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Job Schedules that Work for 
Businesses 
Employers rely on their employees to keep their businesses running. That’s why they work to recruit and retain 
the best possible staff—workers who will not only fulfill their duties but be ready each day to push the business 
to the next level. However, workers can only show those strengths when they have quality jobs, which include 
(among other features) stable, predictable, and flexible schedules. 
Too often, lower-wage workers receive their weekly schedules just 
days before their shifts, have erratic schedules that change from week 
to week, get sent home from work early without compensation, or 
receive too few hours. These types of scheduling practices wreak 
havoc on workers’ lives; they disrupt child care arrangements, make 
budgeting impossible, and prevent workers from securing much-
needed second jobs or taking classes to improve their employment 
prospects. And volatile scheduling is not just bad for workers; it’s bad 
for business, too. Employers who adopt fair scheduling practices find 
they have lower turnover, higher morale, and healthier, more 
productive workers. They also find that improved scheduling 
practices are easy to implement and generate cost savings.  
 
Fair scheduling practices are good for the bottom line 
  When hourly workers have workplace flexibility, 
productivity increases and absenteeism decreases. In a survey of 
lower-wage, hourly workers with access to workplace flexibility and 
their managers, 80 percent of workers and 79 percent of managers 
reported increased team productivity and effectiveness. Additionally, 
64 percent of workers and 74 percent of managers reported reduced 
absenteeism.
 
  Accommodating employees’ scheduling needs significantly 
reduces turnover. One study of retail employers found that when 
managers more closely considered employees’ scheduling needs, 
stores had 22.9 percent lower turnover and 6.6 percent greater 
retention.
 A review of numerous studies of the impact of turnover 
found that for workers earning less than $50,000 annually, the cost of 
turnover is 20 percent of salary.
 
  Flexibility promotes employee engagement and reduces 
operation costs. In a study of one large retailer, managers reported 
that hourly workers with schedule flexibility were more engaged on 
the job, leading to lower turnover and reduced operating costs.