Have you ever wondered how many hours you should work each week in order to maximize your performance?
Many people working in professional services and other demanding careers assume that the longer they work, the better. However, in this article, you will learn one key reason why that is actually not true. You will also learn the sweet spot for how many hours you should work each week if you want to perform your best over the long-term.
Let’s begin with a quick story…
Morten and “Natalie”
In 1988, Morten Hansen landed his dream dream job as a management consultant at Boston Consulting Group (BCG). 1 Eager to succeed, he followed what he thought was a wise strategy. He would outperform his co-workers by working really long hours.
Over the next three years, Morten worked anywhere from 60-90 hours each week. In order to maintain this intense schedule, he fueled himself with lots of coffee and sugar.
One day, Morten stumbled upon some work that had been created by one of his colleagues named “Natalie” (not her real name). As he read through her work, he realized that her analysis was crisper, more compelling, and easier to understand than his work.
Morten went to look for Natalie one evening and she wasn’t there. He asked a colleague near her desk where she was. His colleague told him that Natalie had already gone home for the day. As it turned out, she always worked from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., and she never worked late. She didn’t work on the weekends either.
Both Morten and Natalie had the intellectual horsepower required to work at a prestigious management consulting firm like BCG. They also had a similar amount of experience. However, Natalie produced better work than Morten- while working fewer hours. How could that happen?
“The Natalie Question”
A few years later, Morten left BCG to pursue an academic career. After earning his Ph.D. from Stanford University, he became a professor at Harvard Business School.
He often found himself thinking about what he referred to as “the Natalie question.” Why had she been able to perform better than him, while working less?
His curiosity inspired him to focus his research on corporate performance. Starting in 2002, he and Jim Collins spent nine years working on a book called Great by Choice, which was a sequel to Jim’s book titled Good to Great. Both books provide research-based frameworks on great performance in companies.
Morten was still curious though about what led to great performance by individuals. In 2011, he launched one of the most robust research projects ever conducted on individual performance at work.
Morten recruited a team of top researchers and began generating a set of theories about which behaviors led to higher performance at work. He also reviewed more than 200 relevant academic studies and leveraged insights from over 100 in-depth interviews with business professionals.
In addition, Morten and his team tested some of their theories in a study of 5,000 managers and employees. These individuals represented 15 different industry sectors and over 20 different job functions. Ages and education levels varied, and study participants were nearly 50-50 for men and women.
The findings from all of this research eventually led to Morten writing Great at Work: How Top Performers Do Less, Work Better, and Achieve More.
How Many Hours Should You Work Each Week?
One of the factors that Morten and his team looked at in their study was hours worked per week. They found that working longer hours enhances performance, but only to a point. Here is a summary of what they found:
- Performance increased as the number of hours worked increased from 30 to 50 hours each week.
- Performance flattened as the number of hours worked increased from 50 to 65 hours each week.
- Performance declined as the number of hours worked increased past 65 hours each week.
Morten likens this data to squeezing juice from an orange. At first, squeezing an orange produces a lot of juice. Then, as you keep squeezing, you stop getting much more juice. Eventually, there is a point where you are squeezing as hard as you can, yet producing no extra juice.
Shorter, More Predictable Hours
Other research has also found that working longer only enhances performance up to a point. 2 For example, Harvard Business School’s Leslie A. Perlow and Jessica L. Porter have studied the work habits of people working in professional services. This includes occupations such as lawyers, accountants, and consultants.
Over a four-year period, Perlow and Porter conducted experiments with several North American offices of the Boston Consulting Group (where Morten and “Natalie” worked previously). The experiments found that shorter, more predictable work hours could actually increase productivity. Overall career and life satisfaction also improved.
How Can Working Longer Hours Reduce Performance?
When you work longer hours, something needs to give. Typically, people who work longer hours choose to cut out sleep, exercise, eating healthy, and quality time with friends and family.
In other words, working longer usually means that you have to cut out the activities that help you renew your energy and show up at work in an optimal state (mentally, physically, and psychologically).
Working extremely long hours is a poor strategy because it makes it harder to perform your best each day. As a result, you have to work longer to produce the same caliber of work that you could have produced in less time.
Working Shorter Hours Is Not About Balance
The year before my book Work Stronger was published, I was speaking with a CEO about the book.
We discussed the core message of the book: stronger hours (not longer hours) are the key to higher performance. At one point during our conversation, the CEO said, “Oh, so you are writing a book about balance?”
I corrected him. “It’s not about balance. It’s about high performance,” I said.
Working shorter hours can help you achieve more balance in your life, if that is your goal. However, that is a by-product.
Working shorter hours can actually make you better at your job, too. Of course, this assumes that you use your time wisely- both at work and outside of work.
Summary and Final Thoughts
How many hours should you work each week?
Ultimately, it depends. While studies have found that performance flattens or declines once you work over 50 hours or so each week, that number could change based on the person, the job, and other factors.
The key message here is that there is a point where working longer actually becomes counter-productive. If you are currently working more than 50-60 hours each week, your performance would probably actually increase by working shorter hours.
That would give you more time for sleep, exercise, eating healthy, time with friends and family, and other activities that would help you show up at work at your best each day.
Stronger hours (not longer hours) are the key to sustaining higher performance over the long-term and avoiding burnout.
References
- Hansen, Morten. Great at Work: How Top Performers Do Less, Work Better, and Achieve More. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2018.
- Leslie Perlow and Jessica L. Porter, “Making Time Off Predictable—and Required.” Harvard Business Review 87, no. 10 (October 2009), https://hbr.org/2009/10/making-time-off-predictable-and-required.
About the Author
Pete Leibman is the Founder of Stronger Talent and the author of two books and more than 300 articles on high performance. His latest book is Work Stronger: Habits for More Energy, Less Stress, and Higher Performance at Work. Pete works with professional services firms and other high-performing organizations that want to develop more focused, resilient, and productive workforces.
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