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Epic Games Ends Alternate-Friday Vacation Policy, Angering Staff (bloomberg.com) 87

Epic Games is ending a pandemic-inspired policy of granting every other Friday off, sparking an uproar among staff. From a report: An internal Slack channel was filled with pleas from employees for the game publisher to reconsider. Several people said the extra vacation days had helped their mental health, allowed them to be better parents and even improved their productivity while working on updates for Fortnite, which is one of world's most popular games. Epic said the policy was always meant to be temporary and that the company's goal was to allow employees and contractors to take paid time off on their own schedules. The company also closes for two-week breaks in the summer and winter.

"Right now, we are seeing lots of Fridays off for deep work, and lots of people who must work Fridays anyways," Chief Operating Officer Daniel Vogel wrote in an email to staff reviewed by Bloomberg. "This meant that many people were not benefiting from this policy equally." But in a survey of 581 employees reviewed by Bloomberg, 93% said they had found the alternating Fridays off to be "extremely beneficial" and 61% said they felt worried, guilty or stressed when taking separate vacation days. Almost 90% of employees said they wanted to keep Fridays off as a standard.

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Epic Games Ends Alternate-Friday Vacation Policy, Angering Staff

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  • There are a lot of metrics available over the last couple of years to know how productive employees were during the pandemic. I think CIOs like this should be tarred, feathered and driven out of town backwards on a donkey for good measure. Incompetent idiots like this are just trying to justify their existence overbloated compensation.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yep, throughout human history we've trended towards less working hours in a week, when we were an agrarian society it was a 7 day a week job, the productivity boost from industrialisation dropped this to 6, and eventually 5 days. It shouldn't be too surprising that in the computer age we can probably shed a further day off a week and have no negligible impact.

      In fact, the massive increase in disproportionality between executive pay and everyone else in the last decade or two is probably a symptom of the fac

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @03:01PM (#61918401)

      I think CIOs like this should be tarred, feathered and driven out of town backwards on a donkey for good measure.

      This is why companies are rarely nice to employees. Employees soon take the niceness for granted and then resent the return to normality.

      If Epic had never given anyone any time off, the employees would be happier, and there would be no demands for tarring and feathering.

      Managers everywhere should learn from this example.

      • This is why companies are rarely nice to employees. Employees soon take the niceness for granted and then resent the return to normality.

        Same thing happens with raises, or any other jump in material well being. We're happy for a while, then adjust and our happiness returns to the previous level. It's where you get the saying "money can't buy you happiness." It pretty much doesn't.

        This is why it's important to keep things in perspective and maintain an attitude of gratitude. No, things are not actually worse than all of recorded history, much as overwrought hysterics might want you to think.

        Good news is this will blow over. It works in both d

        • "If money can't buy happiness, then I guess I'll have to rent it." -- Weird Al Yankovic.

        • by teg ( 97890 )

          This is why companies are rarely nice to employees. Employees soon take the niceness for granted and then resent the return to normality.

          Same thing happens with raises, or any other jump in material well being. We're happy for a while, then adjust and our happiness returns to the previous level. It's where you get the saying "money can't buy you happiness." It pretty much doesn't.

          This is why it's important to keep things in perspective and maintain an attitude of gratitude. No, things are not actually worse than all of recorded history, much as overwrought hysterics might want you to think.

          Good news is this will blow over. It works in both directions

          High salaries don't make people happy for more than a short time after the raise. Low salaries make them unhappy. This, and other similar things, are often called hygiene factors [wikipedia.org].

      • They were almost certainly burning out staff they needed and did the policy to stop the bleeding. They feel they don't need to do that now for some reason. The job market is probably a lot worse than anyone's really admitting.
      • JFC, they wouldn't be happier, they'd be miserable and they wouldn't understand it was because they were burnt out.

        Management hears that people are happier and healthier and the only thing that some of these assholes think is, "shit, am I paying for this"?

        Healthier, less burnt out workers don't leave as much. They produce better work. Why the hell shouldn't employees treat decent working conditions for granted?

        Some workers got a little extra time off and realized that they didn't have to be away from their

      • Or managers should have learned to *manage* expectations. By clearly stating that the extra day off was only for the pandemic and nobody should get used to it being a permanent thing.
        Funny how managers are rarely asked to just do their job nor punished when they don't.

  • Punishment (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Cpt_Kirks ( 37296 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @02:10PM (#61918257)

    If the company grants goodies, then arbitrarily takes them away, most view that as punishment.

    Stupid move in this job market.

     

  • "many people were not benefiting from this policy equally." So, from now on no one will benefit. - Grubby boss man at Epic
  • All that money they're losing by their stunt to work around and then sue Apple when Epic breached their contract... Not just lost sales, but also all the legal fees and lawyer bills...

    (Whether you agree with Epic or not, this is definitely a costly exercise.)

  • by Snard ( 61584 ) <mike.shawaluk@ g m a i l .com> on Friday October 22, 2021 @02:30PM (#61918305) Homepage
    ... Hmm, let me do the math on this one. 52 weeks in a year, therefore every other Friday is 26 days a year. Over five weeks. I'm retired now, but I would have loved an extra 5 weeks of vacation each year.
    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @02:31PM (#61918313) Journal

      At one of my jobs I negotiated a 4 day workweek in exchange for a 20% pay cut. Best negotiating I've ever done, it was a great idea.

      • by Snard ( 61584 ) <mike.shawaluk@ g m a i l .com> on Friday October 22, 2021 @02:38PM (#61918335) Homepage
        I would say this was an "everyone wins" situation. You had fewer work hours and extra free time, the company saves the extra salary, and you probably work a bit harder while you are there and do the same amount of work as your 40 hour/week coworkers.

        At my last job before retiring, I would burn up my remaining vacation at the end of the calendar year by taking Fridays off each week. It made it hard to return to 2 day weekends at the start of the new year.

      • At one of my jobs I negotiated a 4 day workweek in exchange for a 20% pay cut. Best negotiating I've ever done, it was a great idea.

        Assuming they weren't 10-hour workdays, at least...

      • by dskoll ( 99328 )

        That's a really great idea. I did a similar thing in a pervious job, but it was every-other-Friday off for a 10% pay cut. Best career decision of my life.

        • The best part is that the 10% comes off the top tax bracket, so it's actually more like a 6% cut in take-home pay.

      • And somehow you were able to convince your next job (which presumably was 5 days a week) to give you a 40% or higher raise to make up for that?
        • Yeah I have no problem with that kind of negotiating. Basically, I know what I'm worth, and expect that kind of salary otherwise I won't work with you.

    • Epic Games supposedly already has "unlimited vacation". This is not exactly true then.

    • by gillbates ( 106458 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @04:07PM (#61918653) Homepage Journal

      26 days - So basically about what German workers are already guaranteed by law, then.

    • ... Hmm, let me do the math on this one. 52 weeks in a year, therefore every other Friday is 26 days a year. Over five weeks. I'm retired now, but I would have loved an extra 5 weeks of vacation each year.

      This is the games industry. Having 5 weeks extra off doesn't even begin to cover the permanent crunch time staff find themselves in. Every day is some emergency or some artificial deadline that they are behind on. Given the choice between that and a normal job with only standard vacation I'd chose the latter.

    • The industry is littered with examples of them working themselves to death. The history of the Sega Saturn Sonic game is the one I always think of. Anyway you might want to reconsider...
    • You can make up for it by giving up your other 52 "vacation days" a year, otherwise known as the weekend.

  • Management views with alarm that people actually thought they were allowed to take alternate Fridays off, and seeks to clarify that they weren't actually serious. Please note that the bi-weekly prostration before management policy remains fully in effect and desk floggings will resume shortly.

  • by djp2204 ( 713741 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @02:35PM (#61918325)

    Stop begging. This is the only way to stop a policy you deem harmful

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Well, Epic is run by a psychopath, what did you expect?

  • What, are you going to hold *management* responsible for their own work?

    • What, are you going to hold *management* responsible for their own work?

      It is easier to find better workers than to find better managers.

    • I'd shoot them if it wasn't so terribly illegal.

      Seriously, those pests ain't worth a single second of jail time. That's the main reason they're still alive.

  • by iamnotx0r ( 7683968 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @02:43PM (#61918351)
    TIme to make the business a real work place and not some place for the special people.

    I am sure this post will piss of a lot of folks who have come to believe they are actually special.
    • TIme to make the business a real work place and not some place for the special people. I am sure this post will piss of a lot of folks who have come to believe they are actually special.

      This is supply and demand only. If the employees are rare and difficult to replace AND valued elsewhere, they are special. If they're not, then replace them. This is a simple supply and demand problem. If there are a surplus of qualified candidates who want the job without alternating Fridays, Epic holds the power & I'd suggest the employees bend to their will. Otherwise, they are special and Epic needs to figure out how to keep them happy to keep them from jumping ship.

      However, executives and

    • "Not working" based on what metric?

      Productivity is up, deadlines are being met.

      • Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)

        by Brain-Fu ( 1274756 )

        If deadlines are being met, that means that you aren't getting full value out of your workers. The occasional missed deadline is objective evidence that you are pushing you team to its limit, and hence getting maximum value from the money you pay them.

        Of course, the business must be able to tolerate missed deadlines and not fail as a business. So you need to pick deadlines that are much shorter than anything that would be a realistic need. AND you have to keep this a secret from the employees, so they be

        • The more easily-replaced employees are, the better this approach works

          There are many thousands open software developer jobs in Raleigh (where Epic is located). These employees are not easily replaced, and have lots of other employment options.

          Epic would seem to know this, since they've posted some of those openings.

        • by khchung ( 462899 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @10:08PM (#61919439) Journal

          If deadlines are being met, that means that you aren't getting full value out of your workers. The occasional missed deadline is objective evidence that you are pushing you team to its limit, and hence getting maximum value from the money you pay them.

          This is how bad managers think.

          Good managers love deadlines being met all the time, it builds up morale and confidence in the team, it builds up a culture of getting things done, instead of a culture of "trying" to get things done (but often failing), deadlines being met sets the team mindset to "meet deadlines" instead of the mindset of unending churn and inevitability of passing deadlines. Deadlines being met give credence to the team from the view of business.

          Missed deadlines cost and impact the business, not always in ways visible or directly affect the team or the manager. Bad managers slowly learn to miss deadlines that do not impact them personally, regardless of impact other parts of the business, and that creates rift and break trust within the company. It begets office politics and slowly drive out competent people who hates to play office politics while retaining incompetent people good at office politics.

          Go ahead to "get the full value of your workers" if you want to turn your company into a living hell and drive it into the ground.

    • I am special. I'm someone with a very special skill set in very high demand. And you can get me, and actually quite cheaply, if, and only if, you cater to my needs.

      I guess corporations agree with this, because I get what I want.

      • Some are special. But a fact is that *most* are not.
        • Sure. But that doesn't mean that we should exploit them 'til they croak.

        • Some are special. But a fact is that *most* are not.

          True, but they're clearly special because epic gave them this perk. Epic is not a charity. They didn't do this to be kind. They did this because they want their employees to be happy and stay. It was an investment. If Epic no longer wants to invest in alternating Fridays off, they revoke the perk and can suffer the consequences and hopefully rival studios will snatch up some good talent. Nothing to see here, folks, just the free market at work.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @04:34PM (#61918755)

      TIme to make the business a real work place and not some place for the special people.

      I am sure this post will piss of a lot of folks who have come to believe they are actually special.

      Define "real workplace". Is permanent crunchtime and high burnout rate the gaming industry is known for "real"?
      Is the well researched idea that 9 day fortnights actually produce the same productivity while improving employee mental health "fake"?

      Shit man, I guess I don't have a real job. I've worked for an employer that gives me every second Friday off for the past 15 years now. How will I cope now realising that I believe I'm special? (Note 4 years ago my company tried to roll back the idea due to some new bean-counter taking a high ranking job, there was an uproar, and the company backtracked.)

      For the record: You are special. Someone actively pays you money for being special. Embrace that, see if you can't get some better conditions while you're at it. Maybe "special" just means you're really good and worth keeping. At worst you may find out your a dispensable normie, which is also a good thing to know.

    • Being nice is only a requirement if other companies are nicer. Business is all about what you can get away with.

      Suggesting that work is supposed to be awful certainly will piss off a lot of folks, because that's just total crap.

  • ... and also the Monday one.

    So many employers are kind of averse to the idea of "slowdowns" on Fridays and Mondays - and indeed to other activities, such as "developer days", where devs can choose to spend the time innovating on whatever they want.

    It's human nature at work.

    I think what Epic games had, was the best option of all - and to take it away, seems absurd.

    Every alternate Friday is a fantastic idea - it effectively amounts to a 4.5 day week. Of course, that depends how much overtime grind happens, bu

    • I bet people have a lot of momentum going into Friday anyway, if from habit more than anything else. They should change the half/day off to Mondays, so if you had a project you started on the weekend, you can go full-bore on it the whole weekend, then get a break and start ramping up on Monday -- check (not necessarily reply to) emails, get your work week semi-planned -- and start Monday afternoon/Tuesday with a warmer cache.
    • So many employers are kind of averse to the idea of "slowdowns" on Fridays and Mondays

      I barely care what my employer thinks or wants. The day that happens I'll move on or retire.

      It's not like they weren't warned...when they called my references and asked about me, they were told that "you would be very lucky if you could get him to work for you".

      But they didn't listen and they hired me anyway...

  • ...see it as a part of their identity to work themselves into an early grave & neglect their families regardless of whether it degrades their ability to function well & make a positive contribution to the company. They're uncomfortable with the idea that other people might actually prefer sane, rational, evidence-informed, sustainable working conditions, spend time with their families & friends, & come to work rested & able to tackle complex problems & be creative. Not abusing themse
    • ...see it as a part of their identity to work themselves into an early grave & neglect their families

      And I fully support them doing that to themselves. But not me, no no no.

      My job is to do as little as possible whilst earning the most I can. That's my job, period. And so far, so good.

      I put in maybe 15 or 20 actual work hours a week, occasionally a little more, but often less. I'm usually done working by noon depending on how I feel. And usually I feel like I'm done by noon.

      My upper management can run themselves ragged for all I care, that ain't my thang. Have at it, boys, go nuts. I'll watch from an easy

      • My upper management can run themselves ragged for all I care, that ain't my thang. Have at it, boys, go nuts. I'll watch from an easy chair and lift my beer to you in admiration of your work ethic. lol

        Work fascinates me; I can sit and watch it for hours!

      • You must be a rare exception. Executives are also obsessed with wielding the power they've worked & sacrificed so much to acquire. What's the point of having power if you don't wield it? That's how the rest of us end up suffering. Not because it yields greater productivity or profits (those are excuses & executives usually get their bonuses & social status whatever happens) but because they need to wield that power in any way they can think of & that usually means making everyone work under
        • You must be a rare exception. Executives are also obsessed with wielding the power they've worked & sacrificed so much to acquire. What's the point of having power if you don't wield it?

          I'm not an executive; I didn't mean to give that impression. I'm a tiny little cog in a vast corporate structure, nobody reports to me. I'm one of those people who are literally at the very bottom of the org chart, lol.

          But you're not wrong, exercising their tiny bit of power is what gets them up in the morning.

          • I hope I didn't offend you. Enjoy your exceptional corporate existence while you can!
            • I hope I didn't offend you. Enjoy your exceptional corporate existence while you can!

              Not at all, I've been mistaken for much worse.

              To be honest, I am enjoying it. I like what I do, I don't have to do too much of it, and I'm doing it from home.

              The pay and benefits are good, and the company itself is great- they're doing good things and I'm glad to be working to help make their ideas and projects come to fruition.

  • I get that if you work for a place that gives you really sweet perks, you want to try to hang onto them. But this is ridiculous. Like someone else said, that's 5 weeks of paid vacation if you get every other Friday off work. Nobody's in business to pay people not to do anything for them.

    • Odd. I have 5 weeks paid vacation. Plus conferences, plus seminars, plus trainings, plus holidays, plus...

      All a matter of negotiation. Of course, it's easier to negotiate from a position of power.

      • by King_TJ ( 85913 )

        Uh, presumably the people in question in this story got the 5 extra weeks of paid Fridays off work in ADDITION to whatever vacation time they had or negotiated for originally as part of their employment contract. That's the issue here.

        This was a temporary action on the company's part and now they want to end it, and that seems like it's completely their option as nobody had the Fridays off as part of their employment contract in the first place.

  • This year, the company I work for came up with the idea of Summer Fridays. Basically, we were given the option to finish work at lunchtime on Friday throughout July and August. Great, means you get to start your weekends a bit early, right? Except our client base were still working Friday afternoons, so those of us in client-facing roles didn't get the full benefit; we could have a half-day elsewhere in the week, but it didn't feel as special. Nearly all internal departments buggered off completely on those

  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Friday October 22, 2021 @04:21PM (#61918705) Journal

    To be completely honest, I don't do a damn thing on most Fridays.

    Oh, I fart around, maybe attend a meeting, then I fuck off for the rest of the day. The only thing I make sure to do on Friday is submit my time sheet.

    Also, most of my team is on the East coast and I'm on the West coast, so by noon PST I'm blissfully free of any co-workers who might want anything from me. And even if they did, it can wait until Monday.

    So I don't get every other Friday off, for all intents and purposes I get every Friday off.

  • Epic management are just pissed off that they lost nearly every count of their greedy little lawsuit against Apple, and in fact had to reimburse Apple for all the stolen sub fees they had originally agreed in writing to pay.

    So the little shits are essentially kicking their dogs, by cruelly punishing the only beings they can: Their presumably hard-working employees, after agreeing to give them this well-deserved benefit.

    But since when has Epic management's word been worth anything? Ask Apple!

    • The extra day off was supposed to help during COVID times, so you could run errands, do shopping, get away from your spouse/kids while being forced to quarantine. There is no reason for it now if kids are going back to school, and vaccinations are on the rise.

      So now, for some reason, EPIC mgmt are a bunch of assholes. No, that doesn't make any sense.
      • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

        So now, for some reason, EPIC mgmt are a bunch of assholes. No, that doesn't make any sense.

        Yes, they are assholes, and it only seems weird because you've been indoctrinated with capitalism. Fortnight alone has made the company billions of dollars, all built off the work of these developers. So, YEAH, they can afford to give them every Friday off, not just every other.

        And that's putting aside the issue of productivity. You can make an employee come in for 80 hours a week, but that doesn't mean you're going

  • We used the have the same benefit but used have an informal 3rd group of people who consistently worked their Friday off. We also had to work 9 hours / 9 days every 2 weeks to earn the day âoeoffâ.
  • There's a real shortage of qualified game devs in the industry right now. You either pay a shit-tonne to poach someone or you lure them with better working conditions. It's happening all over.

    Want these people to stick around to continue to make your company insanely rich? Give them the fucking Friday off, god. Fortnite is such a juggernaut right now, and you think maybe it's not worth keeping those people around? They can write their ticket anywhere, to be honest, and it's partly because they worked on tha

  • Period.

    OT is usually time and a half.
    So simply paying them OT hours devalues their days off.
    Step the the worked Fridays up to double time.

    Lets the company know they shouldn't fuck with people's time off unless it is ABSOLUTELY necessary.

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