Experts expect surge of unemployment claims this week | Trust is key to making a remote workforce productive | Tips for a healthy home work environment
Created for newsletter@newslettercollector.com | Web Version
Dear SmartBrief reader,
Leaders are facing unforeseen challenges because of the novel coronavirus and the disease caused by it, COVID-19, and we'd like to help by doing what we do best. To help all of us get through this extraordinary time, we are launching a publication dedicated to delivering solution-focused news and information around COVID-19.
SmartBrief’s Special Report on Coronavirus will help you manage your organization and lead your employees in this highly uncertain environment. We'll keep you informed on a range of topics, including best practices for a work-from-home workforce, effective communication with customers and colleagues, and news about organizations adapting to a dramatically different business environment. We'll also keep you abreast of up-to-date information on the pandemic's life cycle and its economic effect.
If you'd like to receive this free, twice-weekly newsletter, please sign up today.
Of course, SmartBrief editors will continue to deliver news across our 200 newsletters as we have for more than 20 years. We are thankful to have you as readers and look forward to supporting you as we navigate this period together.
Best regards,
Rick Stamberger
CEO
SmartBrief
SmartBrief, Inc. | 555 11th St. NW | Suite 600 | Washington, DC 20004 | Unsubscribe
Goldman Sachs predicts 2.25 million Americans this week will file for their first week of unemployment, eight times the 33% jump in new claims the market experienced last week. The firm expects the unemployment rate will swell to 9% over the next few quarters. Full Story: CNN (3/22)
Recruiting & Retention
Trust is key to making a remote workforce productive Flexibility, ensuring employees have the tools they need and trusting them to do their work are key to making a remote workforce productive, writes Alison Green. "If a manager has an employee on their team whom they don't trust to work when they're not being closely watched, that's a failure of the manager's and something that should have been addressed long before this crisis hit," she writes. Full Story: American Management Association (free registration) (3/19),Slate (3/17)
FFCRA expands sick leave, offers employers tax credits The Families First Coronavirus Response Act requires some employers to provide paid leave to eligible employees during the coronavirus pandemic, but allows employers to take tax credits for that leave, write attorneys April Boyer and Erinn Rigney. Businesses with fewer than 50 employees do not have to comply with Division C of the FFCRA if they can prove compliance would jeopardize their viability. Full Story: K&L Gates Hub (3/19)
A team approach to keeping workers safe from the coronavirus is critical, and it's not too late to develop a plan for your employees, said John Howard, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health director, during a recent webinar on virus response held by the National Safety Council. "I would look at that as a crisis team," Howard said, adding, "Clearly, your emergency response plan now has to be a coronavirus emergency plan." Full Story: Safety + Health (3/19)
Sharing SmartBrief on Workforce with your network keeps the quality of content high and these daily updates free.
Refer 10 new readers to receive one year of digital access to The New York Times. Experience groundbreaking reporting, commentary, documentaries and more.