This week’s top stories explore how technology is shaping the way employees are working during the pandemic.
The surge in remote work has quickly created demand for a new set of skills for accountants.
Even though everyone is using Zoom, it’s amazing how few people have actually spent time learning how to use it effectively. There’s no excuse for that.
When it comes to working from home, people’s thoughts automatically turn to Zoom. But there’s another game-changing tool that’s rapidly gaining traction in the telework arena.
Accountants have no need to return to crowded offices, especially not in states where COVID-19 is having a second wind.
Now perhaps more than ever, banks and their proxies need to show tact when communicating with past-due borrowers.
In addition to Apple and Google delivering smartphone apps that would alert users that they are near a person infected by the virus, various other government agencies and businesses are developing that type of technology to address the pandemic's spread.
PricewaterhouseCoopers has developed a contact-tracing app as the Big Four firm looks forward to reopening its offices during the coronavirus pandemic and tries to help its clients safely open theirs as more states announce plans to gradually lift their stay-at-home orders.
Establish a communication plan now, so your firm can come out of this crisis stronger than ever. Here are three key steps to follow.
As the world practices social distancing to counteract spreading the virus further, it forces lenders to move as close as possible to an all-digital model, as quickly as possible.