What Are Flexible Work Arrangements?
Flexible work arrangements are policies, practices or informal arrangements that allow employees to have greater flexibility and control over when, where and how they work. Let's look at whether they fit your company's needs...
Flexible arrangements move away from the traditional 9-to-5, office-bound schedule to better accommodate employees' real-life situations and work styles. and promote work-life balance.
The key benefit is giving employees more autonomy to integrate their professional and personal lives in a way that works best for their circumstances and working styles.
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What Are Flexible Work Arrangement Options
Flexible work arrangements can take many forms, but some common examples include:
Remote work or work-from-home opportunities
Hybrid schedules splitting time between home and office
Flextime policies to shift start/end times
Compressed workweeks with fewer but longer days
Job-sharing between two part-time employees
Flexible Work Arrangements vs. Flexible Work Schedules
While often used interchangeably, there is an important distinction between flexible work arrangements and flexible work schedules:
Flexible work arrangements encompass any alternative to the traditional in-office, 9-to-5 structure. This includes arrangements around the work location, like remote or hybrid options that allow working from home. It covers any non-standard schedule as well.
Flexible work schedules, on the other hand, specifically refer to alternative scheduling practices for when and how employees work their required hours and days. This does not necessarily include the ability to work remotely.
For example, a compressed 4-day workweek or flextime schedule providing employees control over start/end times would qualify as a flexible work schedule, even if the work must still occur on-site. Meanwhile, a work-from-home policy is considered a flexible work arrangement, as it changes the location of the work.
The two often overlap, with many employers combining arrangement and scheduling flexibility. For instance, some may offer hybrid remote/office arrangements along with flextime schedules.
But the key distinction is that flexible arrangements deal with the where and what kind of work happens, while flexible schedules focus on when and how the work gets done within set constraints like weekly hours.
Implementing strategic flexible work arrangements and schedules has become an increasingly critical way for companies to attract and retain top talent by promoting greater work-life balance and job satisfaction. When properly structured and supported, these flexibility initiatives can boost employee engagement, productivity and well-being.
A List of Flexible Schedule Options
Here are some of the most common types of flexible work week schedules that organizations can implement to give employees more control over when and where they work:
Compressed Work Week
Compressed Work Weeks With a compressed schedule, employees work their standard hours but consolidate them into fewer days per week. Common examples include:
- 4/10 Schedule: Working 4 days at 10 hours per day, then taking the 5th day off each week.
- 9/80 Schedule: Working 9 hours per day for 9 days, then taking the 10th day off (80 hours over 2 weeks).
This allows employees to have an extra full day off every week or every other week while still working their full hours. It can improve work-life balance, reduce commuting time/costs, and give employees a restful 3-day weekend. However, longer daily hours may not work well for some roles or employees.
Flextime
With a flextime policy, employees are given a core range of hours they must be present (e.g. 10am-3pm), but can choose when to work their remaining hours before and after. This provides flexibility in:
- Start/End Times: An employee could work 7am-4pm or 9am-6pm, for example.
- Break Schedules: They can shift breaks and lunches to accommodate personal needs.
- Make-Up Time: If they need to leave early one day, they can make up those hours on another day.
- Provide "summer hours" with half days on Fridays. An extra afternoon of personal time refreshes people.
Flextime requires well-defined core hours, but otherwise gives employees autonomy over how to meet their total hours. It helps with balancing personal/family obligations.
Remote Work
Human Resources Consulting Pro Tip: Remote Work Options cut down on wasted commuting time and allow employees to actually contribute longer to their work product. More and more companies are allowing employees to work remotely, whether:
- Fully Remote: The employee works from home or anywhere they wish full-time.
- Partial Remote: Working remotely 1-4 days per week, and in the office the remaining days.
- Remote As Needed: An ad-hoc ability to work from home when obligations require.
Remote work eliminates commutes, provides geographic flexibility, and allows better work-life integration. However, it requires appropriate infrastructure, communication protocols, and performance management strategies.
Job Sharing
In a job share arrangement, two employees effectively split a full-time role, each working on a part-time schedule that allows for personal/family time. For example:
- Split Weeks: One works Monday-Wednesday, the other Thursday-Friday.
- Split Days: One works mornings, the other afternoons/evenings.
This allows employees to only work ~20-30 hours while still being engaged in their role and career path. Job shares require extensive coordination between partners.
Gradual Retirement / Phased Return
Some employers allow employees transitioning to retirement to slowly ramp down hours over time for a smoother transition. Similarly, new parents returning from leave may prefer gradually increasing back to full-time. For example:
- Starting at 50-60% time for a period, then increasing incrementally
- Working full-time for part of the year, then taking a partially-paid sabbatical
This gives employees more control over work-life integration during major life transitions.
Human Resources Consulting Pro Tip: A good HR consultant can help you formulate the best mix of strategies for your particular culture and then craft policies that help employees while protecting the company.
No matter which types of flexibility are offered, it's critical for the organization to have clear policies and protocols around scheduling, handoffs, communication, performance management, and work coverage.
Be open to unconventional ideas from staff on new ways of working flexibly. Empower them to experiment.
Getting buy-in from managers, properly training employees, and monitoring for any unintended negative impacts are essential practices for successfully implementing flexible work week initiatives.
HR Consulting Pro Tip:
I can't tell you how many companies, management teams, and individual managers I come across who have real hang-ups about allowing employees flexibility in their work schedules. I recently worked with a small company in which a very competent employee in a very key position had a serious lateness problem. The company wanted to terminate the employee. The specific role requires knowledge and experience and in this particular industry it's very difficult to fill. It is even harder to find competent practitioners with whom to fill them.
Instead of simply allowing this employee time in the morning by giving her a later start time, or allowing her to work from home on days when she had childcare issues, the company owner was fixated on her attendance being traditional and strictly watched.
Ask yourself, "why?" What benefit does watching the clock or holding an otherwise good employee to a policy they can't keep? In this case, there was no benefit to the company. It was just a personal feeling of the President that he was being disrespected. He took it as a personal afront. Well, instead of using compassion and common sense to keep a vital employee, he terminated her.
He then spent the next 6 months trying to find a suitable replacement. All the while, the lost productivity and lagging performance from a missing function took its toll. After 2 failed attempts with inferior workers, whom he had to pay higher salaries, he finally split the position into several lower-level positions that now cost him 3 salaries.
Don't be pound wise and penny foolish with your policies and your enforcement of archaic and unnecessary work rules. Employees today expect more... and they do ask, "why?" If you don't have an honest and practical reason to NOT be flexible, take advantage of these tools and make everyone's life better!
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Joseph Campagna, SPHR, SHRM-SCP is president and owner of My Virtual HR Director, a human resources outsourcing company serving small and medium sized businesses nationwide. My Virtual HR Director provides an executive level HR advisor to companies that can’t afford or can’t justify hiring a fulltime HR professional on staff.
With twenty years of experience dedicated to the HR profession, Mr. Campagna has honed his skills as an expert in compliance, talent management and employee relations. Bringing human capital management experience from start-ups, IT and biotechnology companies, employee leasing, and fortune 100 behemoths Mr. Campagna has filled his tool belt through generalist work, executive positions, and consulting opportunities with companies such as ADP, Merrill Lynch, and Johnson & Johnson. As Vice President of HR for biotech company Hemo Concepts, as well as the head of HR for the global IT solutions company, the Galaxy Group, Mr. Campagna created rich and successful organizational development and employee engagement programs.
Having worked with a diverse group of companies and clients in a broad spectrum of industries and environments, he brings a unique HR philosophy to every organization he works with. “HR is not the picnic department,” he says “but instead bears the full responsibility and the unlimited potential for a highly productive and efficient workforce. If HR systems are successful, the organization’s revenue should be increased.” From mergers and acquisitions, to IPO’s, to new product development, to divestiture Mr. Campagna has a true business background to support his HR Architecture.
Mr. Campagna is certified as a senior professional through both the Human Resources Certification Institute (HRCI) and the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM). The HRCI designation of Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR) is an experienced-based examination certification. The SHRM certification is a competency based examination certification. Each is a premier designation in the world of HR and recognized by the Society for Human Resource Management of which Joe is a national member and former chapter president.
Mr. Campagna brings decades of helping small and medium sized businesses create HR structures such as employee handbooks, performance systems, talent management, training programs, and employee engagement. He knows how to deliver business results through HR aligned objectives.
Nearly 30 years of expertise and HR executive authority combined with a group health insurance license and certifications from the Society for Human Resource management and the Human Resources Certification Institute have given Joseph Campagna the guru status that has earned him leadership roles, board of director roles, and speaking engagements related to human resources.