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Is it still safe to quit your job simply because you don't want to return to the office? The job market is still strong and offers a higher share of remote job postings than pre-pandemicData from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, or BLS, shows the labor market is still robust. Cory Stahle, an Indeed economist, noted at a press event last week that "remote work is something that is here to stay." Even Indeed renamed its Remote Job Tracker given the demand for hybrid employees, noting as hybrid "work arrangements emerge as a primary modality of flexible work — which itself is a topic of growing interest to job seekers, employers and policymakers alike — we are updating and renaming the Remote Tracker to the Remote & Hybrid Job Tracker." Did you quit your job after being told to return to the office?
Persons: there's, , Insider's Juliana Kaplan, She's, Bonnie Chiurazzi, Chiurazzi, Lab's Daniel Culbertson, Culbertson, Cory Stahle, Stahle, Dawn Fay, Robert Half, Fay Organizations: Service, ADP Research Institute, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Labor, Survey Locations: North America
'Quiet' is the workplace word of 2023
  + stars: | 2023-02-25 | by ( Madison Hoff | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +9 min
Bare Minimum Monday, another workplace buzzword of 2023, also relates to quiet quitting. Experts think those "quiet" trends and more are set to continue throughout 2023 and beyond. "Quiet hiring" is one of the "biggest workplace buzzwords" of 2023 per Insider's reporting. Emily Rose McRae of Gartner's HR Practice said per reporting from GMA that quiet hiring is a workplace trend in 2023 in part because of a shortage in talent. Other buzzwords of the year from Insider's reporting relate to quiet quitting even if they don't use the word quiet.
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