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新西蘭試行每周四天工作 結(jié)果效率奇高

所屬教程:職場(chǎng)人生

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2018年04月02日

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新西蘭一家公司從三月初開(kāi)始試行每周四天工作制,結(jié)果怎么樣呢?每周有三天假期是很爽,但是五天的工作要在四天內(nèi)干完也是挺有壓力的。來(lái)看看員工們?cè)趺凑f(shuō)。
新西蘭試行每周四天工作 結(jié)果效率奇高

截圖來(lái)自衛(wèi)報(bào)網(wǎng)站

On the first long weekend of her employer’s experiment with a four-day working week, Kirsten Taylor freaked out a little bit. Like a housework hurricane, she got through mounds of clothes-washing, weeded the garden, cleaned the windows and mowed the lawn.

在公司首次試驗(yàn)四天工作制的第一個(gè)長(zhǎng)周末,柯?tīng)査诡D·泰勒感覺(jué)有點(diǎn)抓狂。就像經(jīng)歷了一場(chǎng)家務(wù)颶風(fēng),她洗了一大堆衣服,除了花園的雜草,擦了窗戶(hù),還修剪了草坪。

It had been lovely to spend extra time with her 21-month-old son, but by the end of the third day off she was shattered.

能夠和21個(gè)月大的兒子共度更多時(shí)光本來(lái)是件很好的事,但是到第三天快結(jié)束時(shí)她感覺(jué)自己要崩潰了。

“I actually found that day really hard. I ran myself ragged,” laughs Taylor, who is a solo mother. “I hadn’t yet programmed that routine into my life. I thought: I don’t know when the next one of these is coming, I better get everything done. I don’t think I did it well, but heck it was a productive day!”

身為單身母親的泰勒大笑著說(shuō):“事實(shí)上,我覺(jué)得第三天很難熬。我把自己累壞了。我還沒(méi)有將這種長(zhǎng)周末納入常規(guī)生活。我在想,不知道下一個(gè)長(zhǎng)周末會(huì)是什么時(shí)候,所以我最好把一切事情都干完。我覺(jué)得自己干得不夠好,但這一天還真是非常高效!”

Taylor is one of 200 employees at New Zealand trustee company Perpetual Guardian, which is halfway through a six-week long trial which could have profound implications for the future of labour. Staff are working four days a week but getting paid for five.

泰勒是新西蘭信托公司Perpetual Guardian200名員工中的一位。該公司正在試行為期六周的每周四天工作制,目前正進(jìn)行到一半。員工每周工作四天,但卻能得到五天的薪水。這次試驗(yàn)可能會(huì)對(duì)勞動(dòng)力的未來(lái)產(chǎn)生深遠(yuǎn)影響。

The experiment began in early March and will conclude in mid-April, after which productivity data will be collated and analysed. Employees will find out if the new routine will be adopted full-time in July.

這次試驗(yàn)是從三月初開(kāi)始的,將在四月中旬結(jié)束,之后會(huì)整理和分析生產(chǎn)率數(shù)據(jù)。該工作制是否會(huì)長(zhǎng)期實(shí)施將在7月揭曉。

New Zealanders work an average of 1,752 hours a year, making them close to average compared with their OECD peers. Germans spend the least amount of time working annually, closely followed by Denmark, Norway and the Netherlands, while Mexicans, Koreans and Costa Ricans clock the most.

新西蘭人每年平均工作1752個(gè)小時(shí),接近經(jīng)濟(jì)合作與發(fā)展組織其他成員國(guó)的平均水平。德國(guó)人每年的平均工作時(shí)間是最短的,其次是丹麥人、挪威人和荷蘭人,而墨西哥人、韓國(guó)人和哥斯達(dá)黎加人的工作時(shí)間是最長(zhǎng)的。

Luxembourg is the most productive country in the world, despite its workers toiling away for an average of only 29 hours per week.

盧森堡是世界上生產(chǎn)率最高的國(guó)家,盡管他們的勞動(dòng)力每周平均工作時(shí)間只有29小時(shí)。

Last year the Autonomy Institute made renewed calls for the implementation of a four-day week, saying it would help even out the unhealthy distribution of work and shift the focus to producing better work in a shorter time.

去年自治學(xué)會(huì)再次呼吁實(shí)施每周四天工作制,聲稱(chēng)這將平衡不健康的工作分配,將重心轉(zhuǎn)移到在更短時(shí)間內(nèi)做出更好的業(yè)績(jī)。

Christine Brotherton, head of people and capability for Perpetual Guardian, said many employees brought a similar level of focus to making the most of the extra day off as they would apply to their work.

Perpetual Guardian公司人力部主任克里斯汀·布拉澤頓說(shuō),許多員工都會(huì)將投入到工作中的同等精力投入到多出的那一天假期,以實(shí)現(xiàn)最大化利用。

“People have been thinking quite hard about that third day off and how best to use it so it can change their life. Some people come back to work and are incredibly energised,” says Brotherton.

布拉澤頓說(shuō):“人們努力地思考如何充分利用第三天假期,從而改變自己的生活。有些人回到公司工作,而且奇跡般地充滿活力。”

“People have been training for marathons, going to the dentist, getting their car serviced, or doing the shopping for their elderly parents. All the stuff that has been put on the back burner, but either helps themselves or their family. Life administration. ”

“人們進(jìn)行馬拉松訓(xùn)練、去看牙醫(yī)、把車(chē)送去保養(yǎng),或?yàn)槟赀~的父母購(gòu)物。去做所有想做但被擱置的事情,對(duì)自己或家人有用的事情。管理自己的生活。”

“But some people haven’t quite realised that if we have three days off, the four at the office have to be very productive, and we need to address that,” she adds.

她補(bǔ)充說(shuō):“但是有些人還未完全意識(shí)到,如果我們放三天假,那么工作的那四天必須效率很高,而我們需要解決這個(gè)問(wèn)題。”

Amazon is reportedly piloting a 30-hour work week for some employees. Whilst workers on the 30-hour work week receive the same benefits as full-time employees, they earn 75% of the salary – and results aren’t in yet on the pilot’s outcomes. KPMG and Deloitte offer four-day work weeks to some employees (with certain conditions attached), while Google allows some employees full control over 20% of their working week, hoping that the creative freedom will lead to new ideas and innovations.

據(jù)報(bào)道,亞馬遜正在一部分員工當(dāng)中試行30小時(shí)工作周。每周工作30小時(shí)的這些員工雖然能享受和全日制員工同樣的福利,但是前者的工資是后者的四分之三。目前這個(gè)試行項(xiàng)目還沒(méi)有出結(jié)果。畢馬威和德勤的某些員工可以每周工作四天,但是有一定的附加條件。谷歌則允許一些員工隨心支配工作周中超過(guò)20%的時(shí)間,希望這種創(chuàng)作自由可以引發(fā)新想法和創(chuàng)意。

Perpetual Guardian’s CEO, Andrew Barnes, a Briton, says the experiment is generating interesting data, which will be analysed by academics at two leading New Zealand universities before a decision on extending the trial is made.

Perpetual Guardian公司的首席執(zhí)行官、英國(guó)人安德魯·巴恩斯說(shuō),這個(gè)試驗(yàn)正在產(chǎn)生有趣的數(shù)據(jù),來(lái)自?xún)伤挛魈m一流大學(xué)的學(xué)者們將對(duì)這些數(shù)據(jù)進(jìn)行分析,然后再?zèng)Q定是否延長(zhǎng)試行期。

According to Barnes, some employees have found the reduced time to complete their work stressful. “People were really positive going in, then a bit negative, then positive again,” says Barnes. “In general terms, people are more positive because they are suddenly able to do things that they otherwise couldn’t do.”

巴恩斯說(shuō),一些員工因?yàn)橥瓿晒ぷ鞯臅r(shí)間變短而感到壓力重重。他說(shuō):“剛開(kāi)始人們真的很積極,然后會(huì)有點(diǎn)消極,接著又會(huì)變得積極。普遍來(lái)說(shuō),人們變得更積極了,因?yàn)樗麄兺蝗荒軌蜃瞿切┍緛?lái)做不了的事了。”

Supporters of reduced working hours have been cheering on the trial. “I don’t feel the pressure for it to succeed, but I think my staff do. People are telling me: we have to make this work for New Zealand,” says Barnes.

支持縮短工作時(shí)間的人一直在為這個(gè)試驗(yàn)歡呼。巴恩斯說(shuō):“沒(méi)有壓力迫使我非把這件事做成不可,但我認(rèn)為我的員工有壓力。人們告訴我:為了新西蘭,我們必須讓這個(gè)試驗(yàn)成功。”

“From my point of view, it’s very difficult as an owner of a business to see any way that this is not positive for me at the moment.”

“從我的角度出發(fā),作為企業(yè)主,我目前還難以看到這種工作制對(duì)我有什么不利。”

But he expressed disappointment at the lack of interest in the trial shown by the New Zealand government, despite its potential implications for addressing issues from work/life balance and the gender pay gap to the health and mental wellbeing of working New Zealanders.

雖然新工作制有望解決工作與生活平衡、男女收入差異以及新西蘭工作者身心健康等方面的問(wèn)題,但新西蘭政府對(duì)此缺乏興趣,他有些失望。

Having survived her day of housework, Kirsten Taylor has now settled into the new routine. She loves spending more time with her son, saving money on childcare and getting through her to-do list. Her personality and “head down, bum up” work style suit the arrangement perfectly, she says.

好不容易結(jié)束了干家務(wù)的一天,柯?tīng)査诡D·泰勒現(xiàn)在適應(yīng)了新常規(guī)。她喜歡和兒子共度更多時(shí)光,省下了一些托管費(fèi),也做了更多想做的事。她說(shuō),她的性格和“埋頭苦干”的工作風(fēng)格與新的工作制非常合拍。

While her colleagues still socialise during the work day, the office space is quieter and more concentrated, and “water-cooler chats” are briefer. “I am feeling significantly better equipped when I begin the work week now,” she says.

盡管她的同事們?nèi)匀粫?huì)在工作日進(jìn)行一些社交活動(dòng),但是辦公室變得安靜了,人們工作時(shí)的注意力更集中了,辦公室里的閑聊時(shí)間也變短了。她說(shuō):“現(xiàn)在當(dāng)我開(kāi)始一周的工作時(shí),我感覺(jué)自己精力更充沛了。”

“[The trial] was definitely more pressurised than I would ever have expected. But now I am nervous about when it ends. I don’t know anyone who wants to return to the old routine.”

“試驗(yàn)期間的工作壓力肯定比我預(yù)計(jì)的更大。但現(xiàn)在我擔(dān)心的是試行期結(jié)束了該怎么辦。我認(rèn)為沒(méi)有人想回到過(guò)去那種工作制。”
 


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