Is a 4-day policy feasible in Asia?
Can a four- or three-day work week be effective in Asia?
Microsoft Japan’s successful trial over the summer acts as a positive case study for leaders considering the option.
A report on the summer showed a 40% jump in employee productivity, compared with the same period last year. Almost all employees also cited feeling satisfied at home and work with the shorter week.
The pilot is encouraging for a country notorious for its culture of overwork. The government as well as employers have been pushing for reform in recent years, in hopes of improving the unhealthy work environment and reducing ‘karoshi’, or death by overwork.
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Microsoft Japan was one of the proactive players and established “Work-Life Choice” over the summer as a philosophy to reform work culture.
The new management strategy aimed to create an environment where each employee can engage in flexi-work to accommodate both their work and personal schedules.
“By implementing a new in-house practice aimed at promoting ‘Work-Life Choice’, we challenged all employees to work in a short time, take a rest, and learn well, to further improve productivity and creativity,” wrote the report.
Initiative rollout
This summer, Microsoft implemented two initiatives:
For the first part of the rollout, the company closed the office for all Fridays throughout August 2019. Full-time employees took special paid leave and took the day off.
To encourage adoption of the practice, they aided with expenses related to things like self-development, family travel and social activities.
Microsoft also reformed internal communication methods to ensure employees worked more efficiently in a shorter time.
This helped to cut down on excessive time spent on non-essential meetings and emails and kept employees to the four-day work weeks. They also used online collaboration tools to encourage quick chats, if meetings were unnecessary.
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The report noted several challenges:
Monitoring results
On top of the ‘softer’ culture rollout, Microsoft measured crucial performance indicators. This included monitoring time and cost-savings, improvement in productivity, as well as employee satisfaction.
As August saw shorter weeks, the company managed to reduce overuse of printing by 59% and electricity consumption by 23%.
Employee productivity went up 40% versus the same period in 2018, while 46% of staffers stuck to the ‘30-minute meeting’ guideline. There was a 21% increase in remote conferences, compare with usage from April to June 2019.
Employees also cited overwhelming satisfaction with the new arrangement:
In addition, management observed an impact on employee leave and welfare programs.
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Due to the overwhelming positive impact on welfare and work culture, Microsoft Japan will embark on another round of trials in winter.
The firm plans to hold an internal contest to involve employees and get ideas on how the company can work, rest and learn better over winter.