The Seven-Day Weekend

The Seven-Day Weekend, by Ricardo Semler is a 2003 non-fiction book about changing the nature of work, with a case study of the management changes at Semler's family-owned business, Semco. It follows his popular Maverick!: The Success Story Behind the World's Most Unusual Workplace (1993).

The Seven-Day Weekend
First UK edition
AuthorRicardo Semler
CountryBrazil
LanguageEnglish
GenreBusiness, Economics, Non-fiction
PublisherCentury (London), Arrow (London), Portfolio (New York)
Publication date
2003
Media typePrint (Paperback)
ISBN9781101216200
OCLC9781101216200
658.406

The book has been described as challenging conventional approaches to work by advocating corporate anarchy. The business principles described encourage employees to "...ramble through their day or week so they will meander into new ideas and new business opportunities."[1]

The book is written in an easy-to-read, conversational style,[2] but Rocco Forte's review, notes that the ideas within couldn't work for most businesses and that Semler does not accurately assess or appreciate the years of success in other businesses using traditional approaches.[3] Alan Timothy's review focuses on the lack of coverage of any downsides to the Semco way of working,[4] and others have highlighted the gimmickry of making people work harder by providing rest hammocks, and attempting to beat recession through ultra-liberalism.[5]

Title versions

The book was originally titled The end of the weekend, but was changed by editors.[6]

It has been published with varying subtitles including:

  • The Seven-Day Weekend: Finding the Work/Life Balance (London: Century, 2003).
  • The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works (first American edition, New York: Portfolio, 2004).
  • The Seven-Day Weekend: a Better Way to Work in the 21st Century (London: Arrow Books/Random House, 2003).

Despite the related title, it is not associated with Stefan Smith's book, The 7-day Weekend: Finding the Work you Love (East Roseville, NSW: Simon & Schuster Australia, 2000).

gollark: You pick a "subcommand" with a capital-letter flag like `-S` (sync, which seems to be a fancy word for "Install packages"), `-Q` (query information aboud stuff) and then pass extra flags to configure how that works.
gollark: > what's a pacman-like CLI?Arch Linux (btw I use that) has a neat package manager called `pacman`.> what counts as package updating support?Updating packages without breaking things horribly, including not overwriting user-edited (config) files.> and library interface as in an API you can use from scripts?Precisely.
gollark: Oh, and a library interface.
gollark: Well, I would want a pacman-like CLI, probably configurable repos, multiple files in a package, good package updating support, and... other stuff?
gollark: If CC had symlinks, which it doesn't without a ton of FS hackery, you could make a busybox-type thing.

References

  1. Birchfield, Reg (May 2003). "Semler's Strange Sequel". New Zealand Management. 50 (4): 16.
  2. O'Connor, Brian (June 2003). "A better way of working?". Works Management. 56 (6): 9.
  3. Forte, Rocco. "April 2003". Management Today: 39.
  4. Timothy, Alan (28 August 2003). "Book of the week". Marketing: 48.
  5. "The Seven-Day Weekend". The Times: 4. 6 May 2003.
  6. "7.30 Report - 06/03/2007: Interview with Semcos business guru". www.abc.net.au. Retrieved 2017-05-07.


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