logo
EXCLUSIVE Roxy Jacenko slams WFH and reveals why she thinks it is going to severely harm businesses: 'Lazy'

EXCLUSIVE Roxy Jacenko slams WFH and reveals why she thinks it is going to severely harm businesses: 'Lazy'

Daily Mail​30-05-2025

Roxy Jacenko has slammed working from home arrangements, describing it as a 'lazy' work mentality.
Speaking at her 'In Conversation with Roxy Jacenko' exclusive event in Sydney on Friday, the PR dynamo said the key to a good business operation is interacting and networking - in person.
'We stopped picking up the phone, stopped going to things, stopped networking altogether. Zoom became an easy way of doing business,' Roxy told the crowd.
'It's a lazy way of doing business. The fact is, people want an experience, they want a memory. We need to start doing that networking again.'
Roxy runs a PR firm and Ministry of Talent, a talent agency that represent influencers like Costeen Hatzi and reality TV star Ash Pollard.
From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the
She believes that as working from home arrangement continue, workers are increasingly forgetting the importance of being around people.
'Everything has become digital, but people want the touch-and-feel experience. This is why I am doing this (seminar), there is an importance in being around people,' she explained.
'We lost that connection during Covid. We became lazy. Instead of going to a face-to-face meeting you would have a meeting over Zoom or Teams.'
'I get to an end result because I do it face-to-face. People want to be treated like real people, they want to belong. It's about community,' she added.
'We want to see a familiar face, to see a connection. So much more comes from face-to-face than staring at a screen. It's s**t on Zoom, it doesn't have the same connection.'
She went on to describe a recent business meeting with an investment banker in Singapore.
When she walked into the company's office there were no employees at their desks because everyone was working from home.
She said it made her think twice about working with the company, and in turn, they lost her business.
'When you walk into our office, it's light and bright, there's orchards and music, There's a vibe!' she said.
WFH became the norm for white-collar workers during the Covid lockdowns from 2020 - 2022, and has since become entrenched in many industries, with more than a third of Australians now doing their job at home.
Some companies are pushing to get staff back into the office more often in the belief it is a more efficient way of working, but the Productivity Commission recently concluded the opposite.
This is not the first time Roxy has slammed working from home.
Back in November 2024, she scolded fellow business owner Jane Lu over her working from home policies at Showpo.
She expressed her disapproval of the CEO's decision to have employees work in the office only two out of five days per week.
Speaking on The Lazy CEO Podcast with Jane Lu, Roxy emphasised her belief that having staff present in the office five days a week would foster greater collaboration among the team.
'You've got a whole team out there. Get them here five days a week, not f**king two days a week,' she said.
'The only way to work the team is with the team. And I'm sorry, I don't believe in this work from home.'
Jane acknowledged that when she had her team in the Showpo office full-time, she noticed that more ideas were 'bounced off' and exchanged among colleagues.
'Before Covid, I was more the same age as everyone. We were together five days. [There was] so much more collaboration,' she said.
'Everyone just presents ideas to me. There's no brainstorm.'
'Yeah, but that's your fault. You're the boss,' Roxy quipped. 'You're not together, you're not on the floor with them... only two days a week.'
Roxy, who relocated her family to Singapore in 2023, confirmed in September she had made a return to publicity and Sydney two years after stepping down as director of Sweaty Betty.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why Iran closing this 103-mile stretch of ocean could be catastrophic
Why Iran closing this 103-mile stretch of ocean could be catastrophic

Metro

time2 hours ago

  • Metro

Why Iran closing this 103-mile stretch of ocean could be catastrophic

As fighting between Israel and Iran is boiling over with the US now involved, the most strategic oil chokepoint in the world – the Strait of Hormuz – is in the spotlight. Concerns have been raised about just how disruptive the war could be for the steady flow of Gulf oil shipments to Europe, the US and Asia. All eyes are on the Strait of Hormuz after Iran's parliament voted to approve the closure today. The decision still needs to be rubber-stamped by the country's Supreme National Security Council. Adam Lakhani, security director at International SOS, warned that shutting it could cause a bigger market turmoil than the Russian invasion of Ukraine and Covid-19. He told Metro that the price of oil could jump from the current $71.77 to as much as $120 per barrel in a 'worst-case scenario'. 'Iran has a very well-established naval base in the city of Bandar Abbas and it has a strong naval capability,' Lakhani explained. 'So whether they decide to pull that lever… is something we are concerned about and are watching very closely.' About a fifth of the world's oil is transited through the shipping lane, which splits Iran on one side and Oman and the UAE on the other, and links the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea in the Indian Ocean. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Tankers collecting from various ports on the Persian Gulf must go through Hormuz. The strait – between 35 to 60 miles wide – has been at the heart of regional tensions for decades, but the threat from Iran to shut it has only escalated the fears. Islamic Revolutionary Guard commander Sardar Esmail Kowsari told local media that closing Hormuz 'is under consideration, and Iran will make the best decision with determination.' He said: 'Our hands are wide open when it comes to punishing the enemy, and the military response was only part of our overall response.' As a major chokepoint, the operation of Hormuz is critical to global energy security. The inability of any oil to transit – even temporarily – can create substantial supply delays and raise shipping costs, increasing world energy prices. Although most chokepoints can be bypassed by using other routes, which often add significantly to transit time, some have no alternatives. Lakhani stressed that Kowsari's threat 'should be taken seriously', judging by the US repositioning of the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier along with several support tankers to bolster the military in the region. Iran's threat to shut Homruz comes as a vessel crashed into two ships sailing nearby, 22 nautical miles east of Khor Fakkan in the UAE. The Emirati national guard said it evacuated 24 people from an oil tanker after the collision. The crude oil tanker, ADALYNN, was bound for Egypt's Suez Canal when the crash in the Gulf of Oman happened. More Trending British maritime security firm Ambrey has said the cause of the incident is 'not security-related'. Naval sources cited by Reuters warned that electronic interference with commercial ship navigation systems has surged in recent days around the strait and the wider Gulf, which is having an impact on vessels. Maritime ship experts say shipowners are increasingly wary of using the waterway, with some ships having tightened security and others canceling routes there. The Strait of Hormuz vote today comes after the US administration announced that is warplanes had dropped 'bunker buster' bombs on three key nuclear sites. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Is Donald Trump gambling his popularity and presidency with strikes on Iran? MORE: London to Dubai BA flight turns back 90 minutes from landing after Iran strikes MORE: UK prepares flights to help British nationals escape Israel after US bombs Iran

Tyra Banks reveals the incredible amount of ice cream she eats in a day - after sharing how much weight she's gained since modelling heyday
Tyra Banks reveals the incredible amount of ice cream she eats in a day - after sharing how much weight she's gained since modelling heyday

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tyra Banks reveals the incredible amount of ice cream she eats in a day - after sharing how much weight she's gained since modelling heyday

Tyra Banks has revealed that she loves frozen desserts so much that she visits three ice cream stores in a single day. The supermodel, who now lives in Australia, said one of her favourite things to do on a Saturday in Sydney is take the ferry across the harbour to Manly and go on an ice cream binge. 'We go full-on ice cream mode. We don't stop at one - we hit Messina, Anita, and Royal Copenhagen. Yep. Three. In a row' she tells the Daily Telegraph of her favourie local frosty treat vendors. 'Call it excessive - we call it Saturday' the 51-year-old continued. 'We're an ice cream family. And when you love frozen cream, there's no such thing as too much.' Tyra is such a big fan of the sweet and cold stuff that she has opened her very own ice cream store. Her SMiZE & DREAM parlour opened last week in the heart of Sydney's Darling Harbour. It comes after Tyra revealed how much weight she has gained since her heyday walking the runway in Victoria's Secret Fashion Shows. Tyra returned to the catwalk for the American underwear brand last year. While appearing on The Drew Barrymore Show last year, the supermodel turned mogul discussed feeling true joy as she returned to her role as a Victoria's Secret Angel for the evening. After Drew said Banks looked like she felt 'good about' herself and was truly 'living in the moment and really present' during her runway walk, Banks said that description perfectly captured what it was like to dust off her wing after so many years. Unlike in past years when the mother-of-one said she 'would walk' for herself, the Life-Size actress said, this time, she 'felt like everybody was inside of' her as she took the stage. '50-year-old women, insecure women - I just felt like there was more, and I look at the playback and I'm like, boom, boom, boom. I was stomping because I felt like I was a vessel more so than it's just all about me. It was different,' Banks raved. The America's Next Top Model creator also reflected on how her body has changed over the years. 'Also what was different is my boobies were like 10 times bigger because I was about 40-50 pounds (18-22 kg) heavier on this runway than when I retired,' she told viewers. 'So I was like, "Don't fall out, don't fall out."' While serving as a VS Angel, Banks walked nine shows, before announcing her retirement from modelling in 2005. Banks walked in her first fashion show for the lingerie brand in 1996. Her final Victoria's Secret runway appearance took place in 2005, before she embarked on a career in television. In 2009, she opened up about no longer believing in diets. 'I have been on diets in the past. They are a bunch of bologna,' she said on The Tyra Show at the time. 'It's not about being skinny. It's about being in the best shape you can be.'

Customers are missing out on bonus savings rates — and banks don't have to actively warn you
Customers are missing out on bonus savings rates — and banks don't have to actively warn you

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Customers are missing out on bonus savings rates — and banks don't have to actively warn you

One of Australia's most popular savings account operators, ING, has ignored regulatory advice to tell customers when they are about to lose bonus rates on promotional accounts, leaving savers at risk of missing out. The practice has helped ING and other banks access customers' money at little or no cost to finance other parts of their businesses, including profitable mortgage books. Savers can be disqualified from earning the advertised rates if they do not make a required number of transactions, deposit a certain amount, grow their balance or otherwise miss their bank's list of monthly requirements. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission found in 2023 that two in three savers were missing out on bonus rates. It recommended banks be forced to warn customers at risk of breaching bonus conditions with real-time alerts and prompt savers to consider their bonus eligibility and whether other products may better suit their needs with annual notifications. An ING spokesperson did not share what proportion of customers received the company's full rate of interest, but said the bank notified savers when their interest rates changed and helped customers check whether they would get their payments with an in-app feature. 'We know that customers like having the ability to check their monthly eligibility criteria for the savings maximiser bonus rate as it's one of the most used features in our app,' they said. The spokesperson declined to comment on why ING did not alert customers in real time, as recommended by the regulator. At 5% per annum, ING's full rate is one of the highest interest rates offered to Australian households. But its base rate – given to customers who don't qualify for the bonus rate – is among the lowest. The base rate is 0.05%. Customers miss out on the bonus rate if they do not meet the monthly requirements to deposit $1,000, make at least five transactions and add to their savings. A customer with a balance of $20,000 would get interest of just 80 cents at the end of the month if they missed a requirement, when they would have otherwise expected $80. The spokesperson said the bonus rate structure was designed to encourage customers to stay actively engaged with their finances and the bank adjusted the rates on offer to respond to broader market conditions. Guardian Australian spoke to one ING customer who received nearly no interest on a large portion of his savings because he breached the deposit limit, another feature of the account. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email The customer put his money in an ING Savings Maximiser account and met the monthly requirements, but was not aware the account only paid bonus interest on the first $100,000 of a balance. His account surpassed that limit in 2020 and reached $185,000 in 2025, leaving him missing out on the equivalent of $4,000 a year in interest. 'It just had never even crossed my mind that that would be something I had to be aware of, and obviously I never received any notification,' he said. 'They notify you about everything else [except accounts] sitting there with $80,000 not earning interest, which is pretty outrageous. 'When I did look back, I was like, 'Oh my God'. I felt a bit sick.' ING's spokesperson could not comment on individual cases but said the bank made it clear when customers sign up that the bonus rate was only available for balances up to $100,000. Sign up to Afternoon Update Our Australian afternoon update breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion The bank is emblematic of the sector's push towards low base interest rates, with a typical bonus account offering total interest of 4.2% overall of which the core rate is just 0.2%, according to online database Canstar. Conditional accounts make up more than half of all savings options, according to financial comparison site Finder's database. They have soared in popularity since 2010 but have grown far more complex, with much lower base rates, says Rachel Wastell, a personal finance spokesperson at loan comparison site Mozo. 'If you don't know the rate or the hoops you need to jump through, how are you supposed to get the bonus? It's like studying for a test without knowing the subject,' she said. Daniel Mulino, a Labor MP, wrote in a 2024 report that savings rates needed regulatory tightening and recommended a notification trial, before the Albanese government committed to improving awareness of bonus rates. Mulino, now assistant treasurer, said the government was still working with the banks on reforms. Each of the big four banks said they prompted customers with push notifications and emails to help them qualify for bonus interest. Olivia McArdle, head of deposits and payments at Macquarie Bank, said complex monthly conditions were the biggest barrier to Australians earning bonus interest rates. Mozo's Wastell said every bank should be forced to notify customers to improve transparency. 'Australians deserve a heads-up when they're about to lose a chunk of their returns,' she said. '[But] honestly, there's not much motivation for banks to act here because if customers miss out, the bank can pocket the savings.' Do you know more? Contact

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store