With the COVID-19 pandemic causing the majority of employees to work from home, it has never been more important for us to have the skills to manage remote workers effectively.
Almost half (47%) of workers believe their employer will ditch widespread remote working once the COVID-19 pandemic is over.
Often when we speak of a wage or pay gap, the topic concerns the gender pay gap between men and women.
Following news that prime minister Boris Johnson was rushed into intensive care last week, we look at how organisations cope when their leader is absent
Employers across the UK are naturally preoccupied with the COVID-19 outbreak at present.
We live in unprecedented times and the news can become overwhelming at times.
In times of unprecedented crisis, business leaders often fall into the trap of jumping straight into ‘troubleshoot’ mode rather than ‘assess and analyse’.
Workers are already suffering from health issues due to the switch to remote working, according to an Institute for Employment Studies (IES) interim survey
The government-sanctioned lockdown will impact young workers the hardest, according to a new report for Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS)
The UK government has made temporary adjustments to Right to Work checks for employers to respect social distancing measures
The government announced it will remove all broadband data caps to help combat isolation during the COVID-19 outbreak
The COVID-19 crisis means that it’s inevitable most employees who can need to work from home. But Carlos Ruiz, managing director of Portas Global, warns that the practice is not the “Holy Grail”...