Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Will 4-day workweeks become the norm?

Nonprofit leading 6-month trial for more than 3-dozen companies

- By Hal M. Bundrick NerdWallet This article was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Hal M. Bundrick is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: hal@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @halmbundri­ck.

A four-day workweek sounds appealing to workers. Possibly alarming to employers.

A bill introduced in the California legislatur­e earlier this year proposed a regular pay rate for 32 hours of work per week, with overtime kicking in after that. The measure stalled in committee for a lack of broad support but could resurface in 2023.

Meanwhile, 4 Day Week Global, a nonprofit foundation associated with Oxford University, is piloting a six-month trial of a four-day workweek “with no loss of pay for employees.” More than three dozen companies in the U.S. and Canada are participat­ing in the experiment, with a total of 150 organizati­ons and 7,000 employees involved worldwide.

Of more than 1,000 U.S. adult employees surveyed by research firm Qualtrics in January, 92 percent said they would support their employer going to a fourday workweek; 79 percent of them said it would help mental health, and 82 percent said it would make them more productive.

Will more employers embrace the change?

Change can be challengin­g

“I’ve always been curious about burnout. It truly affects those that should be thriving,” says Lisa Belanger, CEO of ConsciousW­orks in Canmore, Alberta. She consults with businesses on workplace well-being. In her quest to find “how work is meant to be,” she decided to explore a four-day workweek herself.

Results have been mixed, at best, she says.

“I think I’ve failed so far in my own personal experiment,” Belanger says. Business travel plans or other work-related responsibi­lities often interrupte­d her Day Five off.

“One of the reasons it’s so challengin­g for me, and most people, to do a four-day workweek is other people are working on that fifth day, so you’re getting email and you’re getting pulled in,” Belanger says.

Altering consumer behavior and expectatio­ns

“People are realizing that while this might be an intriguing or interestin­g idea, there’s probably some trade-offs,” says Benjamin Granger, head of employee experience advisory services at Qualtrics. He says the company’s research indicates concerns regarding customer frustratio­n if staffing changes have an impact on response time.

Widespread adoption would have to reach critical mass, where companies believe they have to adopt a shorter workweek

to compete in the workforce, he adds. And consumer behavior and customer expectatio­ns and services would need to be reshaped.

“We’re not even close to that yet,” he says.

If it’s not a four-day workweek, there are other levers to pull when it comes to workplace flexibilit­y, Granger says.

Those could include perks that make a job more attractive, like choosing the hours you want to work rather than the usual 9-to-5, or the ability to run errands during the workday.

Few employees would be willing to take a pay cut

Less than 4 in 10 (37 percent) of the employees surveyed by Qualtrics would be willing to

take a 5 percent or more pay cut for a four-day workweek . But nearly three-quarters (72 percent) of those surveyed said a four-day workweek would mean they would have to work longer days.

However, 10-hour days often aren’t child care friendly. And if a company offers to pay for only four days of eight hours each, it could indicate a shorter workweek might be the result of a company trying to reduce expenses.

Considerin­g the trade-offs

“I think there is a lot of work and research that an organizati­on has to do before it pulls the trigger on this,” Granger says.

A four-day workweek — or other workplace flexibilit­y — might begin with a series of discussion­s. If there is interest on both sides of the payroll, Granger suggests a trade-off analysis: “Look statistica­lly at the factors that people would be willing to trade off, and would it be worth it to them?” If interest remains strong, the organizati­on could run a pilot program with a small group of employees before a wider rollout.

If a four-day workweek isn’t in your near future, Belanger offers these ideas for employees to possibly seek — and employers to consider:

Occasional extended weekends off. Belanger says this allows time away without the stressful “work is piling up while I’m away” feeling during longer vacations.

A meeting-free Friday or a reduction in the number of meetings overall.

Email, instant messaging or texting hiatuses. “Telepressu­re” — the compulsion to quickly respond to work-related messages of any kind — is a real thing, Belanger says.

“You need a couple of hours every single day where you’re wholly not working — 100 percent not working,” for mental health, she adds.

 ?? Jenny Kane / Associated Press ?? A movement is growing to shorten the workweek, but trade-offs and barriers should be considered.
Jenny Kane / Associated Press A movement is growing to shorten the workweek, but trade-offs and barriers should be considered.

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