Episode Details
Back to EpisodesA Summer Staffing Plan That Actually Works
Description
Summer PTO can reveal whether a team is healthy or just held together by late nights and quiet resentment. We’re honest about the seasonal paradox: the months built for rest often become the most burnout-heavy time of the year, especially for managers, project leads, and anyone in operations. The big reframe we keep coming back to is simple and uncomfortable: burnout isn’t a personal failing. It’s an operational failure. When capacity planning gets replaced by hope, the system survives through “heroics” and those heroics hide the smoke until the engine blows.
We walk through the real-world warning signs you can spot without a giant employee survey: overtime climbing week after week, PTO delayed or discouraged, backlogs that never shrink, and Slack or email activity creeping past dinner. Then we dig into why “just hire more people” can backfire when the workflow is already messy, adding coordination costs and training load to the same exhausted team.
The practical core is a straightforward framework you can use immediately: a 30-minute capacity check to identify the work that cannot fail, find single points of failure, and calculate real availability instead of fantasy hours. From there we build a summer staffing plan that works, including a shared PTO calendar planned six to ten weeks out, primary and backup owners for every critical process, a three-step cross-training method, and a one-page runbook you can actually use under stress. We also talk about the competence penalty and why surface-level wellness perks can’t replace real operational support.
If you want a calmer summer and a more resilient team, hit play, share this with your manager or ops partner, and leave a review if it helps. What’s the one process at your job that would break if one person disappeared for two weeks?