Current:Home > MarketsThis company has a 4-day workweek. Here's its secret to making it a success. -TruePath Finance
This company has a 4-day workweek. Here's its secret to making it a success.
View
Date:2025-04-17 06:25:28
More companies across the U.S. are experimenting with a truncated workweek as employees demand flexibility and studies show that actually working less can make people more productive while boosting a company's profits. Online consignment and thrift store ThredUp, a public company with 300 corporate employees, has made the shift to four days permanent after a successful one-year experiment. Co-founder and CEO James Reinhart told CBS MoneyWatch that the shorter workweek has improved employee morale and increased productivity.
How did this experiment come about in the first place? What was wrong with working five days a week?
James Reinhart: The catalyzing event was at the onset of the pandemic in April 2020 when many companies were laying off large swaths of workers. We said, 'Let's experiment with 80% pay for four days of work a week. It forced this experiment in service of our balance sheet. We did that for a year. People were paid 20% less, and their experience was, 'I get just as much done, I'm happier, I can spend more time with family and be more creative.'
In 2021, we kept the four-day schedule and switched everyone to full-time pay. At the time, I said it was an experiment and we would measure the impact and hold ourselves accountable. Now we're two-plus years into it.
Sounds like the experiment was a success. What made it work?
JR: I've always believed happy employees are great employees. So if you can find an opportunity to make people really love their work and company, so they come to work happy, they create better companies.
Early in our life as a company [before the pandemic] we had work-from-home days, you could qualify for a sabbatical after being at ThredUp for just a few years, so we had built a culture where employee well-being was a key input to retention and productivity.
What are the fundamental changes you made to allow for this shift?
The quantitative, rigorous approach is you have to get five days of work done in four days. That means you need to work harder and be more efficient with your time on four days. We have pushed people to really make those four days of the week super productive.
I'll give you a sports analogy. In interval training, you do an interval really hard, then rest. Where it breaks down is if you don't do the work hard and you don't take advantage of the rest.
The four-day calendar is rigorous. It can't be three-and-a-half days. Things can't get slow Thursday afternoon, you have to work all the way through.
How do you measure success? How can you tell this works?
We don't get it right all the time. On average, people are working really hard those four days. They work more if they have deadlines. Because it's not officially a workday, people treat Friday as a looser opportunity to get things done or cross things off of their to-do lists. It helps people feel they have the freedom to get things done.
As far as productivity, I'm not seeing anything like this product has not shipped on time or we're not delivering this quarter because we are only working four days.
Still, it's a privilege for employees, right?
It goes without saying that the four-day workweek is a privilege, and we have to show up every day and earn that privilege. The minute we stop delivering the outcomes our shareholders expect, we are not going to have a four-day workweek.
Is four days of work and three days of rest the ideal work-life balance?
You're balancing the amount of effort that's required with the amount of recovery required for people to feel like they can work really hard.
Often we underappreciate how much the quality of the work is the most important thing, and when we are rested and are the best versions of ourselves, the quality shines.
How are ThredUp's employees responding to the change?
Before the experiment, we heard consistently from folks how much they value a three-day weekend. They came back feeling recharged. So I think the psychology there is about feeling recharged coming back into work. I wanted to create that level of freshness that leads to better outcomes.
Some people do work Fridays. There's something about waking up Friday morning with a fresh cup of coffee with no emails, no Slack messages and banging out a creative proposal or performance review or product design. There's a freedom you have when you don't have all these inbounds coming at you.
How do you define "better outcomes"?
It's hard to prove that the work quality is better. But we have a set of things we're trying to accomplish as a public company. We have standards and we know how long it's supposed to take to get things done. We're not allowing people to work one day less to push things out.
What I most worry about is when things start to drag. When something that could get resolved Thursday afternoon doesn't and you have to wait until Monday. But if you have the right mindset, and the right employees, you get it all done.
Do you think every company should shift to a four-day workweek? Why might it not work for everyone?
I don't know if it's something I would advocate globally for every company. It works for us because of the mission-driven nature of what we do.
Our people are inspired to come to work and care about the impact we're making on the world. So they're willing to be flexible and work super hard on those four days in service of that mission.
I could see an environment for folks who don't like their jobs or the companies they're working at, how this could go horribly wrong.
How many days a week do you work?
Because I am the founder, I basically work all the time. As founder you never shut your love of the company off. I never complain about working hard. I am the luckiest guy around.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Trial expected to focus on shooter’s competency in 2021 Colorado supermarket massacre
- Hailey Bieber Rocks New “Mom” Ring as Justin Bieber Gets His Own Papa Swag
- The 49ers place rookie Ricky Pearsall on the non-football injury list after shooting
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- The 49ers place rookie Ricky Pearsall on the non-football injury list after shooting
- Murder on Music Row: Phone calls reveal anger, tension on Hughes' last day alive
- South Carolina Is Considered a Model for ‘Managed Retreat’ From Coastal Areas Threatened by Climate Change
- Small twin
- Millions more Americans lacked health insurance under Trump vs. Biden
Ranking
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Tobey Maguire’s Ex Jennifer Meyer Engaged to Billionaire Heir Geoffrey Ogunlesi
- Michael Kors Designer Bag Sale: Snag a $378 Crossbody for $55 & Other Under $100 Deals on Fall Styles
- Jessica Pegula earns seventh quarterfinal Grand Slam shot. Is this her breakthrough?
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Nikki Garcia Attends First Public Event Following Husband Artem Chigvintsev’s Arrest
- 2024 US Open: Here’s how to watch on TV, betting odds and more you should know
- Body of missing Myrtle Beach woman found under firepit; South Carolina man charged: Police
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Auburn police fatally shoot man at apartment complex
Why Kristin Cavallari Is Showing Son Camden’s Face on Social Media
Joshua Jackson Shares Rare Insight Into Bond With His and Jodie Turner-Smith's 4-Year-Old Daughter
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
You Have 24 Hours To Get 50% Off Ashley Graham’s Self-Tanner, Madison LeCroy’s Eye Cream & $7 Ulta Deals
Murder on Music Row: Predatory promoters bilk Nashville's singing newcomers
Shohei Ohtani back in Anaheim: Dodgers star chases 50-50 before first postseason trip