At I.B.M., a Vacation Anytime, Or Maybe No Vacation at All 
31 August 2007 
The New York Times <javascript:void(0)>  
SOMERS, N.Y. -- It's every worker's dream: take as much vacation time as
you want, on short notice, and don't worry about your boss calling you
on it. Cut out early, make it a long weekend, string two weeks together
-- as you like. No need to call in sick on a Friday so you can disappear
for a fishing trip. Just go; nobody's keeping track. 
That is essentially what goes on at I.B.M., one of the cornerstones of
corporate America, where each of the 355,000 workers is entitled to
three or more weeks of vacation. The company does not keep track of who
takes how much time or when, does not dole out choice vacation times by
seniority and does not let people carry days off from year to year. 
Instead, for the past few years, employees at all levels have made
informal arrangements with their direct supervisors, guided mainly by
their ability to get their work done on time. Many people post their
vacation plans on electronic calendars that colleagues can view online,
and they leave word about how they can be reached in a pinch. 
''It's like when you went to college and you didn't have high school
teachers nagging you anymore,'' said Mark L. Hanny, I.B.M.'s vice
president of independent software vendor alliances. ''Employees like
that we put more accountability on them.'' 
But the flip side of flexibility, at least at I.B.M., is peer pressure.
Mr. Hanny and other I.B.M. employees, including his assistant, Shari
Chiara, say that they frequently check their e-mail and voice mail
messages while on vacation. Bosses sometimes ask subordinates to cancel
days off to meet deadlines. 
Some workplace experts say such continued blurring of the boundaries
between work and play can overtax employees and lead to health problems,
particularly at companies where there is an expectation that everyone is
always on call. 
''If leadership never takes time off, people will be skeptical whether
they can,'' said Kim Stattner of Hewitt Associates, a human resources
consultant. ''There is the potential for a domino effect.'' 
Frances Schneider, who retired from an I.B.M. sales division last year,
after 34 years, said one thing never changed; there was not one year in
which she took all her allotted time off. 
''It wasn't seven days a week, but people ended up putting in longer
hours because of all the flexibility, without really thinking about
it,'' Ms. Schneider said. ''Although you had this wonderful freedom to
take days when you want, you really couldn't. I.B.M. tends to be a group
of workaholics.'' 
I.B.M. officials said they have no idea whether workers take more or
fewer days off now than before, and have not studied the policy's effect
on efficiency. 
But they point to employee surveys showing that the self-directed work
and vacation policy is one of the top three reasons workers choose to
stay there. 
''Change is change,'' said Richard Calo, vice president of global
workforce relations. ''We had some initial questioning of it. But at the
end of the day, you remember how much time you spent. This wasn't a
difficult sell.'' 
Mr. Calo, the human resources chief, said that the open-ended vacation
policy is ''not a total license to do whatever you want to do,'' and
that workers are expected to produce quality work, even if the company
is not paying attention to when or where they complete it. 
The hands-off approach to vacation time, which gradually took hold over
the past decade, has come amid I.B.M.'s shift from engineering and
manufacturing into services like consulting and is part of a broader
demise of old notions of eight hours' pay for eight hours' work at a
fixed location. 
Aided by broadband connections, cellphones and video conferencing
software, 40 percent of I.B.M.'s employees have no dedicated offices,
working instead at home, at a client's site, or at one of the company's
hundreds of ''e-mobility centers'' around the world, where workers drop
in to use phones, Internet connections and other resources. 
Long a trendsetter in human resources -- it began offering family leave
in the 1950s -- I.B.M. is probably the largest company to do away so
completely with tracking vacation, although a number of newer, smaller
firms have similar policies. 
Best Buy has introduced a program called Results Oriented Work
Environment for its 4,000 corporate employees, giving them freedom to do
their jobs without regard to the hours they put in daily. 
Motley Fool, the online investment adviser, has, since its founding 13
years ago, let employees take as many paid vacation or sick days as they
need; the company's director of human resources, Lee Burbage, said that
most of its 180 workers take three to four weeks a year. Netflix, the
online DVD distributor, no longer allots specific numbers of vacation
days to its 400 salaried employees. 
''When you have a work force of fully formed professionals who have been
working for much of their life,'' Patty McCord, the chief talent officer
of Netflix, said, ''you have a connection between the work you do and
how long it takes to do it, so you don't need to have the clock-in and
clock-out mentality.'' 
I.B.M.'s vacations-without-boundaries system started in the early 1990s,
when managers in the human resources, finance and technology departments
questioned whether tracking days off helped the company grow -- and some
complained that it was an administrative burden. 
So the company stopped counting days in a few departments, then
gradually expanded the new policy. Since 2003, it has covered everyone
in the company, from the chief executive, Samuel J. Palmisano, who has a
vacation house in Kennebunkport, Me., to workers at I.B.M.'s chip and
server factories in East Fishkill and Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 
Luis H. Rodriguez, the director of market management in I.B.M.'s
software group, said he visits his office here in Somers about once a
week, working the rest of the time on the road or at his home in
Ridgefield, Conn., where he sat one recent afternoon at the kitchen
table with his laptop open. 
He said that in six years at I.B.M. he can recall only one time when he
asked a co-worker not to take a long weekend off -- when their group was
about to buy another company -- and that calling colleagues or checking
e-mail while visiting relatives in Texas or Illinois is a fair trade for
being able to work from home so he can spend more time with his
children, Alec, 5, and Evia, 2. 
''I get an incredible amount of flexibility from the company, but it
cuts both ways,'' he said. ''Because people's schedules and needs are so
structured, you need flexibility at work.'' 
For most companies, keeping track of time worked and time off remains a
critical and transparent benchmark for workers and bosses. It is also a
necessity in factories, call centers, restaurants and other workplaces
where business would grind to a halt if managers were unable to
predictably have enough employees on hand. 
''If you look at the organizations that have done more radical things,
they tend to be technology companies with salaried people,'' where
flexibility in job performance ''is embedded into the culture of the
place,'' noted Max Caldwell, a managing principal in the work force
effectiveness area at Towers Perrin, a human resources consultant. 
Indeed, I.B.M.'s Mr. Calo said that the flexibility has helped the
company compete with the more freewheeling atmosphere at start-up rivals
in the technology world that have lured away some of its talent over the
years. 
''We have a reputation of not being as hip as a Google or a Netflix,''
he said. ''You don't have to be the coolest guy on the block, but you
don't have to be the Big Blue nerd, either.'' 
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