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Baby Boomers have been often ascribed as technology resistant, and slower to adopt computers and smart phones than more recent generations who have grown up with them. This has created a sharp divide in how Boomers and modern generations see and interact with the world, including relationships, consumption of media, news sources, and spending ...
A notable difference when compared to the 50% response we got from baby boomers. Prioritize complexity over simplicity I’ve been using generative AI tools at work for months now–and I never ...
Some 1,303,000 people aged between 55 and 64 worked multiple jobs at once in 2023, research shows.
As the U.S. grapples with what the future of work will look like, this group of baby boomers is claiming its stake, Walton says, and in the process reshaping workplaces and societal expectations ...
Baby boomers are redefining work in their 60s, 70s, and beyond with ‘unretirement’ plans: ‘We’re not our grandparents’ vision of retirees’ Alicia Adamczyk April 16, 2024 at 7:06 AM
About 23% of all employees, at all levels, said the same—including one in three baby boomers. Missing the real value Even the entry-level workers can tell they’re missing something crucial.
Gen Zers and boomers—a rare alliance—want to work more in the office, while millennials place more value on working from home, according to new research from Bloom and others.
Boomers were the largest generation until 2011, Gen Xers had a brief time in the sun until 2018, and millennials have been at the steering wheel since then. Gen Z isn’t set to overtake ...