“Clock botching” is the latest workplace buzzword making headlines. The term describes when employees are physically present but emotionally checked out.
The phrase is trending after workplace experts linked it to burnout, disillusionment and inefficient office cultures. Unlike laziness, it signals quiet withdrawal — when employees show up but simply go through the motions of their job without truly engaging.
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So how did clock botching become so common? Some experts point to Gen Z.
Guy Thornton, founder of an employee testing service, told Inc. Magazine that today’s workplaces often reward visibility over results. Young workers, he said, are responding by showing up but disengaging mentally.
Burnout and AI anxiety
Burnout also fuels clock botching. At work, it could look like feeling drained or increasingly irritable and feeling overwhelmed with tasks. According to e-learning site Moodle, 66% of Americans report feeling burned out on the job.
At the same time, artificial intelligence is adding a new layer of stress. Moodle found 27% of Gen Z workers are three times more likely to worry AI tools could replace parts of their job.
Countries testing shorter workweeks
Several countries are experimenting with shorter schedules to fight burnout. Pilot programs have rolled out in the United States, while the latest examples are in South Korea and the Netherlands.
In South Korea, newly elected President Lee Jae Myung campaigned on a four-and-a-half-day workweek. While the change has not gone nationwide, some workplaces are trying it, including hospitals.
Severance Hospital in Seoul is one of the first medical facilities to test shorter work weeks in response to this stress, according to Al Jazeera. Administrators found nurse turnover dropped from 19.5% to 7% among employees with fewer than three years of experience. Average sick leave also decreased by one day.
Meanwhile, Eurostat data shows the Netherlands already has the shortest workweeks in Europe. Workers aged 20 to 64 average just 32.1 hours weekly. Austria, Germany and Denmark followed, logging an average of 33.9 hours. The European country with the longest working week was Greece at 39.8 hours.
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In comparison, Gallup reports Americans averaged 42.9 hours per week in 2024. Even with these hours being slightly higher, there’s been a drop in average hours worked per week in America. In 2019, employees reported working an average of 44.1 hours.
The reason? Gallup says it’s due to employee burnout.
Studies suggest a four-day workweek can lower stress and improve health. However, some companies fear shorter schedules could hurt competitiveness.
Still, clock botching is already costing businesses. When employees mentally check out, teams scramble to cover gaps and deadlines slip. Experts say addressing burnout may be the key to keeping workers engaged.
Harry Fogle (Video Editor)
and Devin Pavlou (Digital Producer)
contributed to this report.