UpTrajectory Review
This piece discusses the importance of taking time off from work, particularly during the summer months when many employees feel inclined to vacation. It highlights the common reluctance to use vacation days and emphasizes the mental health benefits of breaks. The article also provides practical advice on how to navigate time-off requests without disrupting workplace dynamics.
For small business owners, understanding the nuances of employee vacation time is crucial. Encouraging a culture that supports taking breaks can enhance productivity and employee satisfaction. However, operators should be mindful of their team's workload and the potential impact of absences. Balancing these factors is key to maintaining a healthy work environment while ensuring business continuity.
“Vacations are good for your mental health.” — Fast Company
Takeaway: Foster a culture that encourages taking vacation time to improve employee well-being and productivity.
From the original item — Fast Company:
Summer is here. Even though most workplaces are not on an academic calendar, summer is still a time that many people choose to take vacations. Some of that decision is pragmatic—families with school-age children can bring their kids with them on a trip over the summer more easily than during the school year. Some of it is just that summer feels like a time when vacations ought to happen.
If you’re worried about taking time off, you’re not alone. People often do not use all of their allocated vacation time, and companies that enable employees to take as much time off as they would like find that their employees don’t take many vacations.
Breaks from work are important. Vacations are good for your mental health. Getting time away from work to reconnect with important people in your life and to change up your routine is important. It helps to prevent burnout, strengthens your relationships, and can also make your work more productive.
That said, there are a few things to consider as you think about how to request time off and to take it without causing disruptions at work.
If you worry about asking for time off, start by paying attention to what other people are doing. Get a feel for the amount of time that people typically take off and the size of those chunks. Are people taking a week at a time? Are there folks who take longer vacations?
You want to know what is typical so that you know whether you’re asking for something that your supervisor might think is out of the ordinary. If you’d like to take a two-week vacation and nobody ever seems to do that, then you may want to prepare a little extra justification with your request. If that is a common thing for people in your workplace to do, then you don’t need so much framing around the request.
But when you do ask for time off, do it with confidence. You are not asking your employer for a favor. You are doing something that is part of your benefits package, and your workplace should respect that. If they don’t respect your vacation time, then you should think carefully about whether this a place you want to work in the long run.
Being away from work influences the work of the people around you. There are others who rely on the work you do. Team members may need to take on extra responsibilities in your absence.
To minimize the impact of your absence, communicate clearly about your planned vacation starting a week or two in advance. If there are key responsibilities that need to be shifted to someone else while you’re gone, then make sure you talk with those people and ensure that they will be around and will have the bandwidth to handle your work. (If not, chat with your supervisor to get help figuring out who can take on those tasks.)
If the work you do requires some additional expertise, make sure you bring your replacement up to speed on your work so that things are done well while you’re gone. You may need to plan some extra time to train your substitute in the weeks before you head out.
That preparation work will allow you to take your vacation without worrying that balls will get dropped while you’re away. After all, when you’re on vacation, you’d like to be on vacation.
Of course, if you are in a supervisory role, you want to leave clear instructions about when you should be contacted while you’re on vacation. In my academic leadership roles, I did not want to check emails regularly on vacation to avoid thinking about work. But, I did have clear instructions about the kinds of situations my team should text me about. The advantage of having a system like that is that you can ignore your email while you’re away, because you know that anything very serious will be brought to your attention.
Even if there aren’t people filling in for you directly, your contributions are likely to be relevant to ongoing projects at work. That means you’d like to ensure that your colleagues can continue to make progress while you’re away.
Try to minimize the aspects of your work that are partially finished. In general, it is better to complete a few tasks and leave others for your return than to start a bunch of things and leave them all with additional work that needs to be done.
In the days before you leave, document any aspects of projects for which there are things you know that other people might not. Document the context of ongoing conversations or concerns that particular clients may have raised. Put yourself in your colleagues’ shoes and ask yourself what you’d want to know to do the work they will likely do during your time off. Let that guide the notes you leave.
Doing these things will minimize the number of things waiting in your inbox when you return from your vacation. Plus, your colleagues will appreciate those efforts.
Enjoy your vacation!