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Do shorter workdays really make us more productive?

2014-07-31 07:12:14

By Michelle Goodman

Andrew Bauer needed a way to invigorate his staff working the production line.

I used to have them working up to nine or 10 hours a day, said Bauer, chief

executive officer of Royce Leather in Secaucus, New Jersey, in the US, which

makes wallets, luggage and other leather accessories.

But the longer his employees worked, the more their productivity declined. So

last year, after taking over the company from his father, Bauer cut the workday

of his 15-person assembly line by two to three hours, depending on the

position. Workers still received the standard breaks, including 45 minutes for

lunch.

Bauer s goal was to boost efficiency, not to cut payroll. On the contrary, he

increased the team s compensation by 15%.

Switching to a seven-hour workday paid off: output went up, with the line

churning out 10% to 15% more merchandise each day. Plus, he added, his staff

many of whom have been with the company one to three decades appreciated

getting home earlier.

Shorter workdays have made headlines lately, thanks to Gothenburg, Sweden. On 1

July, the city began a year-long experiment with six-hour days, enlisting a

segment of government employees to work less than their eight-hour-a-day

counterparts, for the same pay.

The hope is that staffers working shorter days will accomplish just as much,

only with more efficiency and less calling in sick. It s a nice idea, but will

it and other efforts to shorten hours in the office work?

The grand productivity experiment

Studies of past attempts by various countries to trim employees workdays have

yielded conflicting results.

Last year, research from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and

Development (OECD) reported in The Economist showed that the more people

worked, the more their productivity tapered off.

But South Korean research detailed in the Journal of Happiness Studies last

year found that employees appreciated shorter workdays in theory only. In

practice, researchers found, the country s 2004 workday reduction from 44 hours

to 40 and a declaration of Saturdays as an official day off didn t do much

to improve workers job satisfaction or overall happiness. Instead, having less

time to tackle the same workload increased their stress. The workload, it

turned out, for these already-efficient employees was simply too high to get

done in fewer hours.

And back in 2005, Sweden s Kiruna district council ended a 16-year-run of

mandated six-hour workdays for 250 employees, claiming the programme cost too

much and was too unwieldy to manage. According to the council, managing two

different sets of employee work schedules the six-hour day and the eight-hour

day had grown too complicated. The European news site The Local also reported

that at a similar experiment a hospital in Stockholm created resentment among

employees whose schedules hadn t been reduced.

Whether reduced workdays succeed may have more to do with the type of work

performed, the workload and the managers overseeing it than the country or

company making the change. Part of the problem is that one work schedule won t

necessarily fit all employees or job descriptions, said Cali Williams Yost, a

workplace strategist based in Madison, New Jersey.

In a competitive global economy, I find these one-size-fits-all, strict models

are hard to maintain to the letter, said Williams Yost, author of Tweak It:

Make What Matters to You Happen Every Day.

When shorter workdays don t work

Kenny Kline of MedPreps can vouch for that. In 2012, Kline trimmed the workday

of 20 full-time employees he d hired to write practice questions for medical

certification exams, keeping their salaries intact. The four-month experiment

was a failure.

Giving employees only six hours a day to devise test questions instead of the

customary eight changed the company culture for the worse, said Kline,

co-founder of the St Louis, Missouri-based company, which sells medical exam

preparation materials in the US.

People definitely worked harder and we ended up getting more out of them,

Kline said. But they wouldn t interact with each other at all. And they were a

lot less happy at work.

Without much time for lunch or other breaks, the camaraderie his staff once

enjoyed ground to a halt. What s more, Kline said, employees were too mentally

drained at the end of the day.

People felt a lot more burned out working six hours a day just because of the

intensity, Kline said.

Royce Leather s Bauer can relate to the need for some people to put in more

time to be more productive. At the same time that he reduced his production

team s workday, he gave his 20-person product development and design staff a

pay bump and encouraged them to start working 10 hours a day instead of their

customary eight. The idea was for them to create and collaborate on ideas at a

more leisurely pace.

The time increase has definitely made the office a lot more relaxed, Bauer

said. There s not as much stress, which definitely makes everyone a lot more

productive.

In praise of flexibility

For a shorter workday to succeed, companies have to treat the change in office

hours as a guideline that can be adapted to meet various employee and business

needs, not a rigid rule, Williams Yost said.

For example, she said, What about business that has to get done in time zones

during the hours the workplace is closed? And what of companies who pile 40

hours of work on employees who only have 30 paid hours in which to get the job

done?

For Jody Greenstone Miller, whose 75-person in-house staff includes people who

ve chosen to work 10, 20, 30 or 40 hours a week (for commensurate pay), knowing

how long each assigned task takes is key.

As a manager, you have to make sure people don t work too much, said

Greenstone Miller, chief executive officer and co-founder of Business Talent

Group, a consulting firm with five US offices and clients throughout Europe,

Asia, Australia, North America and South America. Because if they work too

much, they end up being dissatisfied, she said.

Debbie Carreau, chief executive officer and founder of Calgary, Alberta-based

Inspired HR Ltd, agrees. To prevent workweek creep and as an example to the

dozens of Canadian and US companies her human resources firm serves Carreau s

12-person team handles the bulk of their work between 9:00 and 15:00. After

that, the team goes home but stays on call, often fielding emergency messages

one or two hours a night from clients dealing with on-the-job accidents,

performance issues and resignations.

People are not productive after a 37-hour week, Carreau said. More does not

mean better.