A flexible work life and the option to work remotely have long been a top priority for job seekers, but in these pandemic-ridden days, going to the office is, for the majority, a total dealbreaker. .
If you think Dec. 31 closed the door on the Great Resignation of 2021, you should know that the job market does not obey the calendar the pursuit of greener professional pastures has marched on.
Anyone who has ever applied for a job knows the agony between the time when you submit the application and the time when you finally hear back. But what you do or don't do in those anxious.
With the Great Resignation now more than a half-year-old, anyone pondering a career change might think they missed their window of opportunity. But the same forces that caused the unprecedented.
Frances Haugen put a face to the term "whistleblower" in October when she testified before a U.S. Senate subcommittee about activities she said she witnessed while working at one of the world's most.