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Gossip in the workplace

illustration of a woman targeted by speech bubbles lodged into her back.
Illustration: Paul Blow

Gossip is everywhere. On one estimate, from Megan Robbins and Alexander Karan of University of California, Riverside, people spend 52 minutes a day on average talking about other people. Gossip pervades the workplace. You hear it in conversations among colleagues; you know who to go to for the latest round of it. You can tell when gossip is imminent: voices suddenly lower and there may well be some theatrical looking around to check that the target is not in earshot. Sometimes it is offered up explicitly, like a vol-au-vent at a drinks party: “Do you want to hear a bit of gossip?” And yes, you almost certainly do.

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Gossip in the workplace”

From the April 27th 2024 edition

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