The Guardian
Employers are monitoring computers, toilet breaks – even emotions. Is your boss watching you?
From microchip implants to wristband trackers and sensors that can detect fatigue and depression, new technology is enabling …
WorkAcross our curated articles on work, you'll find a range of guides, stories, research studies and actionable tips on how to navigate the workplace, office culture and politics, meetings, open-plan offices, and a whole lot more.
The Guardian
From microchip implants to wristband trackers and sensors that can detect fatigue and depression, new technology is enabling …
WorkThe Guardian
Copying and pasting emails. Inventing meaningless tasks for others. Just looking busy. Why do so many people feel their work …
WorkACM Interactions
For those who are always challenging themselves and who are facing hard problems, some level of uncertainty is inevitable. …
Life WorkWORK: A Guide
In a creative setting, you simply cannot by words alone expect to convince a person to do something they don’t want to …
WorkTechCrunch
What is missed in all of this is the mindset of craftsmanship; that one’s expertise and deliberate focus on one’s …
Life WorkBuzzFeed
Replying immediately and with two words to all emails is actually heaven.
Productivity WorkTrello Blog
If routine helps you be productive, why does it sometimes make you feel like you need a break from it all?
Productivity WorkAccelerated Intelligence
The warning against being a generalist has persisted for hundreds of years in dozens of languages. “Equipped with …
Career WorkKnowledge@Wharton
The workplace can be a curious environment. Dozens or even hundreds of employees can labor side by side for hours, spending …
WorkQuartz
Employees don’t usually succumb to these negative responses for a lack of trying. They want to feel motivated. They …
WorkStanford
Dying for a Paycheck, published by HarperBusiness and released on March 20, maps a range of ills in the modern workplace — …
WorkKnow Your Team
Our most popular get-to-know-you questions for work, based on four years of data.
WorkAeon
Corporations, non-profits, governments, universities and even preschools test, score and hire the ‘best’. This …
WorkFast Company
To me, the idea of a four-day work week seemed more like a fantasy than a plausible reality, mainly because I didn’t …
WorkMedium
When we procrastinate, we fill our lives with the tasks that are right in front of us rather than make the concerted effort …
Productivity WorkForbes
For most of us, it doesn’t matter when we work or how long it takes to finish. Working fewer hours doesn’t mean …
WorkNoteworthy - The Journal Blog
I’ve read more than 1,000 profiles since I started writing The Profile, a weekly newsletter featuring the best …
Life WorkQuora
It depends.
Career WorkBloomberg
More people are keeping traditional jobs while picking up extra project-based work – and gaining an advantage.
Freelance WorkOpen Culture
If you’ve visited any big city in Japan, you’ve no doubt seen a fair few commuters sleeping on the subway. The …
Productivity WorkPriceonomics
If we’re going to be precise about it, work gets done at 11AM on a Monday in October. At all other times of day, …
WorkSoftware Engineering Stack Exchange
What is your personal process for deciding and delivering an estimate? What techniques have you found useful?
Freelance WorkSome people really benefit from hearing advice that everyone knows, for the same reason we keep schools open despite every …
Life WorkAeon
The most effective tactic in the war on empty talk seems to be to outflank the bullshitter by posing your questions as …
WorkBBC
Mastering ‘active rest’ is far harder than it looks, but there are good reasons why we should keep working at it. …
WorkThe DESK Magazine
My standard answer to myself and others usually is: “Yes, you could have done that, but you didn’t.” But …
WorkMedium
At my most recent job, I did all of my best work at home. I would actively try to avoid the office for as long as possible. …
WorkHacker Noon
71% of meetings are considered unproductive. Let’s fix that.
WorkThe New York Times
First there were individual offices. Then cubicles and open floor plans. Now, there is a “palette of places.” New …
WorkThe New Yorker
The open office was originally conceived by a team from Hamburg, Germany, in the nineteen-fifties, to facilitate …
Work