|
This week's guide to Crisis Management This week's email features a look at Report: Comfort level with in-person works declines; Dealing with employee fraud in the hybrid workplace; Rising popularity of coworking space gets boost from pandemic; 'Unfair' noncompetes? Response beginning to form to Biden's 'competition' order; Learning the secrets of persuasion. For more on Crisis Management be sure to visit our website, crisismanagementupdate.com. We'd love to hear your thoughts or feedback on this newsletter. Please contact Patrick Brannan at [email protected]. | | | |
|
|
|
| | Report: Comfort level with in-person work declines New research from Paychex Inc. shows that nearly one-third of employees say their comfort level with in-person work has decreased because of the COVID-19 Delta variant. Read more > |
|
|
|
|
| Dealing with employee fraud in the hybrid workplace With so many companies now embracing hybrid work environments, there’s an expanded need for reviewing any employee fraud controls that were put into place in 2020. In hindsight, organizations are realizing that these pandemic controls may have been hastily put into place, exposing some potential longer-term vulnerabilities. Read more > |
|
|
|
|
| Rising popularity of coworking space gets boost from pandemic In a sense, the coworking sector has been training for years for a pandemic that they did not anticipate. Coworking space and shared office entrepreneurs saw long ago that there was more than one way to “do office.” Read more > |
|
|
|
|
| | ‘Unfair’ noncompetes? Response beginning to form to Biden’s ‘competition’ order Lawyers have begun to think about what the forthcoming changes may mean for their clients and are developing plans to respond. Read more > |
|
|
|
|
| Learning the secrets of persuasion The secret to succeeding in these persuasive endeavors is “classical rhetoric”—the art of selecting the most effective modes of persuasion, refined over centuries and relevant today, and using them in our effort to persuade. With its seeds in ancient Egypt, classical rhetoric developed and flourished in ancient Greece and Rome as demonstrated or taught by great advocates and scholars. Read more > |
|
|
|
|