Americans may be finding it a little tougher to land a job these days, but not so much in one field in which salaries are climbing fast and employers are offering robust perks. READ MORE
To Make It Big, Most Tech Startups Have A Limited Post-IPO Window To Turn Profitable
Covering tech startup IPOs generally involves writing about companies that lose money.
Sure, there are exceptions. Blockbusters, like Google, which was minting search advertising cash well before its IPO. Or, more recently, companies like Instacart or Klaviyo that tapped public markets shortly after turning a modest profit. READ MORE
Workers in Japan can’t quit their jobs. They hire resignation experts to help
Yuki Watanabe used to spend 12 hours every day toiling away in the office. And that’s considered a short day.
A typical 9-to-9 workday is the bare minimum. “The latest I would leave [the office] would be 11 p.m.,” said the 24-year-old, who used to work for some of Japan’s largest telecoms and e-payment companies. READ MORE
Why it might be time to reassess using ‘ghost jobs’
When recruiting talent in today’s uncertain hiring environment, HR professionals may be more willing to get creative than they used to. However, one rising trend—the use of so-called “ghost jobs”—could do more harm than good for employers’ chances of capturing top candidates.
In its recently released 2024 Recruiting Trends Survey, career and resume service MyPerfectResume found a significant 81% of the more than 750 recruiters nationwide it polled are posting so-called ghost jobs. Such a practice refers to strategically advertising for a job that isn’t actually open, either because it is already filled or non-existent. READ MORE
The right-wing activist riding a wave of opposition to DEI in corporate America
Robby Starbuck, a former Hollywood music video director and turned conservative activist, has caught fire campaigning online against some major American brands’ diversity, equity and inclusion programs (DEI), support for gay Pride marches and LGBTQ events, strategies to slow climate change and other social policies.
Starbuck is both riding a wave of right-wing hostility to DEI programs and corporate advocacy on issues like climate change and LGBTQ rights and advancing the opposition himself. He has channeled energy on the right to target specific brands popular with politically conservative customers — Harley-Davidson, Tractor Supply Co. and John Deere — and relentlessly drawn attention online to their past publicly-stated policies. Starbuck has also claimed credit for Brown-Forman and Lowe’s internal announcements in recent weeks to scale back some of their diversity and inclusion programs. READ MORE
Brown-Forman joins groups moving away from DEI programs
Some big Kentucky names are moving away from their Diversity, Equity and Inclusion programs.
Louisville-based Brown-Forman is one of them. The company said since it launched its Diversity, Equity and Inclusion strategy in 2019, the world has evolved, its business has changed and the legal landscape has shifted.
Officials did not provide specific details about what will change, but said it "adjusted its work" to drive business results. READ MORE
New Boeing CEO Faces Hard Choices After NASA Snubs Starliner for SpaceX
After a humiliating setback to its space ambitions, Boeing Co. faces a dilemma that pits its national duty against strained cash reserves.
The decision about the future of the struggling Starliner program now rests with Boeing’s newly installed chief executive officer, Kelly Ortberg, after NASA announced over the weekend that it wouldn’t send astronauts home from the space station on the faulty spacecraft. Following weeks of testing and heated debate, the space agency decided it was safer to use Elon Musk’s SpaceX. READ MORE
America's most boring job is on the brink of extinction
For most of his youth, Bryan wanted to be an astrophysicist.
He was obsessed with the Hubble telescope, and his bedroom ceiling was dotted with plastic glow-in-the-dark stars. When the Scholastic Book Fair came to his library, he'd beg his parents for cash to buy NASA photo books. To him, space science seemed the pinnacle of innovation, excitement, and existentialism. READ MORE
US firms' 'low firing' approach may turn to more layoffs, Fed's Barkin tells BBG
The "low-hiring, low-firing" approach that U.S. businesses currently take to their employment decisions is unlikely to last, Richmond Federal Reserve President Thomas Barkin said in newly released comments, citing the risk that firms could resort to layoffs if the economy weakens.
Concerns about the job market have intensified at the U.S. central bank in recent weeks and are a core reason for why Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a speech on Friday that interest rate cuts were needed to prevent any further and unwanted erosion in U.S. joblessness. READ MORE
This former Credit Suisse exec says Americans should ‘never quit’ their jobs if they’re unhappy — do this instead
See if this sounds familiar: You’re miserable in your job. You’ve been “quiet quitting” (or thinking about it) for months. You’ve concluded it’s time to quit for real and the boss’ office is just a few steps away.
But hang on a minute there. READ MORE
The Summer Is So Hot, Workers Are Wearing High-Tech Ice Packs
In his 2021 novel “Termination Shock,” about a near-future Earth that is much warmer, science-fiction maestro Neal Stephenson imagined that in the hottest and most humid parts of the world—including Texas—people would don spacesuits, but for Earth, called “earthsuits.”
That science-fiction future is, for millions of Americans, our present. Heat waves are more intense and longer thanks to climate change. For people who work outside in hotter regions or in broiling indoor spaces like large warehouses without air conditioning, heat injury, illness and even death are a growing concern. READ MORE
Harley-Davidson sunsets DEI programming following backlash
Harley-Davidson has “not operated a DEI function” since April 2024 and does not have one currently, the company revealed earlier this week. Harley-Davidson does not have hiring quotas and no longer has supplier diversity objectives, the company added in its Aug. 19 statement shared on X. HR Dive reached out for comment and did not hear back by the time of publication.
Reports of backlash against the motorcycle company surfaced in July. READ MORE
Target CFO says GenAI tool is boosting worker efficiency
Target’s generative AI initiative is part of the retail giant’s broader effort to use the technology across its business to empower its workers, enhance the guest experience and support the company’s long-term growth, according to a June press release.
During Wednesday’s call, Fiddelke said Target store leaders are now expecting the new tool to be “particularly helpful as we bring on new permanent and seasonal team members in advance of this year’s holiday season, helping them to become more productive, more quickly than in the past.” READ MORE
Wall Street regulator approves tougher rules for accounting 'negligence'
Wall Street's top regulator on Tuesday voted 3-2 to bless new rules making it easier for an audit watchdog to hold people responsible for audit firms' violations.
Divided along party lines, the five-member U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission approved a rule change adopted in June by the U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. READ MORE
More than 28% of Americans are searching for new jobs — the highest rate in a decade
A new labor market survey shows Americans have rarely felt more in need of new job opportunities — an indication of a more negative outlook about the economy despite other data that suggests a more stable picture.
The New York Federal Reserve's latest poll of consumers found 28.4% of respondents were looking for a job — the highest reading since March 2014 and up from 19.4% a year ago. That includes both individuals already out of a job and ones currently employed but seeking new roles. READ MORE
US judge strikes down Biden administration ban on worker ‘noncompete’ agreements
A federal judge in Texas on Tuesday barred a US Federal Trade Commission rule from taking effect that would ban employers from requiring their workers to sign non-compete agreements.
The ban, which had been scheduled to go into effect nationwide on September 4, is now effectively blocked. READ MORE
Target slashed prices. It paid off
US consumers, strained by years of higher prices and elevated interest rates, are changing their shopping patterns. Americans are buying more at discount chains like Target and Walmart while dialing back spending at Macy’s and Lowe’s.
Target’s sales at stores open at least one year increased 2% last quarter, and its profit boomed 36%. The company’s stock (TGT) surged 13% in premarket trading. READ MORE
Why a majority of managers are ignoring return-to-office policies
According to ResumeBuilder, a quarter of U.S. companies plan to increase the number of days employees are required to be in the office next year, and managers will likely be key in ensuring that employees adhere to those boosted return-to-office policies. But will managers comply?
The answer is likely a resounding “no” if managers’ behavior is similar to what happened this year in the U.K. According to Owl Labs, which surveyed about 500 U.K. employees and managers this year, 70% of managers noted they allowed team members to work from home despite their organization’s formal return-to-office policy. READ MORE
Now that Google is a monopolist, what’s next?
A federal judge has ruled that Google has an illegal monopoly in the US. “The market reality is that Google is the only real choice” as the default search engine, Judge Amit Mehta said in his decision, and he determined it had gotten that way unfairly. It’s a ruling that could portend big changes for the company, but we yet don’t know how big, and we might not for years. READ MORE
Get ready for nasty layoffs and say goodbye to the 4-day workweek
It's a troubling thought, to be sure, but a longer workweek is already a reality for some workers. Greece has allowed some industries to move to a 48-hour workweek to bump productivity. And South Korean companies, such as Samsung, are telling some execs to also show up on Saturday or Sunday to help boost the company's business.
Now, with economic alarm bells going off in the US, some workers pining for less time on the job may have to keep dreaming. READ MORE
