
Why 'rage quitting' is all the rage
Walking out of a job in anger can seem extreme — but there are often powerful motivations for doing it.
Walking out of a job in anger can seem extreme — but there are often powerful motivations for doing it.
In this story published Sept. 7, 2021, on BBC:
Particularly at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, people started spending a lot more time at home and that gave them a lot more downtime. When you’re in the office and it’s hectic, you don’t have as much space and time to think. It’s hard to zoom out and think about the next month, year, or five years of your life. It made people start to question: How can I live a life or have a career that’s in line with what I’m actually interested in?
– Peter Hom, professor of management and entrepreneurship
Latest news
- Full-time MBA program helps Gina Larson transition from Peace Corps to running cross-cultural venture
Returning from serving in the Peace Corps in Kosovo, Gina Larson (Full-time MBA '26) has found a…
- The subscription trap and how it impacts students' budgets
Monthly subscriptions can reinforce behaviors like the sunk-cost fallacy and loss aversion,…
- Digital therapeutic approach to health literacy can enhance patients' engagement with educational materials
An ASU information systems expert discusses the limitations of digital technology related to…