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Employee Reactions to Working 7 Days a Week
June 2nd, 2014 at 12:58 pm   starstarstarstarstar      

If you manage a business that is considering the idea of expanding to 24/7, you may be wondering how your employees will react to the change. You can expect most employees to focus on the loss of weekends off and the loss of overtime. This is despite the fact that they are already working every Saturday and some Sundays, and even though most 24/7 schedules have some overtime built into them.

Employee responses often depend on how the question is asked. If you simply ask whether they would mind working the weekends, you can expect the answer will be, "No way!" If the question is reframed to whether they would like 10% more pay and 78 more days off annually, you would probably get a completely different response. Responses also will be based on their specific concerns, such as the following:

  • Employees may not understand or appreciate the economic and competitive reasons for running the business 7 days a week. Larger organizations often prepare a business case that discusses reasons for the change. You may not need to be this formal, but you must clearly explain and justify the need for a 24/7 schedule. Lacking a compelling reason for making this change, employees will assume the worst. Management is doing this to get rid of people they don't like. Management doesn't care about the workers or their families. Management is doing this to bust the union. Management is doing this for their convenience, etc., etc.

  • Employees may be concerned about the unknowns of a new schedule. It's important to give them as much information as possible: days off, weekends off, maximum consecutive days of work, maximum consecutive days off, minimum consecutive days off, pay impact, paid time-off (vacations, holidays, bereavement leave, etc.) impact, and so on. They may need time to digest this information, so don't rush it. While there is no way to eliminate all the unknowns in advance, you should tell the workforce as much as you can. If you can know the absence rates and can estimate the overtime requirements, show them. If you are planning to change the vacation or holiday policies, let them know.

  • Employees may misunderstand 24/7 schedules. When told the company will operate 7 days a week, they mistakenly think they will have to work every day of the week. They may have friends who are shift workers who have told them horror stories about 24/7 schedules. You will need to show them several different schedule examples and compare the number of days off, weekends off, and pay vs. the current schedule.


I highly recommend following a strategic schedule selection process. I have described this process elsewhere on my website. Here's a link: http://www.shift-schedule-design.com/Schedule_Selection_Process.




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