It’s wild to think how much the business landscape has changed recently, isn’t it? Your processes (and even your own role in your business) probably look a lot different than what they did a few years ago.
AI is transforming the business world fast. You see it everywhere: Amazon replacing roles with automation, Salesforce trimming teams, even Duolingo cutting back staff as bots take over content creation.
The headlines are filled with efficiency wins. But what about the teams affected? The real humans who made those companies run long before AI could write a script or answer customer queries?
If you lead a team (even a lean one), you can’t afford to ignore these ripple effects. Your people are feeling them. And if you’re not truly valuing them, they might be quietly checking out.
We live in a culture where “hustle” is the default. Where PTO gets carried over. Mental health is often talked about more than it’s supported. And small business owners (like you) are juggling so much that investing in your team becomes a lesser priority.
But in a culture that worships hustle, one of the wisest things you can do is care for your team. Because if your employees are drained and disconnected, you’re not just losing productivity… you’re risking losing the people that make running your business possible.
So today, we’ll look at some real, culture-building moves to help your people want to stay engaged (and how to spot employee check-out before it costs you more than just time).
4 Ways to Stop Quiet Vacationing In Your Business
“Each of us needs to withdraw from cares which will not withdraw from us.” —Maya Angelou
It’s somewhat counterintuitive: Rest fuels growth. You have to slow down in order to get where you want to go in your business.
Which can feel like a luxury you can’t afford when you’re wearing ten hats and your team is stretched thin. But without effective rest, your team doesn’t push harder… they quietly check out.
A lot of employees (around 4 in 10 Millennials) are doing this through quiet vacationing — taking time off without telling you, staying just active enough online to fly under the radar.
If your culture rewards hyper-responsiveness and nonstop availability (even implicitly) you’re going to see more of this covert behavior. Because they’re trying to solve a real need (rest and recovery) in a way that protects their job security. But they’re doing it in a way that hurts your operations – with no formal coverage and no communication.
Which ultimately means… if your team doesn’t feel like they can take a break, your business is already paying for it.
And no, the fix isn’t more PTO. It’s shifting your culture related to PTO. Here are a few ideas for effective ways you can do that…
#1. Stop quiet vacationing by encouraging time off
Make sure your team knows: PTO is not a reward for being overworked. It’s part of the comp package. If your employees feel like they need a dentist’s note to request time off, that’s your first red flag.
Start explicitly encouraging your team to use their days, not just for family emergencies or vacation trips, but for mental resets. Half-days. Long weekends. Don’t make them justify it.
#2: Stop quiet vacationing by including PTO in annual reviews
I’ve seen real impact when Westchester County businesses set PTO usage goals as part of annual performance reviews. That means actually tracking whether people are taking time off, and measuring managers on whether their teams are getting the rest they need.
Because teams that don’t burn out perform better and stay longer.
#3: Stop quiet vacationing by practicing your PTO principles
Messaging on its own isn’t enough. Your actions matter just as much. If you stress the importance of PTO, but then respond to emails with a timestamp of 10:48 PM, guess what message that sends to your team?
Practice good PTO. Log out. Train key staff members to handle issues independently, so you can stay away from your inbox as much as possible.
#4: Stop quiet vacationing through workload management
You’ve got to get a process in place for workload management around PTO. Quiet vacationing thrives in environments where people feel like time off just means twice as much work waiting when they come back.
Instead, make it a policy that workload coverage is planned before someone goes out. That might mean cross-training. That might mean rotating responsibilities. That might even mean using capacity forecasting tools (yes, even in a 5-person team) to shift project timelines intelligently.
Is quiet vacationing costing you?
Quiet vacationing happens when your employees don’t feel safe or supported enough to take real time off – and it can quietly drain your business. The solution? Building a culture that normalizes rest, models healthy time-off behavior, and plans for coverage. When your team knows they can truly unplug, they’re ultimately more productive, which in turn boosts your bottom line.
My team and I aren’t just here to further your financial hustle (though that’s a big passion of ours). We want to see your business thrive, which doesn’t happen without rest. So, if you’ve got questions about how PTO strategies can up your team’s productivity, let’s chat:
calendly.com/l-karam/prospect-schedule
To resting effectively,
Lynn Karam