shrm.org
Why are companies calling telecommuters back into the office?
over 4 years ago
shrm.org
Companies are worried about how to manage Generation Z.
over 4 years ago
shrm.org
Four decades after the ADEA became law, nearly two-thirds of workers ages 55 to
64 report their age as a barrier to getting a job.
over 4 years ago
shrm.org
Why creating a “culture of civility” may help to prevent workplace misconduct,
inequity and other problems.
over 4 years ago
shrm.org
There is a growing disconnect between what young adults will learn in college
and what their first-time employers will expect them to do. And that means many
new graduates will be unemployed, underemployed or struggling professionally,
even if they land a job in their chosen profession. Our five-par…
about 4 years ago
shrm.org
New workers and their employers often find that undergraduate courses didn’t
prepare them for or keep them up-to-date on the technical and practical skills
they need in their first jobs. Otherwise known as hard skills, these are the
knowledge and abili...
almost 4 years ago
shrm.org
Many companies send employees surveys asking how they feel about their work,
their boss and their company. They are asked to be candid and assured that their
answers will remain anonymous. But how anonymous are those answers, really? And
are workers j...
almost 4 years ago
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Fewer than half of U.S. workers have “good” jobs, according to a new Gallup
study that rated “good,” “mediocre” and “bad” jobs based on 10 dimensions that
included pay, benefits, job security and sense of purpose.
almost 4 years ago
shrm.org
Employees in midcareer can feel bored and disengaged without new challenges.
over 3 years ago
shrm.org
A rash of surveys paints a bleak picture of workers’ mental health amid the
coronavirus pandemic. And in many surveys, a managerial trend is evident:
Supervisors struggle not only with their own COVID-19-related stress, but also
that of their workers.
over 3 years ago
shrm.org
Managers who refuse to seek support from others—whether a boss, a mentor, a
coach or a peer—do so to their detriment.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
How managers handled the fallout from acts of racial injustice and a wrenching
presidential election
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
It can be tricky managing two very different workers: You might have a 9-to-5
employee who’s working with an independent contractor--a gig worker--who takes
home higher pay and enjoys a more flexible schedule than his counterpart.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
As reports of sexual harassment ensnare some of the nation’s most high-profile
men, corporate executives and leading political figures seem in a hurry to
conduct damage control by denouncing or firing the alleged wrongdoers.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
You’ve been promoted into management. And things aren’t going so well. Welcome
to the transition from rank-and-file employee to manager—an adjustment that, for
many, takes time, patience, self-reflection, mentoring and training.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
During the last 12 months, managers learned a lot about themselves, their
leadership styles and their employees. They learned to be more flexible.
Creative. Patient. Understanding. Empathetic.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
Employees may feel loyal, but that doesn’t mean they’ll stay.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
A new virtual learning program designed for people managers has won the Society
for Human Resource Management (SHRM) two top awards.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
A new Society for Human Resource Management survey finds 84 percent of U.S.
workers say poorly trained managers create a lot of unnecessary work and stress.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
Now that some children have returned to in-person classes after nearly a year of
COVID-19 sequestering, working parents have to pivot once again—juggling job
duties with family responsibilities.
over 2 years ago
shrm.org
Today’s CEOs may have the final word, but they collaborate with a host of other
executives. Their power is far more tempered by shareholders, boards of
directors and even their own employees than in the past. What’s required of
executives? What wi
almost 2 years ago