Tech Insider
Businesswoman looking at a window in an office building
Madelyn Machado (not pictured) reflects on her experience as a conventionally attractive woman in corporate America.
Tech Insider
Illustration of people working together to form an idea
People are going to need more skills like teamwork and leadership as technology shifts how we do our jobs.
Tech Insider
Businesswoman with headphones smiling during video conference.
The remote-work trend doesn't seem to be going anywhere.
Tech Insider : Economy
A swarm of cursors surrounds an
At this point you're 60 times more likely to get into Harvard than to land a job that lets you work from home.

Inside the frenzied scramble for remote jobs

Tech Insider : Economy, Politics
Empty office chairs crowded into a corner, and one chair rolling by the pile
The coming surge in boomer retirement will create a labor shortage that will last for decades — and that's great news for everyone.
Tech Insider
After quitting her job, Kym Wootton said she felt freer than she could have ever imagined.
After quitting her job, Kym Wootton said she felt freer than she could have ever imagined.
Tech Insider : Economy
A laptop sits on a desk in front of a window showing dark clouds outside. A bored-looking woman in a virtual meeting is seen reflected in the dark laptop screen.
A new survey shows that Gen Z and young millennials are fed up with work. What's behind the growing disenchantment — and how can employers fix it?
Tech Insider

$100K apparently isn't that much, pals. I'm Diamond Naga Siu, and I'm definitely feeling a financial strain in San Diego.

A new study found that if you make $100,000 in NYC, it only "feels like" $36,000. Meanwhile, the same study found that San Diegans need to make even more than New Yorkers to live comfortably. Imagine moving to New York to save some money. Wild.

Tech Insider : Economy
A drawing of a business man is shown, being erased in the middle by a large hand holding an eraser.
Tech companies like Meta and Twitter are laying off middle managers and "flattening" their structure. That's going to cost them in the long run.

Getting rid of them is a big mistake