‘I wasn’t built to work 9-to-5 every single day’: These Gen Z bosses introduced slump hour, siestas, chilled one-to-ones and flattened structures because they’re tired of formal corporate customs
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While some might scoff at young staff's aversion to a rigid working pattern, a glance to anthropology might prove Gen Z has a point when they complain about traditional workplace schedules.

Sleep experts, for example, are concerned about the impact of forcing a human to wake up at an allotted time—and subsequently back to sleep—as opposed to allowing a person's body clock to synchronize with natural daylight hours.

When an employee gets to work, science also suggests individuals can't concentrate nonstop.

In her book Attention Span: A Groundbreaking Way to Restore Balance, Happiness and Productivity,” Gloria Mark, a professor of informatics at the University of California, outlines that in 2004 her research into average attention span found humans could focus on a screen for approximately two-and-a-half minutes.

“Some years later, we found attention spans to be about 75 seconds. Now we find people can only pay attention to one screen for an average of 47 seconds,” she told CNN.

It's unsurprising, then, that a survey of 10,000 employees found that 45% of workers tasked with an eight-hour day actually work just half of that, spending the rest of their time surfing the internet, scrolling social media or making a coffee.

These findings might have hit upon a notion Gen Z has been trying to explain to their cross-generational peers.

Young bosses told Fortune they're "wired differently" after growing up in a Western world where avoiding screens, smartphones and social media is virtually impossible.

However, the foundations of today's global economy are built on traditional, corporate careers where labor logs on and clocks out day in, day out.

To allow complete flexibility of workforces could make forecasting impossible, productivity more difficult to measure, and cause friction in communication.

The Gen Z founders Fortune spoke to want to meet somewhere in the middle: building businesses where everyone is focused on an ultimate ambition, but have the autonomy within that to form their working days.

'This cannot be the concept any longer'

While Australian founder Milly Bannister's TikTok page is full of fun, tongue-in-cheek takes on being a Gen Z entrepreneur, the 27-year-old's platform acts as a segue into her life-changing work.

Bannister leads a team of five out of Sydney and runs the charity ALLKND.

Her organization is working to prevent the number of youth suicides in Australia, where 350 people aged between 18 and 24 take their lives every year—more than the number of people who die on the road.