Nearly one in six working Brits – that’s 4.3 million people – admit to ‘faking-it’ for a day off work, according to our latest research.
From spluttering down the phone with a faux cold to locking themselves out of the house, truant employees are coming up with new and exaggerated excuses every day to avoid work, with 14% of those we surveyed confessing that they’ve bent the truth in order to stay home.
- Feigning an illness is the most popular cover story workers use for a day off work
- Ridiculous reasons range from my dog ate my iPhone to I have sunburnt feet
- One in seven workers confess Friday is the most desirable day to pull a sickie
Three day weekend syndrome
The study shows the ‘live for the weekend’ mentality is the cause of most absences, with more than one in seven Brits (13 per cent) embracing the Friday feeling early and calling in sick to extend the weekend break. An additional one in eight workers (12 per cent) confess to conjuring up a Monday morning excuse for an unscheduled day off to recover from a busy weekend.
We also asked employers to name the most common excuses employees use for a day-off and it’s no surprise that calling in sick came out on top with workers fake coughing and croaking down the phone to bosses.
‘My dog ate my iPhone’
The study also reveals that employees are becoming more imaginative than ever, from the slightly careless ‘I thought it was Sunday and not Monday’ to the more extreme ‘my dog ate my iPhone’, employers named the most ridiculous excuses they have heard.
Other creative cover stories include, ‘I’ve been waiting for a bus for three hours’ and ‘I cannot make it into work this morning as I have sunburnt feet’.
Lynn Cahillane, Communications Manager at reed.co.uk, said: “If you are considering making-up an excuse and taking a day-off work then perhaps it’s time to think about why. For many people a career is the most important aspect of life, so it’s vital to have a job that makes you happy. If you don’t enjoy work then maybe it’s time you stop faking it and try a new position.”
Employer’s top ten most frequently heard excuses
According to our research, here are the ten most frequently heard reasons given for missing an interview:
- I’m sick
- A member of my family is sick
- I’m in A&E
- My phone battery died
- My dog is sick
- I was robbed last night
- I fainted on the way to work
- I don’t feel like going in
- I’ve broken my leg
- I’m locked out of my house
*4.3 million Brits admit to taking a day off work as they didn’t feel like going in
4,275,600 = 14% of 30.54 million (number of people in work – figures taken from ONS Labour Market Statistics, June 2014)
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