Making your Future Work: Is four days a week enough to love what you do?

Making your Future Work: Is four days a week enough to love what you do?

Take a look at the 'Future Work Prospect Score'; the results may surprise you!

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In a world where working from home has meant that too many of us are 'always on', a 4-day week can seem like an extravagant fantasy. But, there is increasing evidence that limiting work hours increases individual workers' productivity and the economic productivity of whole nations. Scandinavian countries already have the lowest average working hours and consistently higher economic productivity than other European countries (including the UK). Recently published research about a series of experiments in Iceland in government and municipal departments shows that reducing hours and keeping worker benefits had no impact on service delivery.

When I work with individuals who want to move to work four days per week as interims or employees, the long-hours work culture in the UK is so pervasive that they end up paying for four days but continue to work 40 hours a week. Only three days per week or less can shift expectations and reduce the workload. The Icelandic study shows that shorter work hours force workers and managers to rethink work. They address the disease of endless meetings. They optimise and automate processes. They find where the real value is in their activities: worker well-being, motivation, morale and effectiveness increase.

The cultural barriers in the UK currently appear insurmountable. The European Working Time Directive has an opt-out that makes it effectively unenforceable. Lower-paid workers rely on extended hours to achieve a living wage. The NHS depends on consultants doing substantial overtime. Financial and professional services have long hours baked in. Entrepreneurs role model 80-hour weeks as a heroic endeavour rather than failure.

I believe an individual can only establish a 4-day week by having two jobs. The maximum commitment must be just three days for any one role. For experienced executives, a Portfolio Executive workstyle is the simplest way to achieve this. For others, the best answer is a 3-day per week role with a 'side hustle' to build an alternative self-employed income stream. But don't wait for a top-down change in long-hours culture. Take control.

You can make four days a week enough to love what you do and have more time for those you love.

This article was originally written for KCW London.

Hilary Rowland

Executive and business coach, Ikigai expert #ikigai #executivecoaching #businesscoaching

1 年

I'm experimenting with a four day week Charles McLachlan

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i have always been curious about the science of this. is it related to fatigue and exhaustion? is there an optimization formula for this?

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