remote work
Thursday
Wednesday
Friday
Employees elbow bump at a JLL office in Menlo Park, Calif., in September. With the delta variant surging, mask mandates are returning, and some employers are now requiring employees to be vaccinated before coming to the office. David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images hide caption
Back To The Office? Not Yet. Companies Scramble To Adjust To The Delta Variant
Tuesday
Apple's massive" spaceship" campus designed to centralize work and foster collaboration in 2017 may have to make way for satellite offices and other remote work. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images hide caption
Thursday
Jonathan Caballero is among the millions of workers who are rethinking how they want to live their lives after the pandemic. He has found a new job that won't require a long commute. Andrea Hsu/NPR hide caption
Monday
Janelia's cafeteria, which was noisy and crowded in pre-pandemic times, now operates a contactless takeout system. Sarah Silbiger for NPR hide caption
It's Personal: Zoom'd Out Workplace Ready For Face-To-Face Conversations To Return
Monday
Renuka Iyer, chief human resources officer for the World Resources Institute, sits in an empty office. The environmental nonprofit's staff has been working remotely since March 2020. Andrea Hsu/NPR hide caption
Working In Sweatpants May Be Over As Companies Contemplate The Great Office Return
Friday
Kristy Miller gets away from her home office in Charlotte, N.C., with her dogs, Oreo and Dabo. Kristy Miller hide caption
Tuesday
Many tech workers say they have experienced more harassment, hostility and anxiety while working remotely during the pandemic. Wilfredo Lee/AP hide caption
Friday
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
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