Part of my job role will be to help develop employee benefits packages and I’d like to make sure that quality of sleep is high up on that list. (Why aren’t more companies prioritising this?)
There are some obvious ones I can think of;
- Yearly bedding allowance
- Curtains/shade allowance
- Sleep cycle app subscriptions
Alongside ‘softer’ workflow choices;
- Ensuring no standard work emails/slack sent after 8pm. Would like to go further with this, but it’ll be in a developing economy so expectations will be less favourable. We’re not yet France.
For what it’s worth, I’d also appreciate validation (or dissent) to the idea in general. It’s not something I’ve heard of happening anywhere and having not been through a typical path to leadership I might just be missing something obvious on why this isn’t standard.
Employees who had a bad night of sleep, employees with newborns that kept them up at night, employees with migraines or are just feeling ill, employees with sleep disorders (increasingly common), etc. will thank you and the company will be compensated by productivity recovered from these people not being tired. It's not exactly a radical or untested idea either; a quick googling for "nap room at office" finds plenty of companies that implement this benefit, e.g.: https://blog.kickresume.com/2018/09/10/these-7-companies-enc...
Develop good relationships with people. Talk to them about what interferes with getting a good nights sleep. It’ll be different for everyone (screen time, family commitments, partying, stress-induced insomnia, long commutes, etc.) Figure out ways to alleviate the impact of each one without asking people to give up things they value.
(I'm caffeine dependent because it helps with respiratory problems. But it's pretty well established this contributes to sleep issues and is a hallmark of a workaholic culture that respects people for pulling all nighters and the like.)
Give an adequately long lunch.
I used to nap in my car sometimes at my corporate job. But you can't do that if there's no time available in your schedule.
Do your best to not impose sudden and unnecessary shift changes for bullshit reasons.
My corporate job would have everyone come in early the Wednesday before Thanksgiving -- a major US holiday -- so they could close down early. I worked the evening shift normally from 3pm to 11pm and had to be in at like 6am to noon that day. I didn't have enough seniority to blow it off by scheduling it as time off.
They could have found some other way to handle that. I absolutely hated having a gun to my head in that way. It was awful.
I feel like giving benefits designed to dictate sleep hygiene is a bit draconian, but you can certainly work on staying the hell out of their way if good sleep habits is a thing they value.
Young, healthy people often don't care and don't really need to. But if there's a baby at home, if they are older or have health issues, they will appreciate you getting your boot off their neck and staying out of their way in this regard.
- Pay them good money, they are adults, this replaces all your "allowances"
- Give them flexible work hours
- Ensure no work, sms, email, slack, etc is expected implicitly or explicitly after work hours
None of this is hard except companies don't genuinely want to commit to these benefits. They want the benefit to come to them for free. So instead they go chasing gimmicks.
I’ve had companies offer wellness benefits for fitness classes, massages, etc. Sleep benefit sounds nice, but it seems a bit too encroaching into my literal personal space.
If you want people to sleep more, give them less work. Disconnect them from Slack and email, as you’ve proposed.
The sleep benefit doesn’t quite sit well with me.
P.S. Just because the company offers the benefit doesn't mean people will make use of the new bedding, app, etc.
I applaud you for helping people with their sleep.