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Businesses The Almighty Buck

Burnout, Stress Lead More Companies To Try a Four-Day Work Week (reuters.com) 147

An anonymous reader shares a report: Work four days a week, but get paid for five? It sounds too good to be true, but companies around the world that have cut their work week have found that it leads to higher productivity, more motivated staff and less burnout. "It is much healthier and we do a better job if we're not working crazy hours," said Jan Schulz-Hofen, founder of Berlin-based project management software company Planio, who introduced a four-day week to the company's 10-member staff earlier this year.

In New Zealand, trust company Perpetual Guardian reported a fall in stress and a jump in staff engagement after it tested a 32-hour week earlier this year. Even in Japan, the government is encouraging companies to allow Monday mornings off, although other schemes in the workaholic country to persuade employees to take it easy have had little effect. Britain's Trades Union Congress (TUC) is pushing for the whole country to move to a four-day week by the end of the century, a drive supported by the opposition Labour party. The TUC argues that a shorter week is a way for workers to share in the wealth generated by new technologies like machine learning and robotics, just as they won the right to the weekend off during the industrial revolution.

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Burnout, Stress Lead More Companies To Try a Four-Day Work Week

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  • Beware (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MrLogic17 ( 233498 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @04:12PM (#57831930) Journal

    From personal experience: one employer offered a 4x10 week for better "work/life balance".
    My local manager saw that and said, essentially, "oh, so you can work 10hr days. We need you in on Friday too."

    Beware.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      From personal experience: one employer offered a 5x8 week for better "work/life balance".
      My local manager saw that and said, essentially, "oh, so you can work 8hr days. We need you in on Saturday too."

      I mean... I see what you're saying and agree with the problem of some management mentality, but I don't know that I completely agree with this conclusion. A manager will get as much out of an employee as the employee will allow. The form of the work week doesn't make a boss better/worse.

      • Given the choice between working one employee twice as hard or hiring another employee, they will work the existing one twice as hard every time. Free work.

        • And likely shitty, unproductive work too. It's amazing how many managers correlate hours at the desk with work getting done, when that's really not the case. Nothing like putting in hours more time than your brain has capacity, then coming in fresh the next day only to spend all that rested, productive morning time fixing the shit you (or someone else) fucked up the evening before.

          There is definitely such thing as negatively productive work, and it's mindblowing to me how many managers do not get that.

    • UHH. 4-10s is worse than 6-8s imo.
      10 hour days just suck in general.
      • Re:Beware (Score:5, Interesting)

        by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @05:06PM (#57832338)

        We do a 4-9-4 schedule, and I really like it. It makes Friday a pretty chill day, and I only need to take 4 hours of PTO to have a 3-day weekend. 4-10 Is painful, especially for the poor saps that end up working 10 hours on Friday. I guess they can get Monday off, so YMMV...

        I don't think 4-10 would reduce burnout. The main factor for combating work-related burnout is to make work fun and interesting... which simply isn't always possible.

        Maybe I will propose a 4-1 schedule next year...

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          The oddest schedule I've ever seen was an 8-12-12-8 four day work week... on Friday through Monday. The position was doing international tier 3 tech support, and paid well, but it was absolutely the kiss of death for a social life.

        • France had a 39-hour week, variously interpreted as eight-hour days and leave an hour early on Fridays, or 5 equal days of 7 hours 48 minutes, or (often) as "a minute here or there doesn't really matter, just work".

          Almost 20 years ago France moved to 35 hours, with no change in monthly pay, recommending (I think it was a recommendation) that work days continue to be 8 hours but that employees be given whole days in proportion. The legislator (quite correctly IMHO) estimated that 48 minutes less per day woul

      • Yeah, in reality it's a 4x"10" shift in any sane place. I typically do 5x5 unless I have abunch of stuff to do that I'm in to.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      Yeah just watch out for things like firefighting and policing, which is where this brainwave is currently heading as well. Every police service that I know of in Ontario that's tried it, has had massive screwups, jumps in complaints, more gun-draw incidents, and so on. The brain only handles working for so long before you start screwing up rather hard. Luckily, most realize how bad of a screwup it really is. Sadly a friend of mine who's currently in Division E(BC) is stuck in a 4x12(3.5 off) rotation fo

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's not just the total hours or amount of work per week, but the shorter and medium term rates of work also matter.
      Running at 120% nominal all the time leads to fatigue, burn out and health issues, let alone the impact on having a life.

      Technology tends to enable greater efficiencies - rates of work, but also comes with learning curves.
      A given set of tasks has a maximum rate at which they can be done, and not result in immediate exhaustion, or long term fatigue.
      Management knows this but deThrow in Pareto a

    • I used to do 9x9 over a 2-week period. It was pretty popular and I enjoyed doing it. I think if the work week were only 4 days out of every 7 I'd be looking for a side gig.
    • 4x10 or 5x8. 4x8 if you really insist, but certainly not 5x10.

      Agree or two weeks notice.

      Yes, I love working in a field where there are WAY more jobs going around than there are people willing and able to do them.

  • They found a company in New Zealand that does this. And another in Germany. Must be a thing.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The original plan was that to improve moral and team unity the New Zeland group would play the German group in FortNiteBR Squads on Friday's, but they could never agree on what "Friday" meant.

  • What good does having an extra day off if you're just going to be interrupted by the BOFH who refuses to follow any company policies and calls you on your personal line any time they want?
    • I thought BOFH was busy playing video games and deleting users accounts.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      calls you on your personal line

      "Hello. This is Lenny."

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The PHB is the one who refuses to follow policy calling your personal line any time they want. The BOFH is the one who routes the PHB's company phone to a dodgy NSFW, when accounting asks about the PHB charging 900 numbers to the company card, BOFH supplies HR with the PHB's call log.

    • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

      The telephone does not have a constitutional right to be answered, you know. Grow a pair and tell him that your time is both valuable and not theirs.

    • Sadly my house has no land line, and I have very poor cell reception. My position is not an on-call position, and I cannot/will not take an on-call position because of this.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    you will work like a dog so the masters could rule the planet

  • by imperious_rex ( 845595 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @04:34PM (#57832094)
    Many companies are striving to relieve their employees of burnout and stress through "early retirement offers" and "layoffs" thus taking the "work" out of "work/life balance". It's great for the companies, but not so much for the former employees and the remaining employees who have to take up the slack.
  • by mattotoole ( 872355 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @04:42PM (#57832150)
    ...whether they want it or not -- so they can still be considered "part time," with no benefits.
  • by aaronb1138 ( 2035478 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @04:51PM (#57832212)
    The 4x10 work week is great for people with low to moderate stress desk jobs. It's awesome because they work the same cycle of 1.5-3 high productivity hours each day and the rest filler, faffing, and socializing. The huge WLB benefit is having a weekday to deal with all the bullshit personal business which is not available after hours or on the weekend (e.g. every interaction with state and similar -- all the shit businesses working banker's hours).

    It's an awful idea in healthcare, emergency services, and law enforcement; the same applies to 3x12/4x12 cycling hot in healthcare specifically. The only reason it's being pushed in those fields successfully is each one of those lacks oversight, accounting, and personal responsibility for mistakes up to and including death of those being served. And it's just piles of additional days off for those people who corner themselves (accident I swear) into as much overtime as the bosses will let them get away with.

    Side note: these remarks apply to the US. I've heard the rest of the world is mostly more reasonable and people who work public service jobs are actually interested in public service rather than Cadillac pension plans.
    • The 4x10 work week is great for people with low to moderate stress desk jobs

      Not really. How many people want to in an office for 10 hrs, much less 8. I honestly check out around the 5-6 mark.

    • Note that this article is about 4x8, not 4x10.
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @05:06PM (#57832340)
    in the 20s, 30s 40s and even up till the 60s there was talk of less and less hours. And then it just stopped. 40 hours was "standard" with most doing 50+. Why the hell was it so easy to get the working class to work so hard for so little and just grin and bear it?

    For the record, 86% of the manufacturing jobs lost were due to automation, not outsourcing. We're not being out-competed, there's just plain less work to do. And instead of working less we're all fighting among ourselves to see who gets to be the lucky guy that gets to do what little work is left.
    • in the 20s, 30s 40s and even up till the 60s there was talk of less and less hours. And then it just stopped. 40 hours was "standard" with most doing 50+. Why the hell was it so easy to get the working class to work so hard for so little and just grin and bear it? For the record, 86% of the manufacturing jobs lost were due to automation, not outsourcing. We're not being out-competed, there's just plain less work to do. And instead of working less we're all fighting among ourselves to see who gets to be the lucky guy that gets to do what little work is left.

      There's an unlimited amount of work to do. It's only limited if you want to live with a capped standard of living. The standard of living has drastically improved since the 1920s.

    • 4 hour workday?

      Died with nuclear power...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Because those who own the means of production don't want to share any more wealth than they have to.

      These decisions aren't made out of a mutual desire to create a utopia. Its self-interest all the way down.

      Giving you more time off does NOT help you afford your house, so it is absolutely NOT a way that you can share in the wealth of labor automation. This trend produces a near-future economy where everybody works two or three jobs that each require 20 hours a week, just to make ends meet.

      Be that as it may,

    • All that productivity went into the pockets of the 1%. Had it stayed with the workers, we'd be living large while working shorter work weeks. Look at what's happened over the last 35 or so years [wikipedia.org]. Productivity up something like 140%. Median family income up 40%.

  • Where I work, around %5 of the people do the work, while the rest are dead weight. I've been a few places and this seems to be the norm; I wonder if employees are getting "burn out" because A) They're the deadweight who aren't going to do anything anyway or B) they're the ones running around doing all the work.

    Idle thoughts. I'd like to see someone study this.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @07:08PM (#57833056)

      People have. The average white-collar worker does about two to three hours of productive work per day. The rest is playing on the Internet, chatting, wandering the halls, daydreaming, etc.

      Many jobs are superfluous. Apparently, some people in these superfluous jobs experience significant amounts of stress due to having to convince themselves that their job is actually useful.

  • Compermize? (Score:2, Interesting)

    How about instead of 4-8s or 4-10s, how about 5-6s.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Fuel use and transit time become an even bigger waste in that scenario.

      Also this site has really started to suck, there are Nazi posts and a link to tranny porn below but legitimate anonymous cowards have to wait two minutes to post.

      Get you shit together Slashdot or this AC is out!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    A company I worked at had a 9/80 schedule. you worked 9 hour days, got every other friday off and the friday on was a 1/2 day. It worked out really nicely easy to schedule all those errands that you normally have to fit in after or before work. Though I must say that the best contract I had was 4/32 and you could pick friday or monday as the day off it was amazing how refreshed you were at the start of each week after a 3 day weekend and it didn't hurt that I was also able to work from home a day each we

  • You need the 6 hour workday. 5 days is okay, 4 is better. Gives a bit more time for conjugal visits at home

  • And if you say your employee is a 'manager' then it's legal to pay no overtime allowance.
  • I worked 4x10's for years with Sat/Sun and Wed ( Yes, I intentionally picked Wednesday. Explanation below. ) off.

    Means I worked two days ( Mon / Tue ) was off Wed, then worked two days ( Thu / Fri ) and off for the weekend.
    No matter how shitty the day was, the worst case scenario I only had to tell myself " I only have one more day before I'm off ".

    Was outstanding in that no one else is off on Wednesday, so guess what days I picked for all appointments, Doc visits, etc ?

    I miss that shift . . . . .

  • Less human labor is needed to satisfy human needs, so a little human labor buys lots of robot labor. Work 6 month per year or 3 days a week or whatever. Or buy a self driving car that makes you money driving for Uber.

  • When trade unions push for shorter working hours, it's usually so their members can do more overtime at time-and-a-half pay.

  • I would think having more time off might translate into more time to shop. Good for the economy (not that I'm in favor of consumerism).
  • It's been demonstrated experimentally with lighting and temperature. Shorten the work week, and for a while, productivity will increase. Then return to normal. Extend the week but shorten the days, productivity will go up. Wait a month or two and return to a normal week, productivity will increase.
  • I've in the past worked 3 x 12, common in the US medical wards. It was nice having 4 day weekends all the time. I've found that even those that just work 2 days a week, professors for example, still feel their week is full of work.
  • Left-handed sports players are often better. It's not because being left handed is better. It's because most opposing players will be right-handed, and hence a left-handed player has more experience against right-handed players, than right-handed players have experience against left-handed players.

    It's called a "dominant minority", where the benefits of a mutation come from that mutation being a minority. And it's interesting because most advantages become majorities. But in a world where 50% of players

The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh

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