employment

Unilever New Zealand to trial 4-day work week

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Unilever New Zealand to trial 4-day work week

UNILEVER. A view of the exterior of the Unilever building in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on April 6, 2017.

File photo by Marco de Swart/ANP/AFP

The 4-day work week will be tested for a year by Unilever New Zealand employees. If it proves successful, the scheme could be rolled out across the company's operations worldwide.

Unilever New Zealand said on Tuesday, December 1, it would trial a 4-day work week for staff in the country, with no cut to their pay, after the government this year flagged the idea as part of a drive to kick-start the economy.

The multinational consumer titan said all 81 employees would be eligible to participate in the yearlong experiment slated to begin this month and would consider adopting it globally.

“Our goal is to measure performance on output, not time. We believe the old ways of working are outdated and no longer fit for purpose,” Unilever New Zealand managing director Nick Bangs said.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in May raised the prospect of moving the country to a 4-day week to help kick-start New Zealand’s post-lockdown economy.

Ardern said she wanted to encourage “nimble” and creative ideas for recovery after a strict 7-week lockdown that helped New Zealand contain the coronavirus but stalled the economy.

Bangs said momentum for a shorter work week was growing after the pandemic’s upheaval of office culture.

“This is an exciting moment for our team and a validation of the catalytic role COVID-19 has played in shaking up standard working practices,” he said.

The company said it hopes to increase staff productivity and well-being by providing more flexibility and would shift to new project-management software to ease the transition.

Results from the trial will be measured by the University of Technology Sydney, with the potential for the scheme to be rolled out across Unilever operations around the world if it proves successful.

“We look forward to sharing the lessons from this trial with other Kiwi businesses, in the hopes of influencing others to reflect on their own ways of working,” Bangs added.

The New Zealand trial is scheduled to run until December next year. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!