The Macomb Daily

Weekend work inches up in era of layoffs, out-of-office shifts

- By Matthew Boyle

In the 1980s, everybody was working for the weekend, or so a hit song from the period proclaimed.

Now, working on the weekend is becoming more commonplac­e in some sectors as layoffs increase and workers seek time to focus, free from the deluge of meetings and other distractio­ns.

The average hours worked on Saturday and Sunday last year increased 5% to 6.6, according to ActivTrak, which analyzed almost 175 million hours of work across 134,260 anonymized users of its productivi­ty-management software worldwide. While just 5% of all workers tracked toiled on the weekend, certain industries, like technology and media, saw a spike of 25% or more hours worked in 2022 compared with a year earlier. The reasons are twofold: Job cuts that have heaped more work on fewer staffers, along with a need to escape the constant interrupti­ons from the likes of Zoom calls and Slack chats that are part of today’s increasing­ly hybrid workplace.

“With more and more layoff announceme­nts, companies are doing more with less, so where you see an increase in weekend work, it’s in industries that are contractin­g,” said Gabriela Mauch, vice president of ActivTrak’s productivi­ty lab, which researches trends in its data sets. “As people become more comfortabl­e with flexibilit­y, it’s acceptable to log off at 3 p.m. on a Friday and deal with the work on the weekend.”

The weekend shifts are the latest example of the breakdown in long-held workplace norms wrought by the pandemic, as demands for increased flexibilit­y among employees clash with some employers’ desires to see workers in person at the office more often. While remote work has freed up desk workers in many respects, allowing many to do their job where and when they choose, it’s also tethered them to collaborat­ion and communicat­ion tools that can divert their attention with constant notificati­ons. Rising job cuts of late across technology, media and other sectors have also complicate­d the picture, creating more stress on staffers who are already grappling with record rates of burnout.

The most common weekend warriors were technology staffers in computer hardware and services, according to ActivTrak’s data, along with media workers and those in consumer goods. All of those groups increased their weekend hours last year compared with 2021, most by doubledigi­t percentage­s. Technology firms have laid off more than 122,000 workers so far this year, according to tracker Layoffs.fyi, and industry leaders like Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Marc Benioff have said their workforces need to get more out of fewer workers. Musk, in particular, has told workers to embrace a “hardcore” culture or leave the company.

 ?? CHRIS RATCLIFFE — BLOOMBERG ?? A worker works on his laptop in his kitchen whilst working from home in Danbury, U.K., April 7, 2020.
CHRIS RATCLIFFE — BLOOMBERG A worker works on his laptop in his kitchen whilst working from home in Danbury, U.K., April 7, 2020.

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