We decided to put it to the test ourselves. We set Country Email List up an experiment in which several colleagues test a four-day working week. For three months they learned the ins and outs of this work regime. Curious about what we have learned? How do you manage all your to do's? In a 4-day work week you have to tick off all your to do's in one day Country Email List less. According to our colleagues, it works. Although you have to set yourself up as an employee differently than before… Full focus mode, 100% of the time Our colleagues indicated that Country Email List the necessity of the day gnawed at their sense of calm. There was not much time left for a nice coffee chat, a long lunch break or mindlessly scrolling on HLN.
A constant race to complete tasks was the bitter Country Email List reality. It even went so far that some colleagues turned off all noise in Country Email List order to work as efficiently as possible. Before that, they only turned on their phone a few moments a day, worked Country Email List longer on their four available working days (sometimes even until 11 p.m.), and took Country Email List shorter breaks. Everything to not have to work on that day off. Also read: The 25-hour work week is actually quite logical For our colleagues, this full focus mode was also a necessity.
Because what if they worked – even if only for a short time Country Email List on their day off? Then they paid a price for it. They indicated that they could enjoy their free time less because they were mentally still at work. And they couldn't really work Country Email List either, because you are still 'on your day off'. So it's a lose-lose scenario. The four-day working week therefore seems to bring more stress with it than it would remove. A man with stress due to the Country Email List 4-day working week.