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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

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October 05, 2025

Gen Z is rapidly abandoning the traditional 9-to-5 for flexible careers that allow authenticity and viable work hours

- By SHILPI MADAN

Gen Z doesn’t do cubicles—they’re all for creative playgrounds. They chase flexibility, autonomy, and work-life balance, not rigid hierarchies, and “twinning” careers—juggling a corporate job with a passion project—is the new normal.

Job-hopping? Totally fine. Being glued to emails 24/7? Absolutely not. They tackle challenges others say they can’t, see work as both a milestone and a badge of financial independence, and value personal time, family, and friends over pointless loyalty. Offices need to be lively, fun, and inspiring, because this generation works smarter, not longer, and thrives on freedom, flat hierarchies, and the soft life aesthetic of a 12-to-5 grind done their way. Call it The Big Reset—because that’s exactly what’s happening to India’s work culture.

The rules of work are being shredded, redrawn, and GIF-ified.

In response, companies are no longer only chasing profit margins; they’re blurring boundaries, embracing employee individuality, and designing workplaces for a generation that was raised on TikTok trends and memes. By 2025-end, Gen Z will make up 27 per cent of India’s workforce; and by 2030, Indian businesses are expected to employ 30 per cent of the world’s Gen Z talent. This emerging workforce in India is redefining career norms with an emphasis on flexibility, creativity, and personal wellbeing.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The Collector's Pour

What began with stamps and miniature bottles grew into one of the world's most extraordinary whisky collections

time to read

3 mins

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

As onion prices fall, IISc's agri saviour technology keeps waiting in the wings

PRICE fluctuation is a sensitive factor in determining farmers’ plight, but when technology waits in the wings to offer a solution that can be profitable as well as prevent wastage of the produce, there are no takers for it to reap its benefits.

time to read

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

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time to read

2 mins

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The Lost Art of Agenda-free Conversations

I spent last weekend in Fuengirola, a seaside town on Andalusia’s Mediterranean coast. Successive waves of cultures and subcultures have shaped this Spanish region, each leaving its imprint in indelible ways. Yet what struck me even more than the pristine blue waters and fusion architecture was a unique conversational practice. Across Fuengirola’s restaurants, I kept noticing the same thing: tables where the meal had clearly ended but no one was leaving.

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

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THE human attitude to ageing is ambivalent. The final phase of life is often marked by a decline in utility health and mobility While in certain communities seniors are revered, many languish in neglect.

time to read

3 mins

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

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Sharon Stone speaks with Katie Ellis about her latest film, Nobody 2, and the controversies that shot her to fame

time to read

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

Fishy Business and Family Feuds

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time to read

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

When Our National Spectacle Crushes Its Own

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time to read

4 mins

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

Peanuts, Priorities, and the Flow of Time

Not long ago, I had a conversation with a CEO who, somewhere between checking his phone and adjusting his tie, declared: “I just don’t have time to pursue what I really want.” It was a very solemn moment. Almost moving. Had it not been for the fact that, during our 20-minute chat, he checked his phone 17 times. That's once every 45 seconds—20 if you subtract the part where he closed his eyes and said “Mmm” to pretend he was listening

time to read

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

The Man Who Taught a Village to Draw

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time to read

4 mins

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