Teams | Collaboration | Customer Service | Project Management

Latest News

Featured Post

It's National Work Life Week!

Well-being at work matters to us all and it's important for both employers and employees to have conversations that move towards us enjoying our working lives. After all, the idea that our working lives should be a drudge is archaic. Please find below expert commentary from technology leaders on how we can inspire a better workplace for all.

Want to amplify your organization's productivity? Remember these three words.

Want to improve productivity? Start measuring things. As a large-company executive, your remit is to solve complex problems that span the business while giving your department heads a shared roadmap. As such, three words matter more now than they have in some time: Measure. Review. Incentivize. With swaths of employees returning to the office, there’s a real opportunity for managers to activate “all-in” strategies for teams to contribute to company growth.

How To Make Time Go By Faster For Increased Productivity?

We all can relate to the days at the office when time begins to slow down, and it feels like the day is becoming never-ending. Well, we all have been there. A lot of times, the workdays can feel stagnant. As if the entire course of time slows down and the air around you simply becomes confining. We know that you either keep looking at the clock or dreading this shift’s end. But wait, there actually is a way around it!

Work smarter, not harder: 15 tips for success

Wouldn’t it be great if we could be as productive as possible without causing burnout? We call it “working smarter, not harder.” Among many working professionals, working smart is a key to greater productivity. It can save you time and energy for the things that matter, like your life goals, personal growth and health, and relationships. The fact applies at work, too: Working smarter at the office keeps team members engaged and less overwhelmed.

"Quiet quitting": just a Gen Z term for poor employee engagement?

It’s easy to discount quiet quitting as social media-inspired melodrama. A way for younger people to put their own stamp on an idea that attentive leaders have understood for many years: people who don’t feel valued or respected, don’t bring their whole selves to work. But the fact that the trend emerged from a generation of true digital natives — workers in their teens through to their late 20s — offers a new insight.

How to Tackle Employee Burnout Successfully

In a world where work can be accessed from any given location, employee burnout has become increasingly common. The effects of such burnout can be extremely detrimental to a business, impacting factors such as efficiency and productivity. The most widely recognized means of avoiding employee burnout is through the use of approval workflows. In essence, an approval workflow is a feature that centers a Sharepoint.

Identify Moonlighting with the Help of We360.ai

Tech workers say the rise in moonlighting started after the outbreak of Covid-19. The way to work from home and take less time getting there has led to more flexible work schedules. It also gave people who were struggling on the side more opportunities which they can take up in their free time. Now, as it's trending, one thing you all are struggling with is how to overcome such cases. Do we have any tool to track moonlighting?

Sound the alarm: Would you even know if 'quiet quitting' was hurting your profits?

Quiet quitters don’t abandon ship. They don’t complain loudly. Instead these employees gently pull-back, and your business stops benefitting from their entire focus, energy and brilliance. For leaders, that should trigger alarm bells. But many carry on like nothing is amiss. The question isn’t whether you have people in your company that have stopped going ‘above and beyond’—inevitably, you do.