The Free Press Journal

VACAYING AT WORKPLACE!

During the sweltering hot and chilling cold months, a proper vacay at the workplace could help the employees rewind, reboot, and rejuvenate themselves

- SHILPI

Microblogg­ing site Twitter can be an exciting place where some worthwhile conversati­ons start once in a while. Recently, when Kunal Shah, Founder & CEO, CRED, tweeted on May 24, 2021 saying, “Breaking big patterns needs the breaking of small patterns and rituals once in a while. Often bigger and complex decisions are easier to do when you force yourself to move to a different location. Just like vacations, a week away every quarter to make important decisions should be normalized.” it started a chain.

In response, Ankur Warikoo, entreprene­ur, founder of Nearbuy and author of Do Epic Shit, wrote, “Someone suggested the concept of summer and summer winter holidays can be brought to the workplace as well. Think one-two weeks every six months. I loved the idea! Working on it already...” A few weeks later, Warikoo announced, “This is done. Starting next week, the first team member goes on her summer ‘holiday’. Everyone in the team will get nine days of paid leave (over and above all other leaves) during the months of May/ June/July. Not mandatory.” He tweeted that the only clause attached is that it has to be claimed as nine days in one go.

Benefits galore

Weeks after rolling out the vacay plan for his employees, he returned to Twitter to announce how the first one to avail of this leave had come back beaming with joy and how this break worked wonders for her. “She is back from her nine-day break. And I have not seen her happier! In our 1:1 she was brimming with joy, and showed all the things she made during the break, how she started working out (which she had been postponing). Plus she now has a comprehens­ive plan for the year! Awesome!” he tweeted.

The proposed breaks by Warikoo are more than the regular summer hours or summer Fridays. “The benefits of summer vacation shouldn’t just be for kids only. Summer breaks were synonymous with trips to beaches, hills, and train visits to relatives in childhood. As adults, summer comprises the same old computer beeps and deep dives into documents. So, it’s time for companies to adopt this HR practice advocated by Warikoo and break the ‘break bias’,” says Upasana Pattanaik, an entreprene­ur with a small-sized firm in the Capital. Adding reasons, Pattanaik says, “Extreme weathers aren’t very productivi­ty-friendly. I have found that productivi­ty decreases, projects take longer to complete and employees aren’t very focused during these months of the year. The temperatur­e takes a toll on the work tempo.”

Not all agree

Alas, not all business owners, entities or companies can afford to dole out such flexibilit­y to their employees. As Anita Joshi Ray, senior HR profession­al from Mumbai, adds that the concept of summer/winter break may not work for all though it is an exciting concept which will aid in non-monetary motivation. She reiterates that the sustainabi­lity of the proposed ‘vacay model’ depends on the revenue model of the company. “A lot depends on the company profile. If it is a creative firm (ad agency, digital marketing, PR, etc.) or technology-related firm or startup, this propositio­n works well without impacting the productivi­ty but for firms which are in BPO/KPO/outsourcin­g type of work whereby you bill the client on actual work done, the hourly productivi­ty of employees is very important. Giving additional leaves, over and above the stipulated ones, will hamper the overall client deliverabl­es as well as the budgets.”

Bengaluru-based senior management level IT profession­al Aman Ritolia finds no merit in the proposed vacay plan. “I cannot speak for folks in other industries but in Informatio­n Technology, I don’t see any value to it. In the postCOVID world, WFH is the norm that has blurred the work-life balance. If

mental well-being is the intent behind such a proposal, the right to allow an employee to disconnect from work after the designated work hours as recently legislated in Europe will do more good,” he adds.

Making a strong case for the ‘break plan’, Pattanaik has the last word. She admits that an inability to vacation with their kids during this time can leave employees stressed. “In this regard, it’s only wise to take preventati­ve steps to limit stress in your workplace, and who knows, it might increase their productivi­ty too. So give ’em a summer and winter break,” she emphasises.

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