Why the 9-to-5 Day Is So Tough on Creative Workers
"Knowledge workers" tend to be more unfocused in both the early morning and mid-afternoon. Why force them to work when they're least productive? Today, workers are putting in increasingly more hoursso much so that the 40-hour week has become a relic of the past . But pushing employees to clock up those extra hours is bad for their well-being and detrimental to your company . When you sleep is more important than the number of hours you sleep, a recent study found . Whats more, getting too little sleep might not be ideal, but waking up while its still dark is worse. (As weve pointed out before , turning up to the office feeling sleepy is like showing up to work drunk .) In a recent article for the New Yorker , neuroscientist Kenneth Wright said that cognition is best several hours prior to habitual sleep time, and worst near habitual wake timewhich suggests that you do your best work later in the day, not first thing in the morning. Your consciousness kicks in almost immediately after waking up, but it can take up to four hours for your mind to crank itself up to full awareness and alertnessand in that time, you wont make good decisions. So how do employers accommodate this? A shorter workday works particularly well for knowledge workerspeople in creative or professional jobswho can work productively for about six hours a day, compared to the eight hours manual laborers can churn out, according to Salon . Unlike machines, humans operate on a cyclical basis, which means our energy and motivation fluctuate in peaks and troughs. Cognitive workers tend to be more focused in the late morning , getting another energy boost in the late afternoon when lung efficiency peaks. Another benefit of the shorter workday, Kelloggs discovered, was that employees were happy to work less when they were paid 12.5% more per hour, meaning the company was able to offer more jobs. Maybe the six-hour workday could be a solution to the USs current minimum wage debate .