Swedish employers introduce a six-hour work day

Retirement homes, hospitals and car centres across the country are all implementing the change

According to the Science Alert website, the aim of the change is to get more done in a shorter amount of time and to ensure people had the energy to enjoy their private lives.

Toyota centres in Gothenburg, Sweden, made the switch 13 years ago, with the company reporting a happier workforce, lower turnover rate, and an increase in profits in that time.

An app developer based in the capital Stockholm, Filimundus, introduced the six-hour day last year.

“The eight-hour work day is not as effective as one would think,” Linus Feldt, the company’s CEO told Fast Company.

“To stay focused on a specific work task for eight hours is a huge challenge.  In order to cope, we mix in things and pauses to make the work day more endurable.  At the same time, we are having it hard to manage our private life outside of work.”

The six-hour work day does come with a set of rules as Mr Feldt explains.  Staff members are not allowed on social media, meetings are kept to a minimum, and that other distractions during the day are eliminated – but the aim is that staff will be more motivated to work more intensely while in the office.

In order to promote a good work/life balance, the new work day would ensure people have enough energy to pursue their private lives when they leave work – something which can be difficult with eight-hour days.

“My impression now is that it is easier to focus more intensely on the work that needs to be done and you have the stamina to do it and still have the energy left when leaving the office,” Mr Feldt added.

A retirement home in Gothenburg reduced their working hours earlier this year and is conducting an experiment, until the end of 2016, to determine whether the cost of hiring new staff members to cover the hours lost is worth the improvements to patient care and boosting of employees’ morale.

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