The Independent

Give me a break: is it time for ‘burnout’ bank holidays?

- JAMES MOORE CHIEF BUSINESS COMMENTATO­R

A dream date for most employees? Surely that must be someone working in Bumble’s HR department with a view to getting a job

there. The dating app company – its USP is that women make the first move – has closed its offices and told its 700 staff to switch off for a week to combat burnout. There’ll still be some support staff on hand to ensure the app is working properly but they’ll get the same privilege in due course. This is no quixotic gesture by the boss of a private business with an unusually enlightene­d attitude towards employee relations. Bumble is a public company with its shares listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange. Such a move might normally be expected to provoke some, shall we say, plain-speaking exchanges between management and investors, except that the latter probably knew they were buying into something a bit different when they pushed the button.

The pictures of the group’s colourful HQ tell you that. It also has a fairly unique, and admirably flexible, working culture in which people can choose their hours so long as the work gets done. Cynics will inevitably sneer at the eccentrici­ty of a fluffy tech company in the romance game, and point out that such a move would be impossible to accomplish in other industries, where shutting down to all but a skeleton staff for a week could lead to a business closing its doors permanentl­y.

The latter may be true, but look at it another way. Well-rested, mentally healthy staff are likely to be productive, creative, and less likely to indulge in absenteeis­m when they get back. So it’s possible that such a move might ultimately pay off for the firm, especially in a country where vacation days are in notoriousl­y short supply. Not to mention the benefits accrued through encouragin­g the loyalty of existing staff while luring talented new joiners.

When this has been done temporaril­y in the past, usually to mark royal events of some kind, it’s been accompanie­d by a cacophony of moaning and wailing from the business lobby

The wider issue of pandemic stress, and the toll it has taken on people’s mental wellbeing, is real. It’s something companies are going to have to find ways to grapple with. They may ultimately find themselves losing staff through increased time off sick, or just losing staff full stop. Some have responded by offering counsellin­g, while others have offered “burnout days”, an evolution from “duvet days”.

On the other hand, some will just drive their people into the ground, trusting that they can always replace them while ignoring the fact that recruitmen­t can prove to be both quite expensive, as well as disruptive.

Perhaps what we need is a national burnout day. That’s actually rather easier to accomplish than it might look. You can create one simply by creating an extra bank holiday. If you wanted to, you could create two. When this has been done temporaril­y in the past, usually to mark royal events of some kind, it’s been accompanie­d by a cacophony of moaning and wailing from the business lobby.

One or other of its constituen­t groups can usually be relied upon to come up with a figure for how much such a move costs UK GDP, and what a terrible idea it is. This, obviously, ignores the above point about rested workforces and productivi­ty gains, the

fact that people often end up catching up in the subsequent days (or working to clear their inboxes in the run-up), and the economic activity bank holidays also stimulate.

That activity is most often of benefit to, you’ve guessed it, the hospitalit­y industry, the services of which tend to be in high demand over extended weekends. Giving the nation a muchneeded extra break to help relieve the stress of the pandemic would give that beleaguere­d sector a much-needed boost.

It’s also worth pointing out that were the government to take a leaf, or even two, out of the Bumble playbook, it would prove wildly popular from a political standpoint.

 ?? (Getty/iStock) ?? Pandemic stress, and the to ll it has taken on peop l e’s menta l we ll being, is something companies are going to have to grapp l e with
(Getty/iStock) Pandemic stress, and the to ll it has taken on peop l e’s menta l we ll being, is something companies are going to have to grapp l e with

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