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    Workplace culture

    Yesterday

    Employers lure workers back to office with promise of their own desk

    Hot desking took off during the pandemic as a way to save money amid a new era of hybrid work. Now some firms are having second thoughts.

    • Matthew Boyle

    This Month

    X owner Elon Musk.

    Elon Musk’s war on meetings should be taken seriously

    The serial entrepreneur knows that excessive meetings are a sign of poorly run companies. He believes there needs to be a constant battle against bureaucracy.

    • Aaron Patrick
    Work-related harassment and bullying was the main “mechanism of injury” for workers’ compensation claims for mental health conditions.

    Employers lose more than 655,000 days of work to mental health claims

    Increased awareness around mental health and the rising cost of living are contributing to a big jump in workers’ compensation for mental health injuries.

    • Euan Black
    Canva co-founder Cliff Obrecht at the Morgan Stanley conference.

    Canva co-founder calls for ‘wartime’ approach to staff performance

    Cliff Obrecht says companies that let poor performance slide are forced to do big lay-offs, something the graphic design group headed for an IPO has avoided.

    • Updated
    • Nick Bonyhady
    Albatross president Shinji Tanimoto poses for a photograph in Tokyo.

    Scared of resigning? An agency can take care of that

    Quitting agencies are springing up across Japan as workers say some companies try to bully employees into staying.

    • Jessica Sier
    Advertisement
    Entrenched victim-blaming stigmas and a lack of awareness around the new leave entitlement were among the reasons given for its low uptake.

    Domestic violence leave has been law for a year. Almost no one uses it

    Employers are being urged to do more for victim survivors of domestic violence after a survey revealed new leave entitlements were hardly being used.

    • Euan Black and Ronald Mizen

    Chicago wants to enlist remote workers in rescue of downtown

    It’s not the usual return-to-office pitch. Instead, the city is leaning into the rise of remote work by promoting co-working spaces in its iconic locations.

    • Isis Almeida

    May

    Ian Lilley has recently come back from parental leave.

    Why dads take less time off than mums

    Gender stereotypes are discouraging men from taking paid parental leave, a survey has found, making it harder for Australia to close the gender pay gap.

    • Euan Black
    Adrian Foo and Mike Sneesby have been friends for many years.

    Stan executive left Nine’s streaming business after workplace claims

    The departure followed complaints from multiple staff, and was months before another executive left the media group amid separate sexual harassment allegations.

    • Sam Buckingham-Jones
    Nine Entertainment chief executive Mike Sneesby returned from leave early.

    Nine to investigate television newsroom culture after Wick exit

    The media group’s leadership team held a crisis meeting last week to discuss the situation, and the company’s board is also expected to meet this week.

    • Sam Buckingham-Jones

    The humble email sign-off is not what it used to be

    It is not exactly clear when the sign-off turned into yet another tool in the arsenal of self-promotion deployed in so much of modern corporate life, but I do not see it fading any time soon.

    • Pilita Clark

    Qld union’s 13pc pay rise may spoil energy relief

    One of the biggest first-year pay rises in the country could add 30 per cent to costs, as Labor rolls out $1300 in household energy relief ahead of the October state election.

    • David Marin-Guzman
    The NTEU says not paying academics for responding to student emails outside of work hours is inconsistent with the right to disconnect laws.

    Academics seek pay for emails out of hours

    A major union is using Labor’s new right to disconnect laws to scrap a “common practice” where casual academics do not get separately paid to be contacted outside of hours.

    • David Marin-Guzman

    How much fun should you have at work?

    Jokes at work need to be deployed with skill and care. Yet, the best are glorious and the working world would be a far better place if we had a great deal more of them.

    • Pilita Clark

    Westpac brings back time sheets for salaried staff up to $140k

    Time recording for high-earners is becoming the new norm in the finance sector as firms guard against underpayments from excessive overtime. But some white-collar workers “hate it”.

    • David Marin-Guzman
    Advertisement

    Not a home office: cafe finds coffee and laptops don’t blend well

    The same reasons that drove19th-century writers from their garrets have led office workers to colonise café tables.

    • Jane Shilling
    Alex Gerbi, Quinn Emanuel’s London co-managing partner.

    New lawyers to earn $341,600 as London talent war explodes

    Wages for new hires at Quinn Emanuel will rise by tens of thousands from next month in a recruitment blow to Magic Circle rivals.

    • Eir Nolsoe
    Anthony Mouarrege said a simple act of kindness assured him his disability would not hold him back at work.

    Just one gesture stopped Anthony worrying about his disability at work

    Employers often assume that employing people with a disability is costly. New research suggests that’s not true.

    • Euan Black
    The commission member said the right to disconnect laws show the issue of employer contact is “of national importance”.

    Case shows how right to disconnect law could ‘bleed into compo claims’

    A tribunal has invoked Labor’s upcoming right to disconnect laws in finding that an employer’s contact of a staffer during sick leave was not reasonable.

    • David Marin-Guzman

    Family-focussed firm offers fertility benefits

    Staff at Engage Squared can receive up to $5000 towards fertility treatments.

    • Christopher Niesche