Working days of eight hours a day, 40 hours a week, are in the spotlight of the Ministry of Labor in Spain, where the possibility of reducing working hours is being considered, adjusting to models that are already implemented in other European countries. where there are 37-hour days per week. In fact, one of the founders of LinkedIn, Reid Hoffman, has spoken on this topic.
Reid Hoffman, who has already anticipated on other occasions what would happen with some factors related to the workplace, such as the growing importance of social networks in the current paradigm, dares to give a specific date on which the Typical office hours will die: “Your job from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. is dying. By 2034 it will not exist”said the expert about the new work days.
This was recorded on his professionals in the same company, but they go through several of them throughout their career.
How the workplace changes in Spain
At the same time, it is very common for many workers to have temporary jobs as employees or combining several jobs at the same time, sometimes even, within different sectorssince they are not specialized in just one thing.
The good part of all these changes that have occurred in recent decades in terms of the way of working is that productivity and dynamism increase, creating more job opportunities for people. However, it has one bad thing: instability. In general, workers prefer job stability that leads to economic stability.
Employment is shifting towards a sphere in which there will increasingly be more freelancers instead of employees. In addition, these first ones will earn more money with jobs that they could even do from their own home.
Thus, teleworking is another factor that, together with artificial intelligence, will change the workplace. While there are jobs that require 100% presence, other sectors they will be able to implement time flexibilityworking from home or automation through AI, changing the traditional jobs that we know until now.
Your 9-to-5 job is dying.
By 2034, it’ll be extinct.
That’s Reid Hoffman’s latest prediction – the founder of LinkedIn who predicted the rise of social media in 1997.
Here’s what he said next: pic.twitter.com/dZTDzBKlfB
— Neal Taparia (@nealtaparia) July 24, 2024
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