Tuesday November 22, 2005
04:12 PM
for those running companies in the northern hemisphere
- Observation
- Our end of holiday year is December 31st. Consequentially we have some people taking lots of days off to use up their remaining paid leave. It's also coming close to winter, which means that we also have people off sick due to heavy colds. Some days these combine to make us a bit thin in some departments.
- Conclusion
- Given that we can't move winter, maybe it would be worth moving the end of holiday year to April or thereabouts.
it's a rollover! (Score:1)
(Or have managers monitoring holidays taken during the year before it becomes a problem, though that's obviously more work
osfameron
Re:it's a rollover! (Score:2)
I thought about this, but I don't think that it would work. If you increase the fixed number of days you can take, it buys you one year until people hit the same problem. If you remove the limit then it can cause some people to accrue enormous amounts of holiday that they then (not unreasonably) want to take, possibly in sufficiently dense blocks that it causes some problems. Particularly as now they're more experienced, and more knowledgeable about
In Denmark ... (Score:1)
The other solution (Score:1)
Seems to work well enough.
Re-baseline calendar to hire date. (Score:1)
[1] "Essentially" because if you had a coop, or a sabatical, or maternity leave, or left the company and came back, it's adjusted to an