Mark Williams: Balancing demand and flexibility on the frontline this summer

-

This seasonal variation is fuelled by ubiquitous summer holidays, some of the most popular sporting and music events of the year, and widespread growth in overall leisure spending. For employers, this represents both opportunity and risk, with a big part of the challenge coming from balancing increased demand with the need to maintain service levels without overburdening remaining staff or disrupting daily operations.

For businesses that rely on a significant number of frontline workforces, this brings some recurring and potentially disruptive issues to deal with. During the summer months, for example, many employees are either on holiday, need greater flexibility during the school break to balance childcare responsibilities or both. At the same time, relying on seasonal staff puts existing scheduling and training processes under pressure, often because they aren’t designed to adapt quickly enough to fluctuating availability or short-term staffing needs.

In many cases, outdated scheduling practices and technologies make matters worse. Indeed, some employers still rely on paper-based shift rotas or ask staff to arrange swaps via informal channels such as text messages or messaging apps. These systems are prone to errors and miscommunication and place unnecessary pressure on both employees and managers. Without a structured, flexible system in place, filling shifts becomes reactive, time-consuming and unreliable, especially at the scale often required during the summer.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Managing the seasonal staffing squeeze

To manage the seasonal staffing squeeze more effectively, many employers are turning to digital workforce tools that support flexible, employee-led scheduling. These platforms give frontline staff greater control over when and how they work, enabling shift swaps, self-scheduling, and access to available shifts in real time through a centralised system.

Unlike paper rotas or informal messaging, these systems ensure full visibility of who is working and when. The positive knock-on effect is significant, with employees able to release shifts they can no longer work, pick up additional hours that suit their availability or directly swap shifts with colleagues – all without manager intervention. For those balancing work with holidays or childcare, this flexibility is critical, and for businesses, it means improved shift coverage, lower absenteeism and far less administrative overhead.

These tools also help onboard seasonal workers more efficiently. By assigning tasks to shifts rather than specific individuals, employers can ensure critical jobs are completed regardless of who is on duty. Combined with more flexible training, delivered in short, accessible segments, seasonal staff can get up to speed faster and spend more time contributing on the shop floor.

Room for improvement

Improving these vital processes can also provide the benefit of streamlined communication between the head office and staff. Instead of filtering instructions through local managers, as is very often the case, businesses can connect directly with employees at their place of work, an approach that helps avoid bottlenecks and gives store-level teams more time to focus on customer service.

Businesses also find it helpful to move away from rigid, one-size-fits-all rotas and instead adopt a digital open shift marketplace where employers can match shift requirements to employee availability and preferences in real time. This not only improves shift coverage but also contributes to higher levels of engagement, as workers feel much more in control of their time.

These options offer massive time savings for frontline managers too. With these options in place, shifts are moved and filled ahead of schedule with little effort from location managers, removing the issues associated with phoning around employees to cover shifts at short notice.

Feedback is also key to making these processes run smoothly. In particular, seasonal staff, despite their short tenure, can offer valuable insight into what is and isn’t working, particularly when it comes to onboarding, training and scheduling processes. Capturing this feedback consistently can help businesses improve future hiring cycles and reduce inefficiencies.

From a customer service perspective, businesses benefit from higher engagement and more consistent performance. When employees feel trusted and empowered to manage their time, they are more likely to deliver positive interactions, especially during busy periods when service quality is under pressure.

As demand hits peaks and troughs throughout the year, summertime included, organisations that prioritise this kind of workforce flexibility put themselves in a much better position to adapt without the need to rely on reactive fixes or unsustainable overtime. In doing so, they can ensure staffing needs can be met with efficiency, and for the benefit of employer and employee alike – an approach where everyone wins at work.

Managing Director EMEA at 

Mark is an experienced leader in the retail space with an extensive career, including 14 years at Shell (Retail) where he was responsible for retail's 'Global Frontline Digital Transformation' and executing frontline enablement strategies.

Mark has a proven track record of delivery against newly created roles, translating an enterprise vision into reality. As an experienced leader, he creates and develops high performing teams that deliver "real" commercial value.

Latest news

Personalising the Benefits Experience: Why Employees Need More Than Just Information

This article explores how organisations can move beyond passive, one-size-fits-all communication to deliver relevant, timely, and simplified benefits experiences that reflect employee needs and life stages.

Grant Wyatt: When the love dies – when staying is riskier than quitting

When people fall out of love with their employer, or feel their employer has fallen out of love with them, what follows is rarely a clean exit.

£30bn pension savings window opens for employers ahead of 2029 reforms

UK employers could unlock billions in National Insurance savings by expanding pension salary sacrifice schemes before new limits take effect in 2029.

Expat jobs ‘fail early as costs hit $79,000 per worker’

International assignments are ending early due to family strain, isolation and poor preparation, as rising costs increase pressure on employers.
- Advertisement -

The Great Employer Divide: What the evidence shows about employers that back parents and carers — and those that don’t

Understand the growing divide between organisations that effectively support working parents and carers — and those that don’t. This session shows how to turn employee experience data into a clear business case, linking care-related pressures to performance, retention and workforce stability.

Scott Mills exit puts spotlight on risk of ‘news vacuum’ in high-profile dismissals

Sudden departure of a long-serving BBC presenter raises questions about how employers manage high-profile dismissals and limit speculation.

Must read

Achieving the Work-Study Balance

The economic climate has led many people to return...

Maggie Berry: Should businesses provide on-site childcare?

Most people don’t know the astronomical costs of childcare...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you