The last four workplace trends from our quiz highlight positive employee behaviors. These include unbossing, job crafting, career cushioning, and acting your wage.

Each trend represents steps that employees or employers can take to foster growth, balance, and long-term satisfaction at work. As a business owner or manager, understanding these trends—and encouraging them where appropriate—can help you create a positive workplace culture and retain top talent.
Unbossing
Unbossing was popularized by the CEO of Novartis to promote servant leadership and empower employees. Today, many companies use it to replace rigid hierarchies with more flexible, collaborative structures. By removing layers of middle management, employees gain more autonomy, which often leads to higher engagement, better mental health, and increased innovation.
Key benefits of unbossing include:
- Employees decide how and when they work, with accountability tied to outcomes and deadlines—improving work-life balance and motivation.
- Teams self-manage workflows, goals, and performance, leading to faster decision-making and greater innovation.
- Fewer management layers reduce payroll and overhead costs.
- Leaders act as coaches and mentors, and employees communicate directly with leadership, reducing miscommunication.
Challenges for small businesses include:
- Owners may struggle to let go of decision-making.
- Without clear accountability, deadlines can be missed or productivity may drop.
- Unclear authority may stall progress when final decisions aren’t made.
- Small teams may lack experienced leaders who understand coaching-based leadership.
How to succeed with unbossing:
Clearly define goals, implement accountability measures, and encourage transparent communication. Tools like Teams, Trello, Slack, Zoom, or Monday.com can support collaboration and alignment.
Job Crafting
Job crafting occurs when employees reshape their roles to align with their strengths, passions, and values. This can include:
- Task crafting – taking on projects that spark interest, using new tools to improve efficiency, or delegating less enjoyable tasks.
- Relationship crafting – working with colleagues, mentors, or clients who inspire growth.
- Cognitive crafting – reframing how one thinks about work to make it more meaningful.
Steps to begin job crafting:
- Reflect on your strengths, interests, and values.
- Choose one specific change to improve your role.
- Discuss changes with your manager if they affect tasks or clients (cognitive crafting is more personal).
- Test the change, measure its impact, and build from small successes.
Done well, job crafting boosts fulfillment while maintaining or even increasing productivity.
Career Cushioning
Career cushioning is the practice of preparing for your next role while still employed. Think of it as career insurance. Employees who career-cushion are proactive about growth and resilience.
Key practices include:
- Keeping your résumé and LinkedIn profile updated.
- Building professional relationships through networking and events.
- Staying aware of job market trends and openings.
- Upgrading skills and learning industry developments.
- Developing side income streams to provide stability in case of job loss.
For employers, career cushioning shouldn’t be viewed negatively. Employees who stay sharp and connected often bring new skills and perspectives that benefit their current workplace.
Act Your Wage
“Act your wage” is a workplace trend where employees set healthy boundaries by working within the scope of their responsibilities and protecting their personal time. They push back against the expectation to constantly work overtime or take on responsibilities without fair compensation.
Why it matters:
- For employees, it protects mental health, prevents burnout, and reinforces fair boundaries.
- For managers, it highlights the importance of fair compensation, balanced workloads, and respect for personal time.
How employers can support this:
- Avoid assigning tasks outside an employee’s job description.
- Ensure workloads don’t require regular overtime, and encourage use of paid time off.
- Provide raises or promotions when adding responsibilities.
Business benefits include:
- Fair compensation and clear expectations.
- Reduced burnout, turnover, and disengagement.
- Stronger morale and job satisfaction.
Final Thoughts
In today’s competitive job market, attracting and retaining strong employees is more challenging than ever. Encouraging positive workplace behaviors—like unbossing, job crafting, career cushioning, and acting your wage—creates an environment where employees feel valued, empowered, and fulfilled. Employees who know their responsibilities, are fairly compensated, and enjoy a healthy work-life balance are far more likely to stay and thrive in your organization for years to come.

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