BETA
This is a BETA experience. You may opt-out by clicking here
Edit Story
Newsletter

How To Radically Rethink Your Calendar, Reset Your Job Search For 2023 And More

Following

Here is the published version of this week’s Forbes Careers newsletter, which brings the latest news, commentary and ideas about the workplace, leadership, job hunting and the future of work straight to your inbox every Wednesday. Click here to get on the newsletter list!

Have you made a New Year's resolution to carve out more time to think, focus and steer clear of so many meetings? When Shopify employees returned from their holiday break, it was done for them.

As I reported yesterday, employees there learned Tuesday that every recurring meeting with three or more people would be automatically canceled and removed from their calendars. They were instructed not to add them back for at least two weeks—if at all—being careful to evaluate which ones really mattered.

The practice isn’t new. Other companies, particularly in the tech sector, have made similar moves as productivity concerns increase, burnout and mental health issues rise and the half-hour Zoom habits of the pandemic have lingered. As I wrote about in August, software platform GitLab has annual “meeting cleanup” days, Asana conducted experiments last spring called “meeting doomsday” and Slack has “Focus Fridays”—executives there have practiced “calendar bankruptcy” to temporarily remove and review standing meetings.

Shopify wants to take the practice further, requiring large “all-hands” meetings to take place no more than once a week and creating a bot to alert those who try to schedule a meeting on Wednesdays. (They’re considering some other interesting ideas you can read more about here.) It’s all part of a broader effort to become “a better operating company,” Shopify’s chief operating officer Kaz Nejatian told me, as the global commerce company aims to move faster following a year when it had to lay off workers and its shares plummeted nearly 75% amid inflation pressure and consumer shopping changes. “We think it’s important to force change,” Nejatian told me. “You build a muscle by doing it.”

To me, this is what’s most interesting to me about this approach. Simply telling managers to schedule fewer meetings probably won’t work. Outlook calendars don’t clean up by themselves. Real change often needs a forcing mechanism that can overcome the inertia and stickiness of the tools we use to operate our work lives. By automatically deleting standing meetings and requiring that people add them back only if they’re needed, workers are compelled to radically rethink and reevaluate how their time is being spent.

How could you implement this with your team or your own calendar? Could you temporarily pull large meetings off the calendar to force a reset? Create alerts to notify managers to reconsider if they’re scheduling them for unpopular times? Set limits on how many large meetings can be held in a week? After three years of remote work-fueled meeting bloat, such forcing mechanisms might help free up your time—and your team’s time—to do the work that really matters this year.

It’s just one idea of many that Forbes journalists and contributors have been sharing for getting a fresh launch to the year ahead. We highlight a few in the newsletter below, but what are your career goals for 2023? From addressing burnout on your team to what you should have on your resume this year, we have ideas to get you started on the right foot. Here’s to a healthy, inspiring and productive New Year—as always, thanks to Emmy Lucas for her help curating this week’s newsletter.


FEATURED STORY

The Most Notable Career Crashes Of 2022

Forbes’ 2022 list of career crashes focuses on the people whose downfall sheds light on the times in which we live.


WORK SMARTER

Here’s some actionable job hunting advice for the new year. Plus, the advice LinkedIn career experts have for succeeding in 2023.

Not sure if your dream job is actually your dream job? Here are ways to help determine.

Consider adding these ten New Year’s resolutions to your list.

Job hunting? Here are tips on how to sell yourself.

Ask yourself these four questions when it comes to looking for career advancement.


ON OUR AGENDA

Proposed NYC bill may be a win for workers: The New York City Council recently introduced a bill that would make it illegal for employers to fire people without a good reason. “If approved, the bill will offer security and protection from a manager capriciously firing you,” writes Forbes senior contributor Jack Kelly.

RTO policies: Some predictions say 2023 will be the year of the return to the office. But recent Adzuna data shows a gap, Forbes contributor Bryan Robinson writes, between employers mandating return-to-office policies and employees resisting in favor of remote working.

Barbara Walters’ career: With a career that spanned five decades, newswoman Barbara Walters died last week at 93. Forbes contributor Joan Michelson provides 11 lessons to be learned from Walters’ career—and they don’t just apply to women.

Jobs outlook: As elevated inflation and interest rate hikes persist, many companies are looking to hire contractors instead of full-timers, Forbes senior contributor Jack Kelly writes. Meanwhile, full-time employees are focusing on things such as job security and pay that keeps up with inflation.

CEO pay cuts: AMC Entertainment CEO Adam Aron declared on Twitter Monday he will forego any increase in base salary, maximum incentive bonus and stock awards. Forbes contributor Corinne Post writes on the phenomenon of CEOs cutting their own salaries, and the implications of doing so.


BOOK CLUB

Change doesn’t have to derail your career, or your whole life. Author Osnat Benari’s new book, Starting From Scratch: Managing Change Like Your Career Depends On It, provides the step-by-step tools to navigating changes in your career and how to turn changes into opportunities.

Send me a secure tip