Use These 5 Strategies to Maintain Productivity When Switching To a 4-Day Workweek使开关同时保持- or even increasing — productivity requires first addressing these common time wasters

ByTom Medema

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Thefour-day workweekoffers many advantages to employers and employees, but reducing the work schedule without reducing productivity will require organizations to adopt new tools, processes and solutions.

According to arecent pilotconducted by 4 Day Workweek Global, the condensed schedule resulted in lessburnout, higher job satisfaction and better mental and physical health. It's alsoprovento offer significant recruiting advantages. Most of the pilot's 30 participating companies have since made the change permanent.

However, many who fail to adequately prepare their teams before making the change face significantchallenges. But there are ways to cut down on work time without cutting down onproductivity. In fact, a 2022studyfound that knowledge workers only spend a third of their time focussed on skilled work and 9% dedicated towards major strategic goals.

切换到四天的工作时间,同时保持— or even increasing — productivity, therefore, requires first addressing the most significant time wasters. Fortunately, a range of tools and processes can enable employees to cut a full day's worth of waste out of their weekly schedules.

Related:You've Been Tracking Employee Productivity All Wrong

1. Focus on outcomes, not effort

So much of our work culture equates "busyness" with "effectiveness," but encouraging a culture that prizes "busyness" canreduce overall productivity. Rather than focus on how much time employees dedicated to a task, organizations should instead work with staff to set benchmarks related to specific outcomes on a realistic timeline and a mutually agreed uponmeasure of success.

That could include contributing their piece of a larger project before a certain deadline, drafting a budget in time for the next board meeting, or landing a certain number of sales per week. Whatever the task, it's essential to focus on what'saccomplished, not how many hours it took.

2. Get more out of fewer (and shorter) meetings

Research hasfoundthat remote work has led to more and longer meetings, a trend that organizations will need to reverse to cut down onwasted time. Here are a few ways to reduce meeting time while keeping everyone in the loop.

  1. Always prepare and share an agenda in advance
  2. Limit meetings to 30 minutes or less
  3. Start meetings at odd times — such as 12:03 — and stick to those start and end times to reinforce a culture that values every minute
  4. Set the tone, context and expectations before the meeting begins, and share critical points after it ends, using asynchronous communication tools like email, Slack andBubbles.
  5. When necessary, continue conversations over async alternatives to avoid extending meetings.

Related:Got Too Many Meetings? Here's How to Cut Back

3. Use tech tools to measure and optimize work hours

Finding more hours in the day is only possible when those hours aretracked and measured. That's why it's important for organizations to adopt project, time and task management tools before adopting a four-day workweek. Combined, these tools can help leaders benchmark time-saving activities and measure their progress towards shared goals, such as cutting down on meeting times and frequency by 20% across the board.

Related:78% of Employers Are Using Remote Work Tools to Spy on You. Here's a More Effective (and Ethical) Approach to Tracking Employee Productivity.

4. Reduce distractions with async tools

When staff is engaging in their most productive "deep work," the last thing you want is for them to be distracted by the dings and buzzes of endless notifications. In fact,researchhas shown that even small interrupts can lead to anxiety and frustration and that it can take more than 20 minutes to get back on track.

That is why organizations looking to get more productivity out of less work time need to be vigilant in their effort to reduce unnecessary distractions at all costs. One of the most effective ways to do so is by relying less on real-time communications and instead adopting moreasynchronous strategies. Tools designed to facilitate asynchronous communications, like Bubbles, allow team members to collaborate effectively without requiring them to be "always-on" and without pulling them out of their deep work with endless notifications.

Related:What If Your Productivity Tools Are Making You Less Productive?

5. Encourage a culture of productivity and time management

To optimize their staff member's time, organizational leaders need to acknowledge that the mostdisrupting distractionscome from the top. While we might easily brush off a notification from a colleague, most will pull themselves away from the task at hand to respond to a message from leadership. Therefore, the strategies outlined above are only as effective as the leadership's willingness to adopt them.

Some of the ways leaders can "walk the walk" include:

  1. Adopt asynchronous work styles
  2. Avoid treating every task as urgent, and prioritize appropriately
  3. Avoid sending text, slack and email messages to colleagues that might distract them from deep work

The four-day workweek offers many advantages to employers and employees, but those benefits can only be achieved when workers are empowered to cut down on wasted time. Fortunately, there's a lot of room for improvement and a lot of new solutions designed to help employees maintain or even increase productivity while reducing overall work hours.

Tom Medema

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Contributor

CEO of Bubbles

Tom is the Founder of Bubbles, one of the fastest-growing remote work tools in tech— with a quarter of a million users. As a former CTO, he scaled his last company's remote engineering team from 1 to 150 in under two years. Those growing pains led to Bubbles, an async video collaboration platform.

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