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News & Insight

View RALI news and insights to keep up to date with the latest on trend developments relating to future leadership capability and experience requirements and the future world of work.

Why do some teams thrive while others fail? A researcher of team dynamics and former trumpet player shares how to strike the right chord and build a winning team.

10th Oct 2025 | 01:00am

The policy may lead to high-performer flight and unhappy workers, experts say.

9th Oct 2025 | 06:42pm

There are many reasons why someone may have a second job or some kind of side gig when they’re working for you. They may have financial needs that are greater than what you can pay. They may have expertise that enables them to consult or engage with o…

9th Oct 2025 | 06:00pm

Alphabet’s cloud service is viewed as one of the company’s strongest sources of growth as the search business matures

9th Oct 2025 | 02:20pm

Critics say the government’s approach lacks inclusivity and transparency

9th Oct 2025 | 11:00am

Sending LinkedIn DMs—the digital version of cold-calling—can come across as pushy and is becoming a much-less-effective strategy for job seekers. Luckily, there is so much more that LinkedIn is capable of when it comes to facilitating job hunting. Her…

9th Oct 2025 | 10:58am

If you are sick of unsolicited messages from AI recruiters cluttering your inbox—or really enjoy homemade flan—this LinkedIn trick might be for you.

Cameron Mattis, an account executive at Stripe, was fed up with receiving recruiter DMs that seemed…

9th Oct 2025 | 09:00am

Sometimes the smallest shifts in how we plan, think, and work can spark the biggest changes. This list of fresh nonfiction picks will reset your daily habits in ways that reimagine productivity, enhance confidence, and charge motivation. Consider it y…

9th Oct 2025 | 08:30am

If you’re familiar with Gallup data about employee engagement, they have been playing one of their Top 40 hits for decades now. It’s a classic we’ve all heard. The tune? “People don’t quit companies; they quit managers.”

We’ve known this for y…

9th Oct 2025 | 08:00am

Every working parent has that one thing keeping them from completely losing it. Some have the Mary Poppins-like nanny who knows exactly when to show up with wet wipes and organic muffins. Others swear by meal kits, color-coded Google calendars, or chore charts their family actually follows (unicorn families, basically).

For me? It’s a group text.

Not glamorous, not particularly organized, but it’s my lifeline. This is where playdates get arranged, last-minute pickup emergencies get solved, and critical intel on the latest stomach bug gets dropped. It’s also where I can admit, “I fed my kids popcorn and blueberries for dinner,” and instead of side-eye, I get heart emojis and another parent confessing, “Mine ate Oreos in the car.”

This is my working parent wolf pack. And trust me, you need one too.

Because let’s be honest: Working and parenting at the same time is basically like walking a tightrope in a thunderstorm while your boss Slacks you and your kid’s soccer coach emails the snack schedule. A wolf pack is the net below, ready to catch you with help, empathy, or at least a well-timed meme.

Here’s where mine shows up most:

  • Carpools. Knowing that Saturday’s trip to the trampoline park is someone else’s problem. Bliss.
  • Emergency coverage. The meeting runs late, your kid spikes a 103 fever, or your train gets stuck underground. This is when your wolf pack jumps in.
  • Mental health. Sometimes you just text, “If my child sings the Bluey theme song one more time, I’m moving out.” They don’t call CPS. They send solidarity GIFs.
  • Camaraderie. Nothing heals like someone typing “Same.”

Start small

So how do you build one? Start with one or two parents you trust and add as you go. Look for people who are reliable, unpretentious, and living at the same chaos level as you (no judgment, but the mom with an in-house chef and a driver may not be your best emergency contact). You don’t need soulmates, but you need people who won’t flinch when you ask for help, and who understand that reciprocity isn’t tit for tat. You’ll return the favor, maybe not tomorrow, but eventually. The unspoken agreement is simple: we’re all drowning, so sometimes we pass the life vest.

At the end of the day, my wolf pack isn’t just about logistics. It’s about laughing together at 11 p.m. while rage-scrolling the 19-page school newsletter. It’s about knowing I’m not the only one who missed the “bring a pilgrim costume” email. It’s about being seen through the exhaustion, the chaos, and the love that keeps us showing up.

Think of it less as a group text and more as a lifeboat, a comedy club, and a survival kit rolled into one. Every working parent deserves that kind of pack.


9th Oct 2025 | 08:00am