The Job-Hopping Panic Is a Generational Optical Illusion: 25-Year-Olds Have Always Stayed ~2.7 Years
Here’s the stat that should end the loyalty debate before it starts. In January 2024, the median tenure for workers ages 25-34 was 2.7 years, while workers ages 55-64 sat at 9.6 years, according to…
Read the full articleYou might also wanna read
How Career Changers Turn Being an Industry Outsider Into an Edge
69% of US workers changed or weighed a career switch and median job tenure is now just 3.9 years. Here is why outsiders win in an unfamiliar
Why Betting Your Whole Career on One Job Title Is the Riskier Move in 2026
Median job tenure fell to 3.9 years and 70% of job skills will change by 2030. Build a diversified career ecosystem, not one lane. Here is h
How long do Americans stay at their jobs?
Nearly half of American workers have been at their jobs either less than a year (22.2%) or more than 10 years (26.2%).
Laid Off Before the Cutoff, He Feared the Zero Years Would Gut His Social Security. The Real Damage Surprised Him.
The Layoff That Felt Like a Retirement Sentence A 61-year-old engineer with 32 years at the same company receives a severance package. His S
How to Stop AI From Becoming the Enemy of Younger Workers
Workers aged 22-25 in AI-exposed jobs saw a 13% employment drop. Here is why seniority-biased hiring is squeezing young workers and how to f
Changes to policies for work and retirement in EU15 nations (1995–2005)
’’Active ageing’’ policies have been presented as a potential panacea for the conflict between generations many argue will result from demog

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.