[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"external-mp-885":3},{"payload":4,"id":15,"user":16,"level":22,"course":23,"activity":24,"activity_slug":25,"title":6,"topic":26,"tone":27,"stats":28,"created":30,"score":31,"is_favorite":32,"public":33,"is_external":32},{"text":5,"title":6,"choices":7},"In recent years, the idea of a four-day workweek has moved from a fringe proposal to a serious workplace experiment. Companies in different sectors have tested whether reducing working time can improve employees’ wellbeing without damaging results. The most common model keeps salaries the same while cutting weekly hours, often from forty to thirty-two.\n\n(1) ..........\n\nHowever, the promise of “more time off” is only part of the story. A shorter week forces teams to rethink how they use time, which meetings are truly necessary, and how decisions are made. In many trials, managers report that the biggest gains come from removing low-value tasks rather than asking people to work faster.\n\nOne reason the idea attracts attention is that it appears to benefit both sides. Employees often report lower stress and better work-life balance, while employers hope for higher retention and fewer sick days.\n\n(2) ..........\n\nTo avoid confusion, successful trials usually begin with clear rules. For example, some organisations close on Fridays, while others rotate days off to keep customer service running. In both cases, teams need to agree on response times, handovers, and what counts as an emergency.\n\nAnother key issue is measurement. If a company wants to know whether the change works, it must decide what “success” means. For a sales team, it might be revenue; for a software team, it might be delivery speed and quality; for a hospital, it might be patient outcomes.\n\n(3) ..........\n\nTechnology can help, but it is not a magic solution. Tools that automate routine work may free up time, yet they can also create new expectations of constant availability. That is why many trials include guidelines about messaging outside working hours.\n\nNot every organisation is a good candidate. Businesses that rely on continuous physical presence, such as some manufacturing lines, may struggle unless they hire more staff or redesign shifts.\n\n(4) ..........\n\nThere is also a cultural challenge. In some workplaces, long hours are still treated as a sign of commitment. If leaders do not actively support the new model, employees may feel pressure to “prove” they are working just as hard, which defeats the purpose.\n\nFrom a financial perspective, the biggest fear is that output will fall. Yet several trials have reported stable or even improved productivity, partly because people protect their focus more carefully when time is limited.\n\n(5) ..........\n\nEven when results are positive, companies often adjust the model after the trial. Some keep the four-day week all year; others use it only in quieter seasons. A few adopt a “nine-day fortnight,” which gives employees an extra day off every two weeks.\n\nFinally, it is worth noting that the four-day week is not a single policy but a set of choices. The details—coverage, deadlines, communication, and fairness—determine whether it feels like a benefit or a burden.\n\n(6) ..........\n\nFor organisations considering a trial, the most practical approach is to start small, measure carefully, and be prepared to revise. A shorter week can work, but only when it is treated as a redesign of work, not simply a reduction of hours.","A Four-Day Workweek Trial",[8,9,10,11,12,13,14],"This does not mean people never work longer days; instead, they often compress tasks by reducing interruptions and improving planning.","In those settings, the change can be achieved, but it usually requires careful staffing plans and may increase costs.","But the benefits are not automatic, especially when teams have different workloads or when deadlines are fixed by clients.","Some countries have also introduced laws requiring employees to answer emails within five minutes, which makes shorter weeks easier.","A common mistake is to track only hours worked, rather than outcomes such as customer satisfaction, error rates, or project completion.","For that reason, transparency matters: employees need to understand how days off are allocated and how performance will be judged.","This is sometimes described as the “100-80-100” approach: 100% of pay for 80% of the time, in exchange for maintaining 100% of the output.",885,{"id":17,"username":18,"first_name":19,"last_name":20,"image":21},21831,"vladana-kostic","Vladana","Kostić","https://api.useofenglish.ai/static/img/users/default-profile-picture.jpg","B2","Reading","Missing Paragraphs","missing-paragraphs","Anything","Professional",{"times_played":29,"num_favorites":29},1,"2026-05-19T17:19:00",null,false,true]