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Susan M. Heathfield

Enable Family-Friendly Flexible Schedules

By , About.com GuideMarch 8, 2013

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Advantages for employers and employees exist when the employer allows employees to work flexible schedules.

Advantages of Flexible Work Schedules for Employees

With flexible work schedules, employees experience these benefits:

  • Flexibility to meet family needs, personal obligations, and life responsibilities conveniently.

See the rest of the advantages.

Advantages of Flexible Work Schedules for Employers

With flexible work schedules, employers experience these benefits:

  • Increased employee morale, engagement, and commitment to the organization.

See more advantages of flexible schedules for employers.

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Comments
June 8, 2009 at 3:04 pm
(1) TerryNeese says:

These are great reasons why employers should pursue flexibility in the workplace. It truely is a great option to both increase convenience and reduce spending. Unfortunately, it is difficult to make flexibility an option for full time hourly workers. The private sector is still not allowed to give their employees the option of having comp time in lieu of overtime pay, even though the government extended this option to its hourly employees in 1978. Whats wrong with that picture? Considering 63% of women are hourly workers, and they are the ones who need flexibility most because of family demands, we should be fighting for equal amounts of flexibility in the public and private sector. http://www.familyissues.ncpa.org

May 14, 2011 at 6:18 pm
(2) Michael says:

I recommend that an employee have a strong and needed niche that an employee finds very valuable to the organization. Then it is much, much easier to request and negotiate flexible work hours. I have been working from my home for over 10 years and my family treasures it. However, one must be dedicated, dependable and disciplined to maintain such type of work. If not, it won’t work.

May 16, 2011 at 10:52 am
(3) Jody says:

Michael,
Who do you work for? I want to do that!!!
I have a terrible work schedule and am looking to leave partly due to that but also due to the stressors of the job and being a superviser and not being able to depend on other workers showing up, which becomes my problem to deal with.
I have a 10-hr work day Monday-Thurs. which sounds nice to others until you have to do it. I can do nothing during those days when I get home–I leave too early in the morning to see my daughter and get home just in time to eat dinner and go to bed. I commute and hour a day so that adds on to it. I miss all of my daughter’s after school events unless I take off work for 2 hrs. or more to make it in time.
I have fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome so I struggle walking in the morning and never get enough sleep. A shorter workday would be best for my health situation. Even though I am one of the sickest people at my worksite, I have never missed a day of work since I started and am the most reliable and hardworking person on staff but I suffer for it with the unflexible hours and long workdays.

March 31, 2013 at 6:36 pm
(4) Rhonda H says:

My boss lets me have the flexibility of working 7:30 to 4:30. I miss a lot of traffic and can get to the gym for 5:30 classes. It also allows me to get e-mails checked and a head start on my work before everyone arrives at 8:00.

March 31, 2013 at 6:40 pm
(5) Rhonda H says:

Allowing flexibility is a great way to show appreciation to your employees. Especially when you don’t receive annual evaluations. When my daughter was in middle school, my boss let me work through lunch and leave at 3:30 so that she could ride the bus home and I didn’t have to pay daycare.

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