Should You Tell Your Employees Not to Work on Weekends?
I have always prided myself on being the kind of leader that works to help those on my team maintain a work-life balance. I want people on my team to spend quality time with their families in the evenings and not work on weekends. Even when there are those times when we have to work late or on weekends, I try to give some time back. For example, I’ll try to give them a day off during the week to make up for their lost Saturday. And if anyone on my team sends emails at night or on a weekend, I encourage them to stop doing that.
So you can imagine my surprise when I found out that I was actually doing damage to the morale of some of the best people on my team.
I’ve been advising a startup called Watercooler that uses machine learning to look for anomalies in company workflow to predict the risk of burnout, the risk of quitting, and gaps in training. On one of our calls, they were showing me some of their data and I was shocked by what it seemed to reveal.
Below you’ll see a graph provided by the team at Watercooler:
