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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Sun Apr 20, 2014, 12:03 PM Apr 2014

This Company has a Four-Day Work Week, Pays Its Workers a Full Salary and is Super Successful


http://www.nationofchange.org/company-has-four-day-work-week-pays-its-workers-full-salary-and-super-successful-1397916947


The 70 people who work at Treehouse, an online education company that teaches people about technology, only work four days a week at the same full salary as other tech workers. Yet the company’s revenue has grown 120 percent, it generates more than $10 million a year in sales, and it responds to more than 70,000 customers, according to a post in Quartz by CEO Ryan Carson.

Carson has been working four-day weeks since 2006, when he founded his first company with his wife, he told ThinkProgress. He quit his job to start it, only to find that they both put in seven days a week. “I remember distinctly my wife and I were on the couch one evening,” he recalled, “and she said something like, ‘What are we doing? I thought that starting a company means you have more time and more control, but it seems like we have less time and less control and we’re more stressed out.’” They decided to cut back by not working Fridays, and after they hired their first employee, “we decided to officially enact [a four-day week] and we never looked back.”

Carson has since started three other companies at which he’s instituted this rule, Treehouse being the latest. While it’s hard to quantify, he believes his company benefits from better output and morale. “The quality of the work, I believe, is higher,” he said. “Thirty-two hours of higher quality work is better than 40 hours of lower quality work.” The impact on his employees’ outlook is also “massive,” he said. “I find I just can’t wait to get back to work” after the weekend, and he suspects the same is true for others. On Mondays, “everyone’s invigorated and excited.” He recounted a time when a developer told him that his hope was to work at the company for 20 years. In the Quartz article, he noted that a team member gets recruitment emails from Facebook, but that his response is always, “Do you work a four-day week yet?”
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This Company has a Four-Day Work Week, Pays Its Workers a Full Salary and is Super Successful (Original Post) eridani Apr 2014 OP
I work as a machinist House of Roberts Apr 2014 #1
4/9/4 Mopar151 Apr 2014 #5
i propose a 5 hour workday noiretextatique Apr 2014 #2
This should be more than adequate, given that productivity has increased at least fourfold since-- eridani Apr 2014 #3
it would be more than adequate noiretextatique Apr 2014 #4

House of Roberts

(5,180 posts)
1. I work as a machinist
Sun Apr 20, 2014, 12:11 PM
Apr 2014

and it's become almost standard to work four ten hour days. That way you're never expected to work Friday unless it's overtime. Now, we quite often work Fridays, but not every week. If we worked five eights, we'd always have to work six days just to get a little overtime.

Mopar151

(9,992 posts)
5. 4/9/4
Mon Apr 21, 2014, 10:01 AM
Apr 2014

Work 9's - every other Friday off, or an 8 hour day. For me, doing 10 hr/day on concrete is pretty tough, esp. with an hour commute.
As one of my co-workers said of the owners: 4/9/4 is the only reason I stay - I need the 3 day weekends to forget about these cretins.

noiretextatique

(27,275 posts)
2. i propose a 5 hour workday
Sun Apr 20, 2014, 02:55 PM
Apr 2014

no lunch. just get the work done in 5 hours. there would be less need for workers to take time off for appointments, etc. and i think it would boost productivity. draining the life out of people is not a good way to make them work more efficiently.

eridani

(51,907 posts)
3. This should be more than adequate, given that productivity has increased at least fourfold since--
Sun Apr 20, 2014, 03:10 PM
Apr 2014

--the end of WW II. Sure beats the other alternative of turning the three surplus workers into Soylent Green, IMO.

noiretextatique

(27,275 posts)
4. it would be more than adequate
Sun Apr 20, 2014, 03:44 PM
Apr 2014

and it would give people time to deal with their lives. i work 9 to 5, so i have to take off for doctor's appointments, etc. it makes way too much sense.

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