Worklife
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More
    • Music
Monday, December 8, 2025

WORKLIFE

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Remote Control
  • Collective Intelligence
  • Beyond the 9-to-5
  • Worklife 101
  • More
    • Psychology
    • Productivity
    • Technology
    • Japan
    • Time Hackers
No Result
View All Result
WORKLIFE
No Result
View All Result
Home Beyond the 9-to-5

The Australian company that banned work on Wednesdays

August 20, 2020
in Beyond the 9-to-5
2 min read
305 4
0
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


For employers, shutting down mid-week gives “more bang for your buck”. he says. “The Wednesday break means you return to Thursday fresh, and this is when people feel most productive.”

Haar has tracked New Zealand estate management company Perpetual Guardian, which made headlines last year when it trialled a four-day week without any loss in productivity. Sick days were down, staff wellbeing was up, but the company did lose some staff who proved incompatible with flexible, condensed working.

‘A cause whose time has come’

For Andrew Barnes, CEO and owner of Perpetual Guardian, the four-day week is “a cause whose time has come”. While Versa’s Blackham was motivated by a desire to make workplaces more flexible and balanced, Barnes was prompted by a study that found workers were only productive for around two and a half hours a day. There had to be a better way to organise work time, he thought.

The five-day week is not an ancient phenomenon. Car manufacturer Henry Ford was pioneering in giving workers the weekend off in 1926, theorising it would make them more productive. Witnessing the march of technology, economist John Maynard Keynes predicted in 1930 that eventually the working week would be reduced to 15 hours.

Nearly 100 years on, organisations around the world are again revisiting how work weeks are structured. Great Britain and Ireland have shown particular interest in the four-day week, with the Trades Union Congress in the UK, Forsa in Ireland, the Scottish National Party and British Labour Party all considering the concept, at varying levels. Swedish regions have also played with offering shorter days or weeks, to mixed results, and even in notoriously long-working US, fast food chain Shake Shack this March announced it was trialling a four-day week in response to a tight labour market.

However, not all reduced hour trials have proven unmitigated successes. An experiment with six-hour days at state-run nursing homes in Gothenburg, Sweden, found that while sick day and productivity rates improved, staff costs rose considerably as more people needed to be hired to fill in the gaps.



Source link

Related articles

Equality Matters

The personalities that benefit most from remote work

Tags: AustralianbannedcompanyWednesdayswork
admin

admin

Related Posts

Equality Matters

by admin
November 10, 2020
0

Equality Matters Source link

The personalities that benefit most from remote work

by admin
September 10, 2020
0

Changing personalities While some of us might be better adapted to the new remote ways of working than others – confident, articulate and decisive introverts might...

Why Finland leads the world in flexible work

by admin
September 4, 2020
0

“Most of us strongly believe that time spent in work is not where all the effort and outcome comes from,” he argues. “You should have...

Can Germans’ right to switch off survive the digital age?

by admin
September 2, 2020
0

And that can be damaging to health. In the same BAUA study, those regularly denied their 11-hour break reported more frequent episodes of insomnia, exhaustion...

The truth behind 'outskilling'

by admin
August 23, 2020
0

The truth behind 'outskilling' Source link

Next Post

The reasons why people become incompetent at work

The virtual vloggers taking over YouTube

'I tried to sell my own data'

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CATEGORIES

  • About us
  • Beyond the 9-to-5
  • Collective Intelligence
  • Japan
  • Productivity
  • Psychology
  • Remote Control
  • Technology
  • Time Hackers
  • Worklife 101

RECOMMENDED

Psychology

The challenge of a job that doesn’t meet your needs

September 16, 2020
Technology

The new tech that detects deadly slides on rubbish mountains

May 20, 2020

TAGS

avoid bad BBC Biometric calls changing Collective Control Coronavirus CVs decisions digital elite home Intelligence Japan Japans job lockdown mindset news office pandemic people procrastination Productivity Remote rise selfcontrol space stop success team tech time tips uncertainty video Virtual work workers working Worklife world Zoom
Worklife

© 2020 JBC Reel - Powered byJOOJ.us.

Explore the JBC

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More

Follow Us

  • About us
  • Beyond the 9-to-5
  • Collective Intelligence
  • Japan
  • Productivity
  • Psychology
  • Remote Control
  • Technology
  • Time Hackers
  • Worklife
  • Worklife 101

© 2020 JBC Reel - Powered byJOOJ.us.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Worklife
More Sites

    MORE

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More
    • Music
  • Worklife

    Worklife JBC