In the fast-moving world of agency hustle, being present and focused amidst the buzz can be challenging. That is, we are always anticipating what’s next for our clients. Add in modern-day maladies —...
In the fast-moving world of agency hustle, being present and focused amidst the buzz can be challenging. That is, we are always anticipating what’s next for our clients. Add in modern-day maladies —...
Daily news headlines are filled with stories of Silicon Valley leaders finding creative ways to mandate and incentivize their employees to return to the office. At the same time, study after study highlights the reality of many knowledge workers — we can be just as productive working fewer hours.
Since 2020, BAM has been a fully remote company, currently with team members in 13+ states across the country. Throughout the last few years of remote-first work, we've tested many new ways of working, from 'meeting-free Wednesdays' to monthly 'reset weeks.' Some work, some don't, and some we adapt. We're big believers in experimenting to find better and more efficient ways of doing amazing work for our clients.
Starting in 2023, we introduced our latest experiment, the 4-day workweek. Our experiment is still running, but we have learned much from it. BAM CEO Beck Bamberger shares her thoughts on the 4-day workweek and the seven steps for implementing this experiment at any organization.
This post was originally published on Forbes. Read the full article here.
The research is undeniable: Employees love a four-day workweek. Around the world, from Belgium to South Africa, businesses are implementing four-day workweeks in pursuit of happier employees and productivity that remains consistent, if not better, with a five-day week. I hear a number of founders, many with client-servicing companies like agencies, grumble that the shift to a four-day workweek would “never work for ‘our’ industry,” or that “clients just wouldn’t get it.”
We’ve implemented a four-day workweek here at BAM, a PR and marketing agency that works with venture-backed startups, often moving at the speed of light. It's been in place for several weeks, and the results continue to be compelling. Here’s a step-by-step process we followed to make the four-day workweek a pillar of our culture and a highlight of our productivity:
High flexibility, high responsibility means no one, including founders, cares about where a person is located or when a person is doing their job. As long as individuals don't drop the ball on deadlines and results, don't focus on where or when a person works. For us, we flexed our muscles on high-flexibility, high-responsibility for years as our team grew all across the U.S.— and did so even more once the pandemic hit.
The high-flexibility, high-responsibility culture allowed us to first debut a “Flex Fridays” offering across the board. If you want to implement a similar offering, make sure no calls or meetings are ever scheduled (no one wants a meeting on a Friday anyway), and make it clear that people can choose to wrap up their work whenever they're done. A few of our employees took entire Fridays regularly off but worked full Fridays as needed. Because of our high-flexibility, high-responsibility culture, Flex Fridays were easy.
I used Flex Fridays for deep work, a concept coined by Cal Newport, a professor and author of "Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World." Deep work can be an immense work game changer, and aware of its benefits, I established No Meetings Wednesdays at BAM in 2022. This allows employees a full day of deep work.
I’m a proponent of full days of deep work because even the distraction of one meeting throughout the day can trigger your brain into fretting about not missing a meeting, at least in my experience. If you're like me, you may end up stacking Mondays and Tuesdays with up to 25 calls each day, but the No Meeting Wednesday will let you sink into big projects and hairy strategies you need to work on while also allowing you to catch up from the wave of work from those Mondays and Tuesdays.
Following the establishment of Flex Fridays and No Meeting Wednesdays, you can showcase the benefits of a four-day workweek. Seize the moment and pitch your executive team by explaining why you can do this: this ludicrous (to many Americans) four-day workweek. One of our priorities of the year was to increase team happiness, which we measure monthly, and I believed that the implementation of a four-day workweek would be one way to increase happiness in addition to other initiatives. One important nuance: You shouldn't lower the results, hours or responsibilities you expect people to achieve and put in. For us, our pilot, which ran in quarter two, hinged on the team being ironically more productive with fewer hours.
During the initial implementation, practice your "Chief Repeating Officer" skills. Communicate about your four-day workweek pilot via email, Slack, in-person meetings, social media and more multiple times throughout the pilot period. In addition, you should repeat this messaging frequently with clients but emphasize that it is a pilot (a trial period) and that you will maintain results. In our industry, very few clients care about the number of hours we work because the actual results are all that matter. Still, a number of people at our firm were hesitant about how clients would receive the message. Time quickly told us: The vast majority didn’t care or celebrated the move.
“Boundaries” are often gossamer guidelines at workplaces. If your team truly wants No Meeting Wednesdays and a four-day workweek, every person will have to state and hold their boundaries so they are upheld. It’s easy to “squeeze in one call” or “just fit in a quick meeting,” but the “just one” often rolls into “a ton.” Of course, PR blow-ups happen and client emergencies occur. Exceptions can be made, but they should be notably rare and well justified. As an example, we’ll often get requests for Wednesday or Friday meetings from potential clients. As much as we want to get their business, a quick note telling the prospect of our No Meeting Wednesday and four-day workweek easily finds us alternative times. Most people respect stated boundaries.
One of the great ironies I've heard people express about the four-day workweek is its ability to maintain, if not increase, productivity. We have found productivity to be better at BAM while also increasing our happiness inside and outside of work, both of which we measure. In our case, the results we deliver to our clients in the form of media placements, content and client servicing is our measure of productivity. Every organization needs to establish its “measuring stick” for productivity to suss out whether the four-day workweek works. Continue to measure both productivity and happiness because both can contribute to client retention and results overall.
6-April-2022
Alex Wilhelm of TechCrunch+ answered your questions about technology and journalism.
March-2022
In this BAM Book Jam, we sat down with Charmaine Wilkerson to talk about her novel, "Black Cake."
23-February-2022
We chatted with Alex Konrad of Forbes, Marlize van Romburgh of Crunchbase News, and Melia Russell of Insider.
leave a comment