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Corporate Misery? Why Delivery Riders Are Happier Than You

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In case you needed confirmation, yes, corporate confinement is making you unhappy.  A new employee well-being index from Monash University Malaysia suggests that micromanagement is killing employee morale and wellbeing.

On top of that, despite the physical risks and lack of corporate safety nets, Malaysian delivery riders are outscoring office-bound professionals in psychological and social happiness. 

Monash University’s Professor Jane Terpstra Tong, Director of the Future Southeast Asian Centre for Workplace Wellbeing,  joins Enterprise Explores to unpack her findings, including:

The Autonomy Dividend: Why independent gig workers score higher in social well-being than professionals sitting in ergonomic chairs.

The Stressors: Beyond tight deadlines and endless emails, we look at how invisible organisational politics are quietly hollowing out white-collar mental health.

The Micromanagement Epidemic: Why micromanagement is a symptom of a leader's fear; letting go of monitoring requires showing their vulnerability, a psychological trade that most Malaysian bosses are currently failing to make.

The Gig Worker Paradox: Why 35% of surveyed riders are effectively underwater on their bills but still report higher overall life satisfaction.

The True Cost of Freedom: The financial metrics gig workers must calculate to understand their true net take-home pay under the new Gig Workers Act.

Gen Z and the Bot-Team: How the youngest generation of workers is shifting away from the corporate ladder in favour of flexibility and non-traditional autonomy.

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