As many as 23 million Americans are planning to relocate as telework becomes the new normal, according to a new survey. Ken Wramton/Getty Images hide caption
remote work
Friday
Wednesday
When the pandemic first hit, corporate executives thought video meetings were awesome and productive. Now, CEOs are questioning how much those meetings really achieve. Alistair Berg/Getty Images hide caption
Thursday
The pandemic is eroding progress made by women in the workplace, a new report by Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg's Lean In foundation finds. Dominic Lipinski/PA Images via Getty Images hide caption
Sheryl Sandberg: Companies Need To 'Lean In' As Pandemic Threatens Women's Progress
Tuesday
Monday
More companies and schools are turning to Zoom's video meetings during the coronavirus pandemic, boosting sales and profit. Sam Wasson/Getty Images hide caption
Monday
Tech companies such as Google are letting many employees work remotely for the long haul. Ben Stansall/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
Tuesday
A health worker sprays disinfectant inside government offices as a preventive measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus. ARUN SANKAR/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
Thursday
Facebook's CEO says the company will begin "aggressively" hiring remote workers and allow current employees to request to work from home permanently. Jeff Chiu/AP hide caption
Tuesday
The Planet Money team on GoToMeeting with a goat (Listen to our recent episode, "Making It Work") Planet Money hide caption
Thursday
Facebook says it will take a slow approach to letting employees return to its offices this year. Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
Tuesday
Many parents suddenly have the task of making sure their kids learn while adjusting to a new life of managing working from home. Artur Debat/Getty Images hide caption
Coronavirus Triple Duty: Working, Parenting, And Teaching From Home
Cities including San Francisco are telling residents to stay home, contributing to increased use of video chats and other online communications. Jeff Chiu/AP hide caption
Internet Traffic Surges As Companies And Schools Send People Home
Sunday
Kate Walton, the CEO of Steyer Content, in her home office on Bainbridge Island, a ferry ride away from Seattle. Her company does $9 million in sales annually, providing marketing materials for companies such as Microsoft. Anna Walton hide caption
Virtual Happy Hour Anyone? Working From Home But Keeping Connected
Tuesday
Some companies find that real-time technology demands have forced them to curb their work-from-home policies, even as a growing number of employers continue to embrace remote work. Dean Mitchell/Getty Images/iStock hide caption
Some Employers Are Rethinking Telework, Citing A Need For Better Collaboration
Tuesday
Greg Gianforte is distributing a brochure urging workers to "come home to Montana" and telework from there. Marianne Wiest/BetterMontanaJobs.com hide caption