Current:Home > reviewsSummer hours are a perk small businesses can offer to workers to boost morale -WealthSync Hub
Summer hours are a perk small businesses can offer to workers to boost morale
View
Date:2025-04-14 06:55:15
NEW YORK (AP) — With summer having gotten off to a scorching start, workers across the country may be dreaming of a seaside escape or cutting out early to watch a movie in an air-conditioned theater.
For some, that can be a reality. Business owners have found that offering summer hours – a reduced schedule on Fridays, usually between Memorial Day and Labor Day — can be a way to boost employee morale. Workers are able to deal with summer childcare gaps, return to the office refreshed and feel like their job values them, owners say.
Reduced hours in the summer months can also enable smaller businesses to stand out to prospective employees in a competitive talent marketplace.
“When smaller employers have less resources and they want to be more competitive with attracting and retaining quality talent, they want to be creative with the benefits that they offer. And one of the benefits they can offer would be flexible time in the summer,” said Rue Dooley, a knowledge advisor at the Society for Human Resources Management.
Special summer schedules don’t work for all types of industries, however. And it takes some trial-and-error to figure out the best option for each company.
Michael Wieder, co-founder of Lalo, which makes baby and toddler products, thought summer hours were a good fit for his 32 employees because so many of them – about 75% -- are parents.
His staffers work remotely and are spread across the U.S. and several other countries. Since founding the company in 2019, he tried various summer hour schemes, such as offering every other Friday off, but the current system works the best, he said. On Fridays, the business closes at 1 p.m. local time. Staffers also get four-day weekends for Memorial Day, Labor Day and July 4th.
“We know that childcare is harder during the summer,” he said. “Summer is a time where people do like to take time with their family or take trips, and we want to be able to reward our employees with some additional time with their families.”
Greg Hakim, owner of Corporate Ink in Boston, which offers PR services to emerging tech companies, said he uses summer hours as both a recruitment and retention tool. He plays up summer hours in job descriptions and said the perk has helped him retain staff – particularly during the pandemic when others found it hard to keep workers.
“It’s just helped us retain our team during the ‘Great Resignation,’ people are just like losing people left and right,” he said. ”And I think we went 23 months without having someone resign. And that’s just such an important benefit and competitive advantage.”
Jim Christy co-owns Midwest Cards, a trading card retailer based in Columbus, Ohio, with about 30 employees. He started offering summer hours – Fridays off after 2 p.m. -- in 2021, a year after founding the company, as the pandemic upended normal ways of working.
The hardest part was figuring out what to offer people who worked in his brick-and-mortar shop, who also fill online orders, since they had to work normal hours to keep the store running. He decided to give logistics-side workers Friday afternoons off while the six staff who work on the brick-and-mortar side and do customer service for online orders get off on Mondays, when the store was closed. Some workers can sign on remotely to answer customer queries if they want to, but it is not required.
“We couldn’t just apply one situation to everybody. So that that was a little challenging,” he said.
For some companies, summer hours work so well they’ve gone even further. Chris Langer, co-founder of digital marketing agency CMYK, has 14 staffers who all usually work in the company’s studio.
In 2014, rather than offer Friday afternoons off, he started offering entire Fridays off during the summer –- every other week. Then, last year, Langer started hearing chatter about the four-day work week, so he decided to try that out during the summer.
Communicating with the company’s tight knit staff, who have all worked together for years, makes the four-day week doable, Langer said.
“We’re small, so, it’s easy to have a discussion with everybody on like what’s real and how everyone’s feeling, if they’re feeling stressed out, can they get their work done,” he said.
If a big project is due, he might call people in on a Friday, but so far, that has only happened twice since CMYK instituted the four-day week.
“It is more stressful in terms of getting the work done throughout the week, but the day (off) was much more of a payoff,” he said.
Of course, summer hours don’t work for every company. Retail stores risk losing customers to big box stores or others that are open for more hours. And employees that are paid by the hour rather than set salaries can balk at getting paid for fewer hours.
Jennifer Johnson, owner of True Fashionistas, a consignment shop in Naples, Florida, thought she would try summer hours in 2022 because Naples is seasonal, with the busiest part of the year wrapping up around Easter. Beginning May 1, she changed her open hours from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. to 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. But the change didn’t work.
“We have a staff of 45 to 50 employees, and it cut their hours and that upset them, and rightfully so,” she said. “It also upset our customers who were used to our hours and wanted to shop.”
She abandoned the effort after two months and hasn’t tried again.
“I really believe that with anything consistency is the key,” she said. “The customers need to know they can rely on you to be open, you cannot always be changing your hours because that is a quick way to lose customers.”
veryGood! (428)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Florida man sentenced to 3 years in prison for firebombing California Planned Parenthood clinic
- Bryan Olesen surprises with vulnerable Phil Collins cover on 'The Voice': 'We all loved it'
- Gov. Kristi Noem banished by 2 more South Dakota tribes, now banned from nearly 20% of her state
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Nearly 50 homes in Kalamazoo County were destroyed by heavy storms last week
- Bill Discounting Climate Change in Florida’s Energy Policy Awaits DeSantis’ Approval
- Kelly Clarkson Addresses Ozempic Rumors After Losing Weight
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Body of New Mexico man recovered from Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park
Ranking
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Melinda French Gates to resign from Gates Foundation: 'Not a decision I came to lightly'
- Pro-Palestinian demonstrators who blocked road near Sea-Tac airport plead not guilty
- A secret stash of 125-year-old bricks at IMS tells hallowed story of an iconic race track
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Pro-union ad featuring former Alabama coach Nick Saban was done without permission, he says
- New industry readies for launch as researchers hone offshore wind turbines that float
- Risks of handcuffing someone facedown long known; people die when police training fails to keep up
Recommendation
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
GM’s Cruise to start testing robotaxis in Phoenix area with human safety drivers on board
Tom Brady's NFL broadcast debut as Fox analyst will be Cowboys vs. Browns in Week 1
Supreme Court denies California’s appeal for immunity for COVID-19 deaths at San Quentin prison
Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
Iowa women's basketball coach Lisa Bluder announces retirement after 24 seasons
Tyson Fury's father, John, bloodied after headbutting member of Oleksandr Usyk's team
McDonald’s is focused on affordability. What we know after reports of $5 meal deals.