• New Year resolutions to inspire adaptability at work

    Gary Martin     |     January 4, 2021

    As many of us take a well-earned break to kick off the new year, thoughts will turn to finalising those new year resolutions to guide our personal lives:

     

  • Why hoarding your holidays is a recipe for disaster

    Gary Martin     |     December 16, 2020

    One of the great joys in life is taking a break from work — getting away from it all,

     

  • Avoid gifting yourself a bad name with your co-workers

    Gary Martin     |     December 4, 2020

    If we are honest, the answer to almost every workplace-related festive season question is as clear as the difference between black and white. You should not wear that ridiculous snowman necktie, 

  • Don’t get sleighed by the end of year office party

    Gary Martin     |     November 24, 2020

    Following a year of events no one predicted, at least some workplaces are still planning to officially put the past 12 months behind them with a safe but rip-roaring end-of-year 

  • Calls for more resilience a smokescreen for broken workplaces

    Gary Martin     |     November 4, 2020

    It was an accusation that left millennials around the country marinating in misery. Ita Buttrose declared that the generation born between 1981 and 1996 – which makes up a major component 

  • Time for us to retire retirement

    Gary Martin     |     October 23, 2020

    Retirement, an invention of the 20thcentury, is disappearing faster than a buttered bullet fired from a shotgun. And its not’s simply because the coronavirus has had a huge impact on superannuation 

  • Wage subsidy for the young marks the coming of ageism

    Gary Martin     |     October 15, 2020

    There is no doubt the Federal Government’s new JobMaker package provides a cocktail of the right ingredients to give young Australians a real chance of making the transition from welfare 

  • Time to come clean about overqualified  job seekers

    Gary Martin     |     October 9, 2020

    With the pandemic pushing unemployment rates up, you might think the most highly qualified and experienced job seekers will be first to be snapped up as new opportunities emerge. Yet as 

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