workspace

Israel should adopt a four-day workweek - opinion

Based upon the improved productivity trends, proven benefits and time for religious reasons and to spend with family/friends, Israel should explore and test a 4-day workweek.

By DAVID S. LEVINE
09/05/2023

Bira Kadima: Taking steps for Israelis with cerebral palsy - with beer

CEO Guy Salomon began thinking about his hobby of beer-making and wondered if this fairly simple and straightforward process might have potential as a job for program participants. 

By HOWARD BLAS
29/04/2023

Making aliyah: Can you find success, work-life balance in Israel?

At an event in New Jersey for medical professionals considering aliyah, Dr. Elissa Freedman presents a realistic take on life for women in Israel.

28/04/2023
Danger

Safeguard raises $8 million for AI workplace accident prevention platform

By leveraging machine learning and Big Data, the company can give real-time warnings to endangered employees, hopefully reducing the fatalities within the physical labor industry.

Is office work in Israel taking a back seat to remote work?

Following the pandemic, remote/hybrid work has become the preferred model for millions of employees. But do its benefits outweigh its singular set of challenges?

This week in Jerusalem: Nof Zahav

A weekly round-up of city affairs.

10/03/2023

As shared offices take off, Israel's ROOMS looks to expand

A trend toward flexible workspace demand indicates increased interest in outsourcing non-mission-critical facets of running a business — such as accommodation and IT — to external providers.

Remote work is here to stay; Gable raises $16 million to keep coordinating it

With nearly 100 million remote workers in the US alone, the need for remote work logistics has become necessary to avoid burnout and disconnection among isolated employees.

Co-workers or lovers? New app can tell if you're a match for either - study

Iman Chatterjee: “You could probably use our system to determine which people in an organization work better together in a group and which are naturally antagonistic.”

There's an upside to playing favorites at work- study

New research finds that in teams that lack clear chain of command, a leader’s biases impose structure and help everyone to work together more effectively.

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