Unlimited vacation

Guin tweeted a link to the Social Media Group‘s new HR policy for vacation time: take as much as you want. Paid.

Basically they stopped tracking it back in October, and while the sense is that people are taking more paid vacation time, that’s kind of the point, since they want to have refreshed employees (and use that as a competitive advantage, I’d guess,) but so far people aren’t booking months at a go, opting instead for weekends and afternoons.

This is one of those things that reminds me of web hosting’s “unlimited” bandwidth promises (and yes, those quotes are important, ha) since as the article points out, most employees anywhere have trouble taking their full allocation of vacation time anyway (back when I worked at a company that had such things, I know I had that issue, plus overtime, but anyway…)

It’s what I hope will be a sign of an overall trend to treating employees like grownups, but I doubt it would work in every industry. Actually, it’s not the industry so much as the culture within an organization.  If you’ve got a culture of clock watchers and people who make sure they get every second back if they stray 2 minutes into lunch on a call, then I could see some serious problems with open vacation.  On the other hand, if your organization’s culture is one where people know they’re being compensated for their commitment to the mission, chances are they’re already doing more than their contractual share anyway.

(Photo by nigelhowe)

Comments

2 responses to “Unlimited vacation”

  1. Michael Lynch Avatar

    I read that article too and got the same impression as you. It’s just sad that the clock-watcher culture exists at all. I have studied the history of work quite a bit and our contemporary idea of it seems misaligned with what humanity is all about. On one hand we’ve worked so hard and efficiently that the technological revolution over the past century has drastically changed what it means to be a person on this planet (for better or for worse depending on how you look at it), but on the other hand it seems we are just working ourselves to death. Finding a balance between work and life has always been the challenge and only recently do I think we’ve realized just how important that balance is. I think time away from the desk is just the first step to a more humane lifestyle. Ultimately I’m hoping we’ll see a paradigm shift in the coming years allowing us to spend more time developing ourselves in other disciplines that extend beyond our career path without feeling the guilt or economic consequences we are so accustomed to.

  2. Jason Avatar
    Jason

    Yeah, I’m still trying to figure out how much of it is company culture though… It seems like some people need to be told what to do and when to do it, but I’m not sure how much of that is because they don’t know any other way, and how much is that some people have decided exactly what they’re willing to do for their paycheque. And for both of those cases, how much culture can fix it.

    And of course, this all just covers certain fields of work, generally. I’m sure there are some janitors out there who love cleaning toilets and have found a way for it to make economic sense to spend as much time as they want doing it, but that wouldn’t be most of the cases…

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