A workforce where employees work from multiple locations — different offices, cities, countries, or home environments — rather than a single central workplace. It requires deliberate infrastructure, communication, and management approaches.
Hiring signals are the data points — both explicit and behavioral — that indicate a candidate's likelihood of being a strong fit and succeeding in a role: skills alignment, career trajectory, assessment performance, engagement with employer content, source of introduction, and pattern of role tenure relative to peers in the same field. The most valuable signals are not the most obvious ones: years of experience is a weak predictor of performance, while career trajectory (is the candidate consistently taking on more complex roles?) and assessment-demonstrated skills (not just claimed skills) are significantly stronger predictors of hire quality. The most common mistake is over-weighting signals that are easy to collect — credentials, years of experience, recognizable employer names — at the expense of signals that require more effort to assess but predict outcomes more reliably.
What the research says about employee engagement.
Other ways this term appears across industries and languages.
Common questions about employee engagement.