MAIL ONLINE: People start to hate their jobs at 35: Increased stress and feeling underappreciated at work means burnout may hit sooner than you think

Press/Media: Expert comment

Description

'There comes a time when either you haven't achieved success, work has burned you out, or lived experience tells you family is more important,' said Cary Cooper, a workplace researcher at Manchester Business School told Bloomberg.

'You ask yourself: 'What am I doing this for?'

Period22 Aug 2017

Media contributions

1

Media contributions

  • TitlePeople start to hate their jobs at 35: Increased stress and feeling underappreciated at work means burnout may hit sooner than you think
    Media name/outletMail Online
    Media typeWeb
    Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
    Date22/08/17
    Description'There comes a time when either you haven't achieved success, work has burned you out, or lived experience tells you family is more important,' said Cary Cooper, a workplace researcher at Manchester Business School told Bloomberg.

    'You ask yourself: 'What am I doing this for?'
    URLwww.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4812774/Workers-start-hate-jobs-aged-35.html
    PersonsCary Cooper

Keywords

  • stress
  • business
  • workplace psychology