Iâve said it before and Iâll say it again: The 4-day workweek ISNâT for everyone
To view this email as a web page, [click here]() This is part of our series on [IWTâs 4-Day Workweek Challenge](), where we take you behind the scenes to show what itâs like for us as we test out a compressed work schedule. The email youâre about to read is written by Tony Ho Tran, a professional journalist for The Daily Beast and a former copywriter for IWT. Join us as we dive deep on the highs and lows of the challenge. {NAME}, Iâve said it before and Iâll say it again: [The 4-day workweek ISNâT for everyone](). It might not work for your specific business, like if you do seasonal work or work in emergency services. Your company culture might simply expect you to put in long hours 5 or more days a week. Hell, you might just be a weirdo who LOVES to work as much as possible (no judgment â weâve all been there). Or a 4DWW might simply be a struggle for you to adapt to⦠and thatâs okay too. Today, I want to introduce you to Andy McNeill. Heâs a marketing associate at IWT and helps deliver all of our great emails straight to your inbox â including the one youâre reading right now. [Andy McNeill] Andy McNeill, marketing associate extraordinaire When Andy first heard about the 4DWW Challenge at IWT, he was PUMPEDâ¦and who could blame him? âI was excited about the idea of doing a 4-day workweek because I love 3-day weekends,â Andy says. âBut, at the same time, I was nervous. What if it doesnât work out? What if things just get harder?â Ultimately though, Andy was looking forward to it. Not only does it mean a longer weekend to spend time with his family (and, specifically, his newborn niece), it also means that he could schedule time for regular medical appointments that he needed â all without disrupting the flow of his work. âHaving Mondays off means itâs easier to set up an appointment, which takes a lot of stress off me during the week,â he says. Taking care of your mind and body, while making sure work is going well? Thatâs the IWT way! But, while thereâs undoubtedly a lot of benefits from the 4DWW for Andy, there are also a few things he struggled with. The problem with a 4-day workweek Iâm going to tell you a secret: It takes a LOT of work to get these emails out to you every day. While itâs a collective team effort, Andy still has his work cut out for him on top of the 4DWW Challenge. âItâs been a roller coaster,â he says, referring to the compressed work schedule. âI've had weeks where I love it, and I have weeks where I hate it.â [Roller Coaster] How the 4DWW has been for Andy He adds that while there have been some undeniable benefits from the 4DWW, heâs also recognized that occasionally his stress at work has spiked because of it. Also, remember how he scheduled those doctorâs appointments? He did that for a good reason: Mondays are great days to schedule medical checkups. This isnât just an opinion â [itâs actually backed up by evidence](). However, since the vast majority of IWT employees decided to take Fridays off instead, that means that Andy has a 3-day window to communicate and collaborate with his co-workers. âItâs been challenging with the three day situation,â he explains. âBut the teamwork has been great when we are together.â Andyâs situation is a great example of how a 4DWW doesnât instantly fit into everyoneâs Rich Life â particularly if theyâre used to a 5-day schedule. âAt first I was thinking about sneaking in five days of work while everyone else did their 4-day workweek,â he explains. âBut I decided to try and make it work and it has paid off.â The beauty about the 4DWW Challenge is that it not only challenges our assumptions of what a typical 5-day workweek could look like, but it also helps us test and prod the 4DWW itself. That can be helpful considering the MASSIVE trend in articles that seem to tout it as nothing short of a gift from the labor gods. Consider these breathless obituaries about the 5-day workweek: - [The five-day workweek is dead (Vox)]()
- [Kill the 5-Day Workweek (The Atlantic)]()
- [How the pandemic killed the five-day office work week (CBS)]()
- [Is This The End Of The Traditional Five-Day Working Week? (Forbes)]() After a few weeks of testing, though, hereâs the cold hard truth: The 5-day workweek isnât dead. Hell, it isnât even dying. BUT that doesnât mean that there arenât some clear and powerful benefits to it that make it worthwhile for a lot of workers. Bottom line: The 4DWW is not a utopian paradise. Instead, itâs just a different way of approaching work that allows a lot of people to live their Rich Lives a little easier. A little help from my friends While Andy has occasionally struggled with the 4DWW, he says that heâs grateful to have received a TON of help from his coworkers and managers. He added that IWTâs culture allows things that would otherwise be annoying in other companies, like unnecessary meetings, to become non-issues. âThatâs something I love about IWT,â Andy says. âI remember other employers that had meetings that consistently went over time or meetings that could have been an email. But IWT has always had an agenda and we respect each otherâs time.â [Being productive at work] This will never be IWT Andy is already seeing huge improvements in how he feels about the 4DWW. Every week, IWT is surveyed on how much theyâre enjoying it. âLast week was great, my score went to an 8 when it had been a 2 or 3 in the weeks before. This week, itâs probably going to be a 9 or 10. My workload is more manageable and my stress levels are down.â Andy had a conversation with his manager about the issue of having enough time to deliver emails while observing a 4-day workweek. The team met together and they drew out the entire process of delivering an email. They identified areas where improvements could be made and even considered if a task should change owners. Now email copy is getting to Andy earlier, giving him more time to send them. Thatâs why companies typically test out big changes like 4DWW before implementing themâ¦well, at least the smart ones do. It takes time and creative problem solving to make the 4DWW work, and you have to have that trial period to figure it all out. REPLY: Do you work better when given more time and flexibility to work â or would you rather have a 3-day weekend no matter what? Let us know in the inbox. We always love to know the surprising ways our readers approach work. Talk to you soon, Tony Ho Tran You may be new to IWT.
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