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Economic Development

South West firm makes four day-working week permanent after trial

Environmental consultancy Tyler Grange has offices in Bristol, Exeter and the Gloucestershire village of Rendcomb near Cirencester

Simon Ursell, managing director of Tyler Grange(Image: Natalie Argent)

A South West-based environmental consultancy has permanently adopted a four-day working week after taking part in a national trial.

Tyler Grange, which offers firms services such as advice on tree planting projects, joined 60 other firms in the scheme which saw its 100 staff gain an extra day off with no pay cut from June last year.

The firm, which has offices in Bristol, Birmingham, Exeter, London, Manchester and the Gloucestershire village of Rendcomb near Cirencester, said it had found productivity had gone up by around a fifth with workers on reduced hours.

It said that employees had produced 102% more work than they had over a five-day week, and had reported being 14% happier and 28% less tired. Sickness absence during the trial also fell by two thirds.

Tyler Grange said since it had introduced the four-day week, which is made permanent in December, it had seen a “huge increase” in applications for new roles and visits to the jobs section of its website, with a near 90% increase in the number of CVs received.

Directors of environmental consultancy Tyler Grange.(Image: Tyler Grange)

The company said it developed an app to monitor workers’ alertness levels, in order to ensure having reduced hours did not cause them stress and fatigue while they were working.

The firm said it had found the “very opposite” was true, with the increased awareness the app gave to staff about potential burnout helping them them make “good decisions” regarding it - such as choosing to use public transport rather than driving, or booking into a hotel rather than driving home late at night.

Managing director Simon Ursell said: “The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ has an unhealthy culture where it is seen as a badge of honour to work all the time, yet our productivity levels are low and younger talent – as well as the brilliant talent that we want to attract at all levels of our business - doesn’t want to be defined by a burnout life.”