It is useless to waste people's time. That statement is something we all can agree with. Yet, I have one question: Why is every last business open from 8 to 5?
There are several industries that we all agree have to be available and operational 24/7. Emergency centers such as hospitals, 911 responders, local police, and fire departments. And websites/web servers. Anything else running 24/7 is not essential.
Those businesses that are not retail and are not open 24/7 are open 8 to 5, Monday through Friday. Take banks, for instance. Let's say you are depositing a check into your local bank - assume someone gave you a check. When do you do it? Saturday morning, of course. Why? Because banks are open only during "regular business hours" and closed Saturday afternoon and all day Sunday. The only time available is Saturday morning unless you can go into work later or leave earlier. Here's a schedule banks should consider:
12-2:00 p.m., 4:45-7:45 p.m., 2-3 a.m. M-F (6 hours per day)
8-7 Sat (10 hours)
Total time: 40 hours.
Actually, similar schedules would work well for almost ANY service-oriented industry. Most clerks/tellers seem to twiddle their thumbs frequently during regular 8-5 business hours and are absolutely thrilled when a customer shows up. The customer gets way more attention than they really want and it is pretty obvious the employees are desperate to do anything - even "busy work".
Another example is dentists and other similar service industries. Dentists work 8-5, M-F and do the occasional emergency surgery on weekends. The problem with that schedule is regular 8-5'ers have to take time off from their employer to go to the dentist. Employers generally are not happy with their employees leaving to go to scheduled appointments even if they are aware of the appointment weeks in advance.
One major downside to the schedule is that many employees live a bit away from the employer. People would probably consume twice as much gasoline as they would likely go home to family and sleep after the second timeframe. To combat this, the 2-3 timeframe could be made to be every third day on a rotating schedule (1/3 the staff). Or fill that time-slot with part-timers (there are a bunch of older folk out there who are retired but who would also love to make a little extra money by working for just one hour a day).
The other major downside is school starts at 8 a.m. and lets out at 3 p.m. at most places. The above schedule works well for the 3 p.m. issue for most people but there might be some issues involving sleep with the 8 a.m. issue. Lots of things to consider.
Still, this is something worth giving a shot. It would significantly ease the "'rush here and there' before they close" mentality for the 8-5'ers. Less stress is a good thing.
Software companies should adopt a similar schedule but maybe provide some extra overlap with the 8-5 (shifting time away from Saturday). The 2-3 a.m. portion allows the software company to interact with people overseas. That is where many sales are mostly going to be in the not-so-distant future.
There are several industries that we all agree have to be available and operational 24/7. Emergency centers such as hospitals, 911 responders, local police, and fire departments. And websites/web servers. Anything else running 24/7 is not essential.
Those businesses that are not retail and are not open 24/7 are open 8 to 5, Monday through Friday. Take banks, for instance. Let's say you are depositing a check into your local bank - assume someone gave you a check. When do you do it? Saturday morning, of course. Why? Because banks are open only during "regular business hours" and closed Saturday afternoon and all day Sunday. The only time available is Saturday morning unless you can go into work later or leave earlier. Here's a schedule banks should consider:
12-2:00 p.m., 4:45-7:45 p.m., 2-3 a.m. M-F (6 hours per day)
8-7 Sat (10 hours)
Total time: 40 hours.
Actually, similar schedules would work well for almost ANY service-oriented industry. Most clerks/tellers seem to twiddle their thumbs frequently during regular 8-5 business hours and are absolutely thrilled when a customer shows up. The customer gets way more attention than they really want and it is pretty obvious the employees are desperate to do anything - even "busy work".
Another example is dentists and other similar service industries. Dentists work 8-5, M-F and do the occasional emergency surgery on weekends. The problem with that schedule is regular 8-5'ers have to take time off from their employer to go to the dentist. Employers generally are not happy with their employees leaving to go to scheduled appointments even if they are aware of the appointment weeks in advance.
One major downside to the schedule is that many employees live a bit away from the employer. People would probably consume twice as much gasoline as they would likely go home to family and sleep after the second timeframe. To combat this, the 2-3 timeframe could be made to be every third day on a rotating schedule (1/3 the staff). Or fill that time-slot with part-timers (there are a bunch of older folk out there who are retired but who would also love to make a little extra money by working for just one hour a day).
The other major downside is school starts at 8 a.m. and lets out at 3 p.m. at most places. The above schedule works well for the 3 p.m. issue for most people but there might be some issues involving sleep with the 8 a.m. issue. Lots of things to consider.
Still, this is something worth giving a shot. It would significantly ease the "'rush here and there' before they close" mentality for the 8-5'ers. Less stress is a good thing.
Software companies should adopt a similar schedule but maybe provide some extra overlap with the 8-5 (shifting time away from Saturday). The 2-3 a.m. portion allows the software company to interact with people overseas. That is where many sales are mostly going to be in the not-so-distant future.
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