MANAGING EMPLOYEE TIME OFF: INSIGHTS FROM NEW WORKFORCE RESEARCH

Stephanie Petersen, TEAM Software by WorkWave, CALSAGA Network Partner

Many security companies are spending a huge portion of time tracking employee time off requests. It’s a necessary function for your teams…but one that often adds up in terms of administrative burden.

If time off management processes seem cumbersome now, consider this: your staff is probably taking less time than they could. While this might seem like it would reduce administrative workload, the reality is opposite: employees who avoid taking time off when they need it often end up creating more urgent, last-minute requests that are far more disruptive to manual tracking systems.

Recent survey data* shows that 67% of Americans worked while sick in the past year. The reasons employees avoid taking sick days include falling behind on work (26%), fear of being seen as unreliable (22%) and negative judgment from coworkers or supervisors (12%). Among Generation Z workers–who represent a growing portion of the security workforce–52% continued to work while sick, rather than take time off. This can actually compound into more absence management work needed by your team down the road, as 35% of workers who pushed through illness ultimately became sicker and ended up needing more time off work anyway.

The Administrative Reality

Consider what happens with a typical time off request under manual systems. An employee fills out a paper form or sends an email request. A supervisor must manually verify available balances, often by consulting separate spreadsheets or calling the office. Approval notifications happen through informal communication. Payment processing requires additional manual data entry.

Each step introduces delays and potential errors while consuming administrative time. Considering enterprise security companies often employ over 100 people at minimum, the cumulative effect often surprises organizations when they calculate the actual time spent on time off management. Administrative staff track multiple types of leave across dozens or hundreds of employees, often using separate systems for scheduling, payroll and benefits. Errors are common and costly—approving time off that exceeds available balances creates payroll complications, while missing schedule updates can leave posts uncovered.

If this is already the reality your business is facing, imagine if the data was painting a different picture, and 100% of employees were taking sick days whenever it was justified. Even discounting unpaid leave absences, your administrative burden could increase exponentially.

A More Effective Approach

Organizations that have streamlined their time off processes focus on creating workflows that work for employees, supervisors and administrative staff alike. The key elements include employee access to their own benefit balances, supervisor visibility into scheduling implications and automated integration between approval decisions and operational systems.

Effective processes allow employees to submit different types of requests—paid time off, unpaid time off and time off not tied to benefits—while automatically checking available balances. Supervisors receive notifications with relevant scheduling information to make informed approval decisions without phone calls or file searches.

When approval workflows include scheduling context, supervisors can see potential conflicts or coverage arrangements before making decisions. Integration with payroll systems eliminates duplicate data entry, while automated schedule updates prevent employees from being assigned shifts during approved time off.

Different types of time off can be tracked appropriately—planned vacation, unplanned sick time, family leave and unpaid absences—supporting compliance requirements while giving managers visibility into usage patterns.

What Success Looks Like

Effective time off management produces measurable operational improvements where your team spends less time processing time off requests. Administrative efficiency increases when routine tasks become predictable and errors decrease. Employee satisfaction improves when policies are clear and processes are accessible. Operational planning becomes more reliable when time off patterns are visible and well-documented.

Better processes also support workforce retention. When employees can easily access their benefits and understand their available time off, they’re more likely to plan appropriately rather than creating last-minute scheduling challenges. Clear processes reduce the administrative barriers that can push employees toward competitors with more accessible policies.

The investment in improved time off management—whether through better manual processes or integrated systems—typically pays dividends across operations. Reduced administrative burden frees staff for strategic activities. Better information supports more informed scheduling decisions. Accurate tracking supports compliance efforts while reducing payroll errors.

For security companies evaluating their current approach, the priority should be identifying specific operational pain points. Some organizations benefit from policy clarification and standardized forms. Others need better tracking tools or integrated workflows. The most successful improvements address real administrative challenges while supporting both employee needs and operational requirements.

*Read more about the referenced survey data by visiting teamsoftware.com.

Stephanie is a passionate product manager with a demonstrated history of working in various roles in the software industry, who loves building and using products that add significant value to people’s day-to-day lives and businesses.