SmartBrief on Leadership was one of the sources I noticed that touched upon what appears to be a relatively new employee engagement approach: allowing workers to take unlimited paid vacations. Recently they linked to this NPR article on the trend.
But then last week they raised the topic again; linking to this article by Chris Grams, SmartBrief wrote:
An increasing number of companies are taking a relaxed approach to worker management, letting staff decide for themselves when they take vacations and how they spend their time at work.
The emphasis on the word "relaxed" above is mine. It's only one word, but in my opinion in terms of leaders taking something away from their summary, it's an important one. "Relaxed" can imply "quick and easy." In fact, getting your workplace culture and productivity to a place in which your organization can truly succeed with a "no policy" vacation policy requires a lot of time and, especially, buy in and long-term commitment from leadership.
I think of the pinnacle of an unlimited vacation policy as the visible part of an iceberg – there's a whole lot more going on under the surface than what's apparent:

What's your take on this trend, and on the team building progress and other people practices work that needs to happen before it's feasible to jump on it?


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