Tag Archives: festivities

The importance of taking time off over Christmas

We’re familiar with the concept of emergency service workers spending Christmas Day on shift or on-call, and yet many freelancers will also be squeezing in turkey carving and watching The Snowman around work this year. Running a business is an exhausting process which can consume any available free time – and I speak from experience, having spent much of Christmas Day 2008 working from a temporary home office as I tried to establish my fledgling business.

However, working over the Christmas holidays is potentially damaging. It can lead to frustration and resentment, as well as meaning you don’t start January feeling refreshed or ready for the new year’s challenges. With only a few weeks until the end of Advent, I’ve written a blog on the importance of taking time off over Christmas – and why it can avoid far worse eventualities…

Burnout revenge

Burnout isn’t something the self-employed like to talk about, because it implies an interruption in service, which might potentially scare off clients. However, like mental health, burnout is a topic which needs to be addressed, primarily to reduce the stigma surrounding it. Burnout happens slowly and then quickly, as your mind and body begin to buckle under the cumulative strain of insufficient rest. I’ve previously written about how after fifty weeks of solid work, I drove into the back of a parked car at traffic lights, because my exhausted brain simply couldn’t function properly. Ever since, I’ve forced myself to take a few weeks off each year (which is always stressful in itself) so I don’t have to endure that level of mental fatigue again.

Freelancers face different pressures at varying times of year depending on their industry and client base, but nobody will expect you to be working on Christmas Day or Boxing Day. Ebeneezer Scrooge has thankfully been left in the Victorian age. Many people take a week or even a fortnight off over Christmas, and others will only work on one or two days between the 24th of December and the 5th of January. In the meantime, inboxes will be empty, meetings won’t be scheduled and deadlines are rare outside industries like print journalism.

Christmas represents a unique opportunity to take time off, since many other companies will be closed for most or all of a ten-day period. My first job was with a major car dealership, and they required one member of the marketing team to be present in the office each non-statutory day over the festive fortnight. We split the days between us, and I spent two very pleasant days each Christmas driving to work along empty roads before eating homemade quiche and reading books. I certainly wasn’t expecting anyone to email me regarding important work issues, and I wouldn’t have needed to respond until January even if they had (which they never did).

Tips for taking time off over Christmas

Back to the present, and these are my recommendations for taking time off over Christmas with a clear desktop and a clean conscience…

  1. Stockpile work. If you have clients who require work over the festive period, produce and submit it in advance wherever possible. Unless it has to be topical, this will keep them supplied while you rest.
  2. Write a to-do list. List all the things needing to be done in December to enable an orderly shutdown. Monitor progress every day to minimise the prospect of last-minute panics or missed deadlines.
  3. Highlight forthcoming absences. Tell clients the dates when you’ll be unavailable a few weeks in advance. Use social media (LinkedIn, Instagram, etc) to do the same, so everyone gets the message.
  4. Schedule things for January. Meetings, deadlines, presentations…it doesn’t really matter. If clients know they’ll have your focus in January, they’re less likely to contact you in mid to late December.
  5. Set out of office messages. Email remains the main method of B2B communication, so ensure any new enquiries or messages are politely acknowledged with the date of your return while you’re off.
  6. Clear your to-do list before Christmas. January will be less stressful if you only have to deal with things that arose over the holidays, and you’ll be less inclined to check emails or ‘just do an hour’.
  7. Tell friends and relatives you’re taking time off. It’s harder to break your vow of abstinence and work if your family are expecting you not to. Plan activities which will allow you all to connect and unwind.

Help when you need it most

Although G75 Media shuts down over Christmas for the reasons outlined above, we are dedicated to helping our clients throughout the other 50 weeks of each year. Get in touch with us to discuss our award-winning copywriting, journalism, proofreading and editing services.