A new study indicates that large employers tend to be more likely to offer employee benefits to their workers than small business owners based on recent statistics.
In an effort to help improve the safety of workers in the professional cleaning industry, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration recently renewed its affiliation with the International Window Cleaning Association.
A new report may come as bad news for small business owners who have been contemplating how the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act would affect their employee benefit programs.
With the holiday season just around the corner, it appears as though more business owners and retailers will be hiring to accommodate the anticipated rise in customers this time of year.
While employee benefits enable workers to afford health coverage, those who are unemployed can apply for jobless benefits. And as data from the penultimate week of October show, fewer people applied for them.
Even though several components of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act are already in place, a considerable number of small business owners aren’t sure how it will ultimately affect them and the way in which they’ll administer employee benefits.
Whether it’s performing searches online or handling human resource software, a considerable number of business owners expect their recent hires to be familiar with cyber security.
Though the information technology department of today wears many different hats, a new survey suggests that professionals tend to associate IT with a specific type of business function.
Even though many companies and retailers have taken precautions to keep individuals’ personal information private, the abundance of ways in which someone’s personal data can be retrieved has made identity theft a major issue in the U.S. today.