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What is “quiet quitting”? NPR explains it’s when employees don’t give 110% at work -- they log off on time, and only do what’s required to stay on the payroll
Quiet quitting
NPR
What is “quiet quitting”? NPR explains it’s when employees don’t give 110% at work -- they log off on time, and only do what’s required to stay on the payroll
Fast Company
Quiet quitting caused quite the stir in 2022. Fast Company wrote that social media engagement with the topic rose 14,000% in a two-week period in August 2022. The term seemed to get under everyone’s skin!
The WSJ
Many employers and employees offered their two cents. In short, some people thought it lazy, others thought it was a totally fair practice -- The WSJ
TikTok
This TikToker’s take is that quiet quitting is really about protecting your life outside of work
TikTok
But *this* TikToker demonstrated quiet quitting in a different way -- it’s about “acting your wage”
Gallup
According to a Gallup poll, quiet quitting is just about everywhere. They reported that at least 50% of the workforce are quiet quitters
The WSJ
The WSJ said it’s a Gen Z-fueled phenomenon: This has become a thing because they’re joining the workforce now -- and they’re just the type to do something like this
TikTok
But this TikToker says quiet quitters are really just employees who choose to do the work they’re paid to do (and no more)
WaPo
WaPo had a different take: It isn’t new -- it’s just another way to say “employee disengagement”. And burnout may be why
CBS
CBS: Maybe quiet quitting is an extension of the Great Resignation -- it’s another way for employees to take control over their work/life balance
Michael Hobbes
A Substacker: Quiet quitting is the result of unfair salary jobs that expect workers to do more without getting paid for their extra labor
The Atlantic
The Atlantic thinks quiet quitting isn’t a phenomenon at all. The term went viral because it gives a name to complex, chronic issues employees and their managers experience
Medium
But this blogger thinks it’s a consequence of our collective sense of doom: Workers can’t be expected to care about our jobs if there’s a climate crisis apocalypse in the near future
TikTok
This TikToker is: The concept of “quiet quitting” gaslights employees into thinking that they shouldn’t have a life outside of work. Plus, it’s up to the *employer* to keep their workers engaged!
Psychology Today
Psych Today likes the practice in general: It helps prevent burnout, gives workers control over their lives, and promotes a healthy work/life balance
CNBC
On the other hand, Shark Tank star Kevin O’Leary is anti-quiet quitting: If you want success and freedom later in life, you gotta be willing to put in the extra time now
The WSJ
Elon’s not into quiet quitters, either. He gave Twitter employees an ultimatum -- work hard or leave. Some experts say Elon’s strategy is risky, but others think it may bring a hardcore work culture to Twitter -- The WSJ
NY Times
An NYT Op is anti too, but for a different reason: Reclaiming your time is not about doing less, it’s about doing more of the things you like! Phoning it in at work isn’t going to make you feel any less burned out
Forbes
And Forbes has a tip for managers: Support quiet quitters by giving them more resources to tackle their tasks
up next...
“Quiet firing'
“Quiet firing'
The Great Resignation
The Great Resignation
WFH
WFH
Crying at work
Crying at work
Failing up
Failing up
Death of the Girlboss
Death of the Girlboss
Great Resignation, done?
Great Resignation, done?
The great remorse
The great remorse
The stay-at-home GF
The stay-at-home GF
Quiet cutting
Quiet cutting
Let it rot
Let it rot
Rattner’s WFH op
Rattner’s WFH op
Conscious quitting
Conscious quitting
Overemployment
Overemployment
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