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From 'quiet quitting' to 'coffee badging' — why employees are less interested in work

Some workers are phoning it in, and it shows.

After mostly trending up for years, workplace engagement has flatlined. Now, only one-third of full- and part-time employees are engaged in their work and workplace, while roughly 50% are not engaged — reflected in the evolution of "quiet quitting" — and the rest, another 16%, are actively disengaged, according to a 2023 Gallup poll released earlier this year.

To be sure, quiet quitting, or coasting, has become a sign of the post-pandemic times, some experts say, with more employees trying to do the least they can get away with without drawing the attention of a boss or manager.

The latest example of this detachment is "coffee badging."

Coffee badging is the practice of going into the office for a few hours to "show face," which could entail coffee with co-workers or sitting in on a work meeting — but then leaving to work remotely.

More than half — 58% — of hybrid employees admitted to checking in at the office and then promptly checking out, according to a 2023 survey by Owl Labs, a company that makes videoconferencing devices.

"Employees have become accustomed to the flexibility of working from home and may only come to the office when absolutely necessary," said David Satterwhite, CEO of Chronus, a software firm focused on improving employee engagement. "It's just too hard to put that genie back in the bottle."

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Roger Hall, a business psychologist based in Boise, Idaho, says this latest trend comes as no surprise, especially considering how much easier it has become to work virtually and how many

Read more on cnbc.com