Mental Health

  • Shared Links (weekly)

    Best Practices for Organizations to Mitigate Risks in Collaboration Software

    McKinsey report: 62% of workers worry about their mental health

    The way we train AI is fundamentally flawed

    Estate planning means organizing passwords

    Microsoft 365 is going full cop on employees with constant monitoring

    Don’t Let Amazon Spammers Scam Your Grandma this Holiday Season

    Why Start-Up Culture Still Hides Mental Health Struggles

    5 meaningful ways to gift your employees this holiday

    Proportionality: Cost Remains The Bottom Line in eDiscovery

    C’mon! Bates Numbering Native Production is Easy!

    This Is How To Make It Hard To Work With You

    The cult of busy.

    Loneliness Is A Mental Health Issue, Can Technology Help?

  • Shared Links (weekly) Nov. 15, 2020

    Why Taking a Break is Good for Your Mental Health

    Why Is Age Not Part of Diversity and Inclusion?

    Data and Time Frames Are Forcing a Shift in eDiscovery Workflows

    How ‘toxic positivity’ at work may be damaging your mental health

    Google Photos will end its free unlimited storage on June 1st, 2021

    Craig Ball Weighs in on Embedded Graphics in Emails: eDiscovery Best Practices

    Expect Pandemic-Related Addiction Among Employees

    Cybersecurity Threats in 2020 now include Choose-Your-Own-IT (CYOIT)

    Legal AI – Don’t Be Scared!

    3 Questions Legal Teams Need to Ask Before Deciding on an eDiscovery Solution

    How to Ask for Help When You Need It

    Are Americans actually more productive working from home?

    3 Cybersecurity Tools for 2021 Corporate Budgets

  • Shared Links (weekly) Nov 8, 2020

    Desktop Users! One Out of Five of You is Running on An Insecure, Unsupported Operating System

    Convenience and Catastrophes of Self-Collection

    eDiscovery Productions in Business Productivity Suites: Truly End-to-End?

    How to talk about mental health at work during pandemic and election

    How to Identify a Phishing Attempt and Thwart It

    Use the Brave Browser for Privacy Concerns

    Getting on the Same Page…of the Dictionary

    After 15 Years, Has the eDiscovery EDRM Model Been Realized

    Time to Treat Broadband Like the Essential Service It Is

    The secret struggles of introverts in a remote workforce

    Dear Leaders, Are You Really Taking Care Of Your Working Parents In The Pandemic?

    Many Americans Plan To Move, Now That They Can Work From Anywhere

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    Linked: Talking About Mental Health with Your Employees — Without Overstepping

    Or as I would put it, if you don’t even know my wife’s name, or can’t remember that I don’t have kids, maybe start there before you ask about my mental health, cool?

    Suddenly asking someone you barely know anything about outside of work about mental health, will be a shock, and quite frankly, will seem threatening more than it seems supportive. As in, “why is my boss asking about this? Does she think I’m not doing my job, am I about to get fired?”

    I’m assuming that’s not how you want them to feel, so be thoughtful about how you bring these subjects up. By all means, work up to it, and work up toward helping your reports feel comfortable, but do it in a way that actually works, not in a way that makes them feel less safe.

  • Shared Links (weekly) Nov. 1, 2020

    Bar Mental Health Questions Deter Treatment, Advocates Say How to Get Better at Remote Small Talk INSIDER THREAT PREVENTION: ONGOING, NOT STATIC 5 ways to design a better mental health future for workers Ghislaine Maxwell deposition redactions: How to crack them. – This is legitimately stupid. Who included the index with the deposition transcript and…

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    Linked: Covid-19 Explodes the Myth That Women ‘Opt’ Out of the Workforce

    I’m a man with no children. So, working extra hours when the need arises isn’t really an issue. (It’s a mental health and work/life balance issue when it never ends, but when that happens I can choose to go do something else, and we’ve made some progress in recognizing this in many workplaces.) On the other hand, I know, pretty instinctively, that if I put a hard 40 hour limit, or a hard ending of my day at a certain time, no matter what, I’d probably be out of a job. Yet, for people with children, there needs to be a hard cap on the hours spent working. The pandemic creating this home/virtual school issue made this worse, and more obvious, but it’s always been an issue. Lots of workplaces talk a good game about balance and flexibility, but when push comes to shove, most of them will also demand that you figure out your childcare issues on your own time and be available to work in a pinch. So, you login from home all evening and work, and if you’re a single parent, the kids get ignored, or maybe you can find someone else to watch them for you. If there are two parents, you’d better hope you both don’t have those kinds of jobs, because one of you needs to be available for childcare, you can’t both be online working all night. 

    And, if you have to choose which one leaves that kind of work arrangement, well, in general, women get paid less and have less advancement opportunities, (partially because they are more likely to “opt-out”), so they are going to be the ones to opt out, perpetuating the impression that women make these choices, that are then used to justify not changing the workplace to accommodate working mothers. After all, they’re likely to leave anyway, right? 

    It’s really quite the little, vicious, circle we’ve made for women in the workplace.