Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "WomenTech Network"


3 mentions found


But a lot of women haven't been able to take advantage of this remote work perk. Remote work has helped women's progress toward equal pay, but it's had a mixed impact on women's career advancement. On the one hand, remote work has allowed more women to stay in the workforce when they otherwise might forced out due to childcare demands. Women's relationship with remote work both helps and hurtsWomen are working at near-record levels, and the growth of remote work in recent years is among the key reasons. AdvertisementMen and women work from home at very similar rates, but there's some evidence that remote work is even more prevalent among women.
Persons: , haven't, it's, jugging, jugglers, Aaron Terrazas, Nicholas Bloom, Sarah Small, Small, Nicole, Stanford's Bloom, Meredith Whitney, Utah's Organizations: Service, Business, Stanford, University of Utah, of Labor Statistics, WomenTech Network, Labor Department, Bard College Locations: Washington, overemployment
A millennial woman started secretly working a second remote job in January to boost her income. Nicole is among a niche group of people secretly working more than one remote job and getting away with it. This year, the Washington-based 30-year-old is on track to earn nearly $100,000 across two remote jobs, according to documents viewed by Business Insider. Differences in gender roles and expectations could also be holding some women back from pursuing overemployment, Nicole said. Are you working multiple remote jobs at the same time and willing to discuss details about your pay and schedule?
Persons: , Nicole, she's, overemployment, hasn't, jugglers, doesn't, Overemployment, she'd, She'd Organizations: Service, Fortune, LinkedIn, Business, WomenTech Network Locations: Washington, overemployment
Who are these overemployed workers? AdvertisementOveremployed workers tend to be male millennials in tech or IT jobsNearly all of the overemployed workers Business Insider has spoken with have been men. "In the IT world, we never really work a full 40 hours a week," a former overemployed worker previously told BI. The typical overemployed worker is making between $100,000 and $500,000 across up to four jobsFor most overemployed workers, job juggling isn't worth the stress unless they're very well compensated. One millennial earned over $500,000 across four non-simultaneous jobs, while another worker earned over $820,000 across three roles.
Persons: , Louis Fed, Zers, Xers, Zer, Xer, overemployment Organizations: Service, Business, of Labor Statistics, WomenTech Network Locations: St
Total: 3