A hundred UK companies sign up for four-day week with no loss of pay

Authored by theguardian.com and submitted by redcremesoda
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A hundred UK companies have signed up for a permanent four-day working week for all their employees with no loss of pay, a milestone in the campaign to fundamentally change Britain’s approach to work.

The 100 companies employ 2,600 staff – a tiny fraction of the UK’s working population – but the 4 Day Week Campaign group is hoping they will be the vanguard of a major shift.

Proponents of the four-day week say that the five-day pattern is a hangover from an earlier economic age. They argue that a four-day week would drive companies to improve their productivity, meaning they can create the same output using fewer hours. For some early adopters the policy has also proven a useful way of attracting and retaining employees.

The two biggest companies that have signed up are Atom Bank and global marketing company Awin, who each have about 450 staff in the UK. They have been accredited by the four-day week campaign, meaning they have demonstrated that they have genuinely reduced hours for workers rather than forcing them into longer days.

Adam Ross, Awin’s chief executive, said adopting the four-day week was “one of the most transformative initiatives we’ve seen in the history of the company.

“Over the course of the last year and a half, we have not only seen a tremendous increase in employee wellness and wellbeing but concurrently, our customer service and relations, as well as talent relations and retention also have benefited.”

The UK campaign is also coordinating the world’s biggest pilot scheme for about 70 companies, which employ about 3,300 workers, to adopt the four-day week in a trial with researchers at the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford, Boston college and thinktank Autonomy.

In September, 88% of those companies in a survey at the middle of the trial said the four-day week was working “well” for their business at that stage of the trial. About 95% of the companies surveyed said productivity had either stayed the same or improved since the introduction.

Joe Ryle, the UK campaign’s director, said there was increasing momentum in the adoption of the four-day week, even as companies brace for a long recession.

“We want to see a four-day week with no loss of pay become the normal way of working in this country by the end of the decade so we are aiming to sign up many more companies over the next few years,” he said.

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“With many businesses struggling to afford 10% inflation pay rises, we’re starting to see increasing evidence that a four-day week with no loss of pay is being offered as an alternative solution.”

Most of the companies that have officially adopted the four-day week are in the services sector such as technology, events or marketing companies. However, the campaign said that some manufacturing and construction employers had also signed up.

Some historians have said the debate over the introduction of the four-day week has many similarities with the 19th-century campaign for a two-day weekend.

nomadProgrammer on November 27th, 2022 at 18:16 UTC »

my SO works in a Canadian company with 4 day, 8hrs work week. With no pay decrease.

And it is wonderful what it has done for her and me as well. Now she uses Friday, which is free, to buy groceries, clean our house and then we have more of our weekend to enjoy.

Also employee retention has boosted, wellness, less stress, health and everyone is super happy at the company.

This was proposed by the CEO himself. Kudos to that wonderful human being.

pacwess on November 27th, 2022 at 17:10 UTC »

I used to work three twelve-hour shifts paid for forty. It was a grind but man, four days off a week was awesome. We had people that lived hundreds of miles away and would just drive a camper over to do their shift, then high tail it back to their paradise.

DrJGH on November 27th, 2022 at 16:55 UTC »

Proponents of the four-day week say that the five-day pattern is a hangover from an earlier economic age. They argue that a four-day week would drive companies to improve their productivity, meaning they can create the same output using fewer hours. For some early adopters the policy has also proven a useful way of attracting and retaining employees.

Seems to provide much sage and timely insight.

Kind regards