not-an-employee 37
Living and Working in the 1099 Economy | Newgeography.com
july 2011 by Vaguery
"Regardless of how one classifies these workers, they remain largely invisible to policy makers and to economic and workforce developers. That needs to change. In addition to recognizing the importance of this part of the workforce, we also need to develop a more nuanced understanding of their concerns and needs. At a minimum, providing a stronger safety net—as suggested by the Freelancer’s Union and others—makes sense. It also makes sense to develop work spaces that support the 1099ers. Here, the recent growth in co-work spaces is a positive trend. Finally, we need new kinds of support and services for the 1099ers. These might include traditional training in business development, but other supports, such as networking or peer-to-peer lending or on-line tools to find customers and partners should also be part of the mix. It’s time to recognize that the 1099 economy is here to stay and will be an important part of every community’s workforce for decades to come."
workantile-exchange
coworking
not-an-employee
july 2011 by Vaguery
Rising Income Inequality & Shifting Identities – The Specialist & The Omnivore | OnTheSpiral
may 2011 by Vaguery
"The specialist sacrifices resilience during times of change for earning potential in the short run. It also bears pointing out that the short run benefits to specialization are only significant when selection pressures amplify the specialist’s competitive advantage. Otherwise, being 5% better than second best only provides 5% more benefits.
If this point isn’t immediately obvious, consider an analogy to the strict zero-sum competition in sports contests. In an Olympic race, being 1% faster than your competitors could easily be the difference between first and last. Outside of that zero-sum competitive environment, the practical value of being 1% faster than the next guy is negligible."
not-an-employee
omnivores
economics
generalism
If this point isn’t immediately obvious, consider an analogy to the strict zero-sum competition in sports contests. In an Olympic race, being 1% faster than your competitors could easily be the difference between first and last. Outside of that zero-sum competitive environment, the practical value of being 1% faster than the next guy is negligible."
may 2011 by Vaguery
Why you may not like your job, even though everyone envies you
november 2010 by Vaguery
"To summarize: trading practical work for high-level positions is prestigious, but it may make you dumber, alienated and unhappy. Back when I was a graduate student, we used to joke about the accident. The accident is what happens to successful professors: they suddenly become uninteresting, pompous, and… frankly… a tad stupid."
via:iamsidd2k7
for-all-my-academic-friends-and-correspondents
worklife
not-an-employee
life-o'-the-mind
academia
academic-culture
november 2010 by Vaguery
Is Joe Hill finally dead? (The Ballad of Joe Hill) | Angry Bear
august 2010 by Vaguery
"Look no one wants to see violence in the streets, but history shows that it is not only the capitalists that have 2nd amendment remedies. Joe Hill may have more life in him than they like."
bankers-should-start-avoiding-lampposts-right-about-now
financial-crisis
capital
types-of
economics
labor
not-an-employee
august 2010 by Vaguery
open enterprise manifesto | bettermeans.com
june 2010 by Vaguery
"The Open Enterprise is a new organizational design. Unlike organizations using traditional management structures, Open Enterprises replace the command and control hierarchy with a meritocracy based on collaboration and open participation.
Organizations that adopt this new organizational structure can make decisions faster and respond quicker to their markets. They look more like living dynamic networks, and less like pyramids. People working in these organizations will have (and feel) more ownership. They’re more engaged in their work, and have the freedom to work on what they want, when they want to. Most importantly this model enables people to once again bring their full humanity – values, beliefs and passions – to the workplace, removing disconnect between organizational and personal values"
worklife
transparency
coworking
collaboration
business-culture
not-an-employee
Organizations that adopt this new organizational structure can make decisions faster and respond quicker to their markets. They look more like living dynamic networks, and less like pyramids. People working in these organizations will have (and feel) more ownership. They’re more engaged in their work, and have the freedom to work on what they want, when they want to. Most importantly this model enables people to once again bring their full humanity – values, beliefs and passions – to the workplace, removing disconnect between organizational and personal values"
june 2010 by Vaguery
Toxic Debt, Liar Loans, and Securitized Human Beings
june 2010 by Vaguery
"… The Panic of 1837 launched America's biggest and most consequential economic depression before the Civil War. And it was the decisions and behavior of thousands of actors like Bieller that created a perfect financial storm: bringing an end to one kind of capitalist boom; destroying the confidence of the slaveholding class, impoverishing millions of workers and farmers who were linked to the global economy; demolishing the already disrupted lives of hundreds of thousands of people like Harry and Roberson.…"
history-is-a-feature-not-a-bug
history
economics
capitalism
not-an-employee
analogies-to-be-drawn
financial-crisis
june 2010 by Vaguery
Year of Hustle: Plan, Build, Ship, Market, Earn, Iterate
march 2010 by Vaguery
"Principle #6: Working for other people (full-time or in some other capacity) often divorces our experience of work from the fruit of our work. Living off your own projects, created of your own accord, is an entirely different kind of existence. And it is AWESOME."
not-an-employee
freemium
disintermediation-in-action
cultural-dynamics
business-culture
productivity
entrepreneurship-as-pathology
collaboration-as-cure
march 2010 by Vaguery
How a New Jobless Era Will Transform America - The Atlantic(March 2010)
february 2010 by Vaguery
'“We haven’t seen anything like this before: a really deep recession combined with a really extended period, maybe as much as eight years, all told, of highly elevated unemployment,” Shierholz told me. “We’re about to see a big national experiment on stress.”'
financial-crisis
economics
unemployment
not-an-employee
sociology
cultural-norms
American-cultural-assumptions
politics
capitalism
capital
types-of
great-employment-shift
february 2010 by Vaguery
Calculated Risk: Five Million Workers to Exhaust Unemployment Benefits by June
february 2010 by Vaguery
"The blue line is the number of workers unemployed for 27 weeks or more. The red line is the same data as a percent of the civilian workforce.
According to the BLS, there are a record 6.31 million workers who have been unemployed for more than 26 weeks (and still want a job). This is a record 4.1% of the civilian workforce. (note: records started in 1948)."
employment
unemployment
financial-crisis
visualization
economics
public-policy
great-employment-shift
not-an-employee
According to the BLS, there are a record 6.31 million workers who have been unemployed for more than 26 weeks (and still want a job). This is a record 4.1% of the civilian workforce. (note: records started in 1948)."
february 2010 by Vaguery
Still Nervous, Many Businesses Are Hiring Temporary Workers - NYTimes.com
december 2009 by Vaguery
"Last month 52,000 temps were added, greater than the number of new workers in any other category. Not even health care and government, stalwarts through the long recession, did better.
“Sometimes we’re asked by a company to bring back ex-employees as temps,” said Joanie Ruge, a senior vice president of Adecco. Some are even ex-employees who have been laid off. “That does happen,” she said."
not-an-employee
employment
worklife
financial-crisis
temping
economics
labor-v-capital
plug-compatible-units
“Sometimes we’re asked by a company to bring back ex-employees as temps,” said Joanie Ruge, a senior vice president of Adecco. Some are even ex-employees who have been laid off. “That does happen,” she said."
december 2009 by Vaguery
Unemployment in October 2009, The Editor's Desk
november 2009 by Vaguery
"In October, 35.6 percent of unemployed persons were jobless for 27 weeks or more...."
unemployment
financial-crisis
not-an-employee
no-really
statistics
public-policy
long-depression
government
november 2009 by Vaguery
Temp Hides Fun, Fulfilling Life From Rest Of Office | The Onion - America's Finest News Source
september 2009 by Vaguery
""Just yesterday, somebody asked me about my last temp job," Braxton said. "It ended in May, but I told them it ended in June. See, after it ended, I took about a month off and just kind of dicked around, traveling around Europe until my money ran out. I knew not to mention that to people who won't be able to do anything like that until they're 65.""
via:aaronsw
not-an-employee
worklife
humor
but-not-wrong
september 2009 by Vaguery
Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : The Entrepreneurial Union (August 18, 2009)
september 2009 by Vaguery
"Also unlike traditional unions, the Freelancers Union does not negotiate salaries or organize strikes. It does, however, work with politicians to win better protections for free agents. A recent advocacy triumph for the Freelancers Union came on March 23, 2009, when New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that he would seek a new federal unemployment benefit for freelancers, who make up 15 percent of New York City’s workforce. The Freelancers Union designed the proposed Unemployment Protection Fund, which would require the federal or state governments to match $300 for every $1,000 a Freelancers Union member voluntarily pays into a designated fund. Members could draw upon these funds to pay for college tuition, housing, education, or other needs in case of unemployment."
employment
labor
not-an-employee
september 2009 by Vaguery
Unemployment: The Harder You Look, The Uglier It Appears « naked capitalism
september 2009 by Vaguery
"Reader John O pointed us to a very good post from the Economic Policy Institute which gives a thorough analysis of recent unemployment data and puts it in a broader historical context. Bottom line: it is not pretty. The fixation with looking for a turn in initial jobless claims as a sign of recovery seems to have diverted attention from how deep the unemployment hole is this time around."
unemployment
financial-crisis
not-an-employee
september 2009 by Vaguery
Works Made For Hire - Keep Your Copyrights
august 2009 by Vaguery
"If there is no signed written agreement, then the work isn’t for hire, and you start out with all the rights. If there is a written agreement, it should be entered into before you create the work. Beware of after-the-fact attempts to take away your rights by calling the work “for hire,” for example by sending you a check whose endorsement line says that your signature is your agreement that the work was for hire."
work-for-hire
law
contracts
intellectual-property
independent
not-an-employee
freelancing
copyright
contractor
disintermediation-targets
august 2009 by Vaguery
Why work-for-hire hurts | StopWorkForHire.com
august 2009 by Vaguery
"Why work-for-hire is hurting the creative industry"
work-for-hire
contracts
independence
not-an-employee
law
disintermediation-targets
business-model
august 2009 by Vaguery
http://agileroots2009.confreaks.com/videos/16-jun-2009-09-00-artisanal-retro-futurism-team-scale-anarcho-syndicalism-brian-marick-small.mp4
video conferences agility agile-management revolution social-norms social-networks propaganda history-is-a-feature-not-a-bug kawgooshkawnick not-an-employee
july 2009 by Vaguery
video conferences agility agile-management revolution social-norms social-networks propaganda history-is-a-feature-not-a-bug kawgooshkawnick not-an-employee
july 2009 by Vaguery
Cut the Cubicle Umbilical Cord: The Seven Traits of the Free Man | Zen Habits
may 2009 by Vaguery
"What’s the gap between dreams being fantasy and reality? Obviously, it’s a matter of action. But, what makes the free man take action where the cubicle citizen recoils? This is the question that has been burning in my mind for some time. This mindset makes the difference between success and near certain failure."
worklife
career
self-definition
psychology
business-culture
employment
not-an-employee
may 2009 by Vaguery
NASE - Fairness in Tax Compliance
march 2009 by Vaguery
"The self-employed and micro-business communities face an overwhelming regulatory burden in complying with IRS regulations. According to the General Accounting Office, a small business owner faces more than 200 IRS forms and schedules that could apply in a given year. Vague and complex rules and forms can mean the demise of their business. According to a study by the Tax Foundation, in 2005 individuals, businesses and nonprofits spent an estimated 6 billion hours complying with the federal income tax code, with an estimated compliance cost of over $265.1 billion. Businesses bear the majority of tax compliance costs, totaling nearly $148 billion or 56 percent of total compliance costs. "
not-an-employee
tax
business
business-culture
government
public-policy
taxes
development
economics
march 2009 by Vaguery
NASE - Access to Affordable Health Coverage
march 2009 by Vaguery
"The National Association for the Self-Employed (NASE) strongly supports proposals such as health care tax credits, a self-employment tax deduction on health insurance premiums, expansion of both Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs) and Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), and pooling arrangements for small business as important steps to creating an equitable environment for micro-businesses and the self-employed to purchase affordable, quality health coverage. "
NASE
not-an-employee
healthcare
business
aggregation
pooling
actuarial
march 2009 by Vaguery
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