Gigged, Sarah Kessler
Gigged, Sarah Kessler
List: $22.99 | Sale: $16.09
Club: $11.49

Gigged
The End of the Job and the Future of Work

Author: Sarah Kessler

Narrator: Hillary Huber

Unabridged: 7 hr 15 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/12/2018


Synopsis

"With deep reporting and graceful storytelling, Sarah Kessler reveals the ground truth of a key part of the American workforce. Her analysis is both astute and nuanced, making GIGGED essential reading for anyone interested in the future of work." —Daniel H. Pink, author of WHEN and DRIVE

The full-time job is disappearing—is landing the right gig the new American Dream?

One in three American workers is now a freelancer. This “gig economy”—one that provides neither the guarantee of steady hours nor benefits—emerged out of the digital era and has revolutionized the way we do business. High-profile tech start-ups such as Uber and Airbnb are constantly making headlines for the disruption they cause to the industries they overturn. But what are the effects of this disruption, from Wall Street down to Main Street? What challenges do employees and job-seekers face at every level of professional experience?

In the tradition of the great business narratives of our time, Gigged offers deeply-sourced, up-close-and-personal accounts of our new economy. From the computer programmer who chooses exactly which hours he works each week, to the Uber driver who starts a union, to the charity worker who believes freelance gigs might just transform a declining rural town, journalist Sarah Kessler follows a wide range of individuals from across the country to provide a nuanced look at how the gig economy is playing out in real-time.

Kessler wades through the hype and hyperbole to tackle the big questions: What does the future of work look like? Will the millennial generation do as well as their parents? How can we all find meaningful, well-paid work?

About Sarah Kessler

SARAH KESSLER is a reporter at Quartz, where she writes about the future of work. Before joining Quartz in 2016, she covered the gig economy as a senior writer at Fast Company and managed startup coverage at Mashable. Her reporting has been cited by The Washington Post, New York Magazine, and NPR.Sarah is the author of Gigged.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Phil on June 16, 2018

A few years ago, I thought about writing a book on the gig economy. On many levels, I knew that it was going to be a big deal and recent events have only underscored its importance. I'm glad that I didn't. I couldn't have done a better job than Sarah Kessler did. A gifted storyteller, she adroitly sti......more

Goodreads review by Kyle on November 29, 2020

I am once again plagued by books with important stories to tell. Late-stage capitalism has let loose a torrent of books by journalists and political commentators that focus on storytelling as an answer to suffering. The books center the authors as observers in individual people's tragic stories whil......more

Goodreads review by Chris on February 10, 2020

Gigged is a tech-journalists tour of the the “gig economy” mostly from a “neutral” standpoint. Recently, there has been a spat of books that look into the “dark side” that web 2.0, and social-apps have had in our society. These include “Weapons of Math Destruction”, “Automatic Inequality”, and “Algo......more

Goodreads review by Marks54 on July 07, 2018

This book is a well done and fairly up to date look at the phenomena associated with the “gig” or “sharing” economy, a set of developments in the organization of work that are turning individual people into individual independent contractors rather than more traditional employers. This model has bec......more

Goodreads review by Atila on February 19, 2020

A Sarah Kessler passa por várias novas categorias de trabalhos, os gigs, que aqui em São Paulo seria algo entre um emprego, um job ou "fazer um corre". As relações de trabalho com novos aplicativos que são os Uber de X. Ela faz essa descrição contando um pouco sobre a origem do Uber e em seguida aco......more


Awards

  • Financial Times Books of the Year
  • Library Journal Best Books of the Year