TikTok divestment law
CNBC - 23m -
Merck to develop weight loss pill from Chinese drugmaker in up to $2 billion licensing deal
CNBC - 1h -
House Ethics Committee secretly voted to release Matt Gaetz report
CNBC - 29m