Is The Four Day Week The Future Of Work?
Clare Evans
Time Management & Productivity for Small Business Owners, Solopreneurs and busy team leaders. Coach | Speaker | Author. Gain clarity and focus, reduce stress and overwhelm. Make better use of your time at work, in life.
The four-day week is back in the news and, as always, opinions are split. Critics argue it will reduce productivity, while supporters highlight the benefits of a better work-life balance. The reality? There are pros and cons on both sides.
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A Brief History of the Work Week
We didn’t always have weekends. Before the Industrial Revolution, most people worked seven days a week, with time off for religious or cultural reasons. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, factory workers were given Saturday afternoons off. By the mid-20th century, the two-day weekend became the standard, and today, most of us take it for granted.
Of course, not everyone works Monday to Friday, 9-5. And I don't mean you, as a small business, working long hours because you have to. Industries like healthcare, hospitality, manufacturing, and emergency services rely on shift work - 12-hour shifts, rotating shifts, split shifts, or four days on, four days off.?
Businesses have always adapted their work structures to balance productivity with operational and service needs for customers and clients, whether it's 24/7 or 5 days a week. The four day week isn't right for every industry or business but it's a possibility for many and absolutely can be if it's your own business.
The Rise of Flexible Work
We’ve already adapted the way we work with flexible working in many forms - from compressed hours, reduced hours, to remote and hybrid work. The pandemic accelerated this shift almost overnight, showing that different working patterns are not only possible but often beneficial.
One of my first clients had been considering a four-day week “some day". By reviewing when and how they worked, they made the transition much more quickly and easily than expected.
Even now many appreciate the hybrid work pattern that provides the connection of being face to face in an office, with the increase in productivity working from home away from those same office distractions.
Even in my own business, I sometimes work split shifts. Work in the morning, a long midday break (making the most of the daylight in Winter and enjoying a break in the sunshine in Summer), then work in the evening to accommodate personal, social or family commitments and enabling me to work across different time zones, without extending my working day to 12+ hours.
Could A Four Day Week Work For You?
More and more small businesses are adopting the four-day week. Could it be the future of how you work?
Do you work at 100% productivity every week? Probably not.
With interruptions, distractions, and constant demands on your time, you’re already losing around two hours a day. That’s 10 hours a week. A full day of work, each week!
Now, imagine cutting out those time wasters and adapting your week ...
You’ll be more productive, not because you’re working longer, but because you’re working smarter and making better choices with your time.
The possibilities are there, it’s just a matter of exploring what works best to fit you, your workflow and your style of working.
If you want it to happen, you need to actively make it happen, not just hope for the best or ... "one day, some day". Start by setting the intention and making a commitment to working fewer hours each and every week.
If you would like to talk through how a four day week could work for you and how to make it a reality or you're currently struggling to even keep to a five day week, get in touch and let's have a chat.
What's next?
Look out for the upcoming 5 Day Challenge which could help make a Four Day Week a reality.
Book a time for a quick chat (it's free!). Click HERE and find a time that works for you.
Your Time really does Matter