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Home / Business / Economy / Employment

Four weeks leave not enough? Business owners think so

Aimee Shaw
By Aimee Shaw
Business Reporter·NZ Herald·
6 Feb, 2020 04:00 AM4 mins to read

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Zac de Silva, founder of Business Changing. Photo / Supplied

Zac de Silva, founder of Business Changing. Photo / Supplied

One third of New Zealand small business owners believe Kiwis do not receive enough annual leave each year, sparking calls for a revision of the country's work culture.

Experts believe that the culture of "being busy" and the current 9-to-5 Monday to Friday work structure paired with regular overtime and just four weeks annual leave a year is negatively impacting productivity.

Independent research commissioned by accounting software firm Xero reveals a quarter of small business owners consider their part-time staff to be more efficient than their full time employees.

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The survey found approximately one third of fulltime staff employed by a small business in this country were regularly working more than 40 hours a week.

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Employees were not alone in feeling the daily grind - 10 per cent of SMEs with more than five employees said they regularly worked up to 55 hours each week.

Zac de Silva, founder of small business advisory and coaching firm Business Changing, said New Zealand businesses were not seeing the efficiency gains that they should given the advancements in technology that helped to streamline operations.

Instead, the workforce had become overworked and unable to "switch off".

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Xero's survey found that 32 per cent of business owners did not think the current legal requirement of four weeks' annual leave, or six weeks including stat days, was enough.

But de Silva said staff and business owners would not need more leave if the lines between work and home life were not so blurred.

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Businesses of all sizes needed to change their expectations of staff and move to enable flexible hours to boost productivity.

"If you've finished all of your work for the day and you've got nothing else to do then you should be able to go home," de Silva told the Herald.

"Flexibility actually helps productivity."

Many staff often worked overtime or after hours as they had the time to procrastinate compared to part-time counterparts. There was also more accountability for part-time employees, he said. "When you have limited time, you just are more productive.

"Full-timers, they know that they've got 40 hours but could actually do 43 hours if they want to, whereas part-timers, they don't normally stay longer because often they can't."

There are concerns that the expectation that staff are "always on" is hindering productivity. Photo / 123RF
There are concerns that the expectation that staff are "always on" is hindering productivity. Photo / 123RF

The advent of the internet and the personal email in the mid-1990s, and the subsequent rise of the text message, could be blamed for overworked staff, said de Silva.

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"In the old days you would never ring someone on their home number, but now you'd totally send a text at 8:40 at night and not think [twice] about it. People are not considering the other person receiving it, what it does to them.

"If we could enable our teams to go home and not think about work, then they would be more productive the next day, because part of your wellbeing is being refreshed and when you're constantly on until 10 o'clock at night and you wake up and you're constantly on from 6 in morning, then you're not as refreshed as you could be".

Staff needed to "be refreshed" to think clearly within their jobs or business, he said.

Craig Hudson, managing director of Xero. Photo / File
Craig Hudson, managing director of Xero. Photo / File

France has banned workers from accessing their work emails after hours in a move to give workers the "right to disconnect", a similar move here could manage the expectation business owners and managers have of their staff, he said.

Perpetual Guardian founder Andrew Barnes has fiercely advocated for the four-day work week to become the new normal as a means to boost productivity.

De Silva said organisations needed to focus on output rather than hours worked.

Craig Hudson, Xero managing director of New Zealand and the Pacific Islands, said the survey findings showed that working long hours did not correlate with efficiency or quality
of work.

Working longer hours, however, could be detrimental to productivity, he said: "There's a disconnect here where businesses are using people's time inefficiently - and this is starting to cost them in the long term".

Hudson said offering staff flexibility to split up the working week with days off would have a significant positive impact on work productivity.

"It begs the question of [would] we be more productive if we had the opportunity to take more time off?"

The survey found the bigger the company, the more hours both the owners and employees put in - but with less time spent on work tasks.

A quarter of the time a person spends at work was found to be spent on tasks that had nothing to do with their job.

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